I THOUGHT ID GONE TO A PRISONThis was Hilda Newmans first impression when, at the age of 19, she left her parents little terraced cottage in Lincolnshire and embarked on a new life as a ladys maid at Croome Court, the enormous stately home of Lord and Lady Coventry.The year was 1935: the twilight of the English aristocracy. It was a time of wealth and glamour; of lavish balls and evening gown; of tiaras and a Coronation. As personal maide to Lady Coventry, Hilda had a unique insight into the leisured life of one of Britains most noble families.In her fascinating memoir of life upstairs and down, Hilda takes us back to a gilded era which would be brutally swept away by the Second World War. Hers is a very personal story of being transplanted from a tiny house with no bath or hot water to an eighteenth-century Neo-Palladian mansion surrounded by parkland landscaped by Lancelot Capability Brown.But it also the remarkable story of the family who service she entered and that of Croome Court itself: during World War Two, it housed the Dutch Royal Family who had fled the Nazi occupation and it was also home to the top-secret RAF base where radar was developed. This is Hildas story.