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Warningcamp

Village and parish in West Sussex, England


Summary

Village and parish in West Sussex, England

FieldValue
official_nameWarningcamp
countryEngland
civil_parishWarningcamp
regionSouth East England
static_image_nameWarningcamp House - geograph.org.uk - 1387125.jpg
static_image_width250
population156
area_total_km23.76
population_ref(Civil Parish.2011)
os_grid_referenceTQ033071
coordinates
post_townARUNDEL
postcode_areaBN
postcode_districtBN18
dial_code01903
constituency_westminsterArundel and South Downs
london_distance48 mi NNE
shire_districtArun
shire_countyWest Sussex

Warningcamp is a village and civil parish in the Arun District of West Sussex, England. It is 1 mi east of Arundel, on the east bank of the River Arun. The south-east quarter of the parish is woodland.

History

A medieval chapelry community of the parish of Lyminster, it contained 119 inhabitants in 1848. The tithes continued to belong until close to that date to Eton College however were commuted for £191 10s () saving a small glebe of 4 acres for the College to help to support the position of the priest.

Contemporary description

Local historian Mary Barber wrote in 2002 that:

"Warningcamp has even been called a 'township'. The former Arundel Youth Hostel, actually in Warningcamp, brought in some 7,000 visitors a year.

Most residents now work elsewhere or are retired. There are now five main areas of buildings; for convenience described Lower, Middle and Upper Warningcamp, Blakehurst and the Dover. The oldest surviving buildings are timber-framed from the 16th century. There was a village school from the 19th century until it closed in 1926. Warningcamp as part of [Leominster, had a] chapel dated from the 12th century, until the late 18th century [when it disappeared]. In the 19th century, the village school building was used as a chapel which finally was closed in the 1960s.

People often miss Warningcamp, on the east bank of the River Arun opposite Arundel, on their way to Burpham [an isolated hillside village with many more listed buildings]. It is a very linear development stretched out mainly along the east-west road from the River Arun. It has altered its boundaries over the centuries to include Calceto Priory and Clay Lane; hence they are included where relevant. At this present time, they come under Lyminster Parish, with the southern boundary of Warningcamp stretching through the woods to the Dover. An ancient bank can still be seen near the ditch. The highest point near the north-east boundary is at . The underlaying geology of alluvial flood plain, chalk, head, Reading beds, and clay with flints...

Warningcamp lists its facilities as one telephone box, two post boxes and a bus shelter, making it one of the poorest served communities in West Sussex, and officially a hamlet (no church, no school, pub or shop)."}}

The Monarch's Way long-distance footpath passes through the village close to the former youth hostel. The parish has many footpaths and rises from 2m above mean high tide at the River Arun to 68m above Ordnance Datum along some of its north edge.

References

References

  1. [http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk Key Statistics; Quick Statistics: Population Density] [[United Kingdom Census 2011]] ''[[Office for National Statistics]]'' Retrieved 10 May 2014
  2. Samuel Lewis (publisher). (1848). "Warmfield - Warsop". Institute of Historical Research.
  3. (1 January 2002). "Warningcamp: The History of a Sussex Community". Woodfield Publishing.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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