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Fernhurst

Village and parish in West Sussex, England

Fernhurst

Village and parish in West Sussex, England

FieldValue
official_nameFernhurst
countryEngland
civil_parishFernhurst
regionSouth East England
static_image_nameFernhurst Green.JPG
static_image_captionThe Green and Red Lion (centre)
area_footnotes
area_total_km223.37
population2,959.
population_ref2021 Census
population_density118 /km2
os_grid_referenceSU896284
coordinates
post_townHASLEMERE
postcode_areaGU
postcode_districtGU27
dial_code01428
constituency_westminsterArundel and South Downs
london_distance41 mi NE
shire_districtChichester
shire_countyWest Sussex
typeVillage

Fernhurst is a village and civil parish in the Chichester District of West Sussex, England, on the A286 Milford, Surrey, to Chichester road, 3 mi south of Haslemere and 4 mi north of Midhurst. The parish includes the settlements of Henley Common, Kingsley Green and Bell Vale, lies within the boundaries of the South Downs National Park and is surrounded by hills.

The area of the parish is 5772 acre. In the 2001 census there were 1,158 households with a total population of 2,765 of whom 1,244 were economically active. The population had increased to 2,942 at the 2011 Census.

Geography

Fernhurst lies in the valley of the River Lod whose feeder streams, known as ghyls, rise in the surrounding hills, that include Telegraph Hill at 676 ft, Marley Heights at 700 ft, Bexley Hill at 600 ft, Fridays Hill at 675 ft and the highest hill in Sussex, Blackdown at 919 ft, which rises to the northeast. The valley soil is predominantly clay with greensand outcrops on Blackdown summit. There are dense wooded areas punctuated by miles of footpaths, the path to the summit of Blackdown commencing at the Red Lion pub.

History

The village, on the Weald, originally developed around crossroads (The Cross) and the village green, and ancient remains (Stone Age and Roman) have been found here. Iron working took place in the 17th/18th centuries; and a turnpike ran through the village. The church, dedicated to St Margaret, () and Red Lion pub are on the green, where several old houses still remain. With the coming of the railway to Haslemere, the village developed around and beyond The Cross, and since the 1960s the village has expanded further westwards. The village houses a commuter population, attracted by the proximity of Haslemere railway station.

In November 2006 the Fernhurst Society published a book, "Voices of Fernhurst", comprising edited extracts of oral history interviews with local villagers.

Governance

An electoral ward in the same name exists. This ward includes Linchmere and had at the 2011 census a total ward population of 5,334.

St Margaret's Church

The Anglican parish church, dedicated to St Margaret of Antioch, was rebuilt in the nineteenth century, the south aisle in 1859 and the tower and spire as part of a general restoration by Anthony Salvin in 1881. The interior is plain.

May Revels

Every May the traditional "Revels" fete is held on the green, raising funds for village societies and some local charities. The event includes various local May-time celebrations, such as maypole dancing, and the May queen is elected from the local area. In May 2006 a film of the village for the Meridian ITV programme "Village voices" was filmed involving the revels and local craftsmen. It was screened on 15 August 2006.

Verdley estate

Verdley Place

About a mile south east of the village lies the Verdley estate. Verdley Castle, probably a 14th-century fortified manor house, or hunting tower, now demolished, lay in present-day Henley Wood. Its concealed wooded location in a hollow afforded protection for smugglers bringing goods from the south coast.

Closer to the village, Verdley Place was built by architect Anthony Salvin in 1873–5, as a country house for Charles Savile Roundell. Baron Davey was living here with his wife, three daughters and a son in the 1891 census. This Grade II listed building and the surrounding estate was the home of ICI's Plant Protection Division and its predecessors from 1945 at the Fernhurst Research Station and subsequently a Zeneca research and development centre. It has since been sold and converted to a residential development.

Notable people

  • Louise (Lulu) Cartwright, formerly of Ruby Flipper and Legs & Co. dance troupes, grew up in Fernhurst where her father was a GP.
  • Margaret Hutchinson, teacher, naturalist and author lived in Kingsley Green and ran Yafflesmead Froebel School from 1931 to 1955.
  • William Joyce, otherwise Lord Haw-Haw, spent his honeymoon in Fernhurst and patronised the Spread Eagle pub.
  • Baron Onslow of Woking (1926-2001), former MP for Woking lived at Highbuilding in Vann Road, Fernhurst.
  • Robert Pearsall Smith (1827–1898), evangelist and lay leader in the Higher Life movement in the United Kingdom in the late 19th century.
  • According to the Fernhurst Society, "proof was found" that Joachim von Ribbentrop expressed his intention to live in Fernhurst "when Germany won the war".
  • It is claimed that Bertrand Russell wrote Principia Mathematica in the house "Millhanger" about a mile south east of the village.
  • Anthony Salvin, a notable English architect, built and lived at Hawksfold and is buried in the village.
  • Margaret Shaw, a diarist remembered for "A Countrywomans Journal: the sketchbook of a passionate naturalist" lived and recorded her diary in Fernurst in 1926–27.
  • Hannah Whitall Smith (1832-1911), evangelist and prominent member of the Women's suffrage movement moved to Fernhurst in 1888, wife of Robert Pearsall Smith.

Bibliography

Rickman, John (1998), The Land of Lod, Peggy Rickman, Midhurst, England

References

References

  1. "2001 Census: West Sussex – Population by Parish". West Sussex County Council.
  2. "Civil Parish population 2011". Office for National Statistics.
  3. Ordnance Survey
  4. Pearce, H. (2012). "Hammer and Furnace Ponds – Relics of the Wealden Iron Industry". Pomegranate Press.
  5. "History: FURNHURST FURNACE also known as NORTH PARK FURNACE, LINCHMERE.".
  6. "Ward population 2011".
  7. Nairn, Ian. (1965). "[[Pevsner Architectural Guides#Buildings of England". [[Penguin Books]].
  8. (May 2006). "Fernhurst Furnace Preservation Group". Fernhurst Society.
  9. Tollemache Roundell, Julia Anne Elizabeth. (1884). "Cowdray: the history of a great English house". Bickers & Son.
  10. {{NHLE
  11. (1 July 2000). "Fernhurst History". The Fernhurst Society.
  12. "Fernhurst archives". The Fernhurst Society.
  13. "Lulu Cartwright – Biography".
  14. (1981). "A Childhood in Edwardian Sussex: The making of a naturalist". Saiga Publishing.
  15. (1998). "The Land of Lod: Fernhurst & Fridays Hill". Jane Rickman.
  16. (1998). "The Land of Lod: Fernhurst & Fridays Hill". Jane Rickman.
  17. "Fernhurst Society – Memories of Fernhurst – War years".
  18. Victor Davey, Helen and Kenneth Ouin: ''Walks around Fernhurst'', 1981
  19. Alexander Bologmolny. (2010). "Mathematics as a Language". Cut-the knot.org.
  20. Holder, Richard. (2004). "Salvin, Anthony (1799–1881)".
  21. Shaw, Margaret. (2002). "A Countrywomans Journal: the sketchbook of a passionate naturalist". Constable.
  22. (1998). "The Land of Lod". Peggy Rickman.
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