Alice
Ayres was employed as nursemaid to her sister Mary Ann or Martha
Chandler's children; neighbours described her as a quiet, hard-working
young woman. She and the Chandler family lived at 194 Union Street,
Borough, above an oil and paint shop. When a fire started in the shop during the night
of 25 April 1885, Alice and the children (aged about 6, 2 and 9 months)
were sleeping upstairs. Alice went to the window with one of the
children, manoeuvred a feather mattress out of the window, then dropped
the child to safety. Instead of saving herself next, as the crowd
outside begged her to, she went back twice more, rescuing the other two
children (although one would not survive the fall).
Finally,
she tried to make her own escape - but too late. Smoke inhalation and
exhaustion meant that she fell awkwardly, hitting the shop front and
then the pavement with great force. She died two days later in Guy's
Hospital from severe spinal injuries; she was 25. Alice was buried in an
elaborate public funeral and her grave was marked with a granite
monument paid for by public subscription. Her conduct was also
recognised by the Society for the Protection of Life from Fire, which
sent a letter of commendation and ten guineas to her father.
Alice
thus became a popular Victorian heroine, whose story was published not
only in newspaper accounts but also in several collections of
inspirational stories. As late as 1936, a Borough street was renamed
Ayres Street after her. However, her story would probably be forgotten
by now were it not for the unassuming plaque in Postman's Park which
reads:
ALICE
AYRES, DAUGHTER OF A BRICKLAYER'S LABOURER, WHO BY INTREPID CONDUCT
SAVED 3 CHILDREN FROM A BURNING HOUSE IN UNION STREET BOROUGH AT THE
COST OF HER OWN YOUNG LIFE, APRIL 24 1885
That plaque gave her an unusual afterlife, as the alias of a character in the film Closer. Jane Jones notices the name while in Postman's Park, location of the film's opening and closing scenes.
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