Part of his collection of pointy-hat clad figurines will be auctioned off in aid of his favourite good causes, his family said. His niece, Patricia Hammond, said Mr Broomfield was "remarkable", "well-loved" and "brought happiness into the lives of many people". He started collecting gnomes after a divorce, she said.
"He was very sad, obviously. He saw a gnome in a shop and thought, 'Oh, he looks happy' so he bought one. Then he bought two, then three, and now he's got a lot - 1,800," she said. Soon, his home in Alford, named Gnome Cottage, became a shrine to the ornaments, and they filled every corner.

"He had a 'gnome-mobile' - it was a trolley and he used to have a little box on the back for the NSPCC and people used to put their change in it," said another niece Maureen Edwards. "Birthdays, Christmas, people that called - you had to buy him a gnome," said Ms Hammond. "One Christmas I thought I won't buy him a gnome, I'll buy him some bird seed. He was so upset, I had to go out and buy a gnome."
There's an interview recorded with the late Mr Broomfield in 2013 here.
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