Horne, Surrey

Horne

Church of St Mary the Virgin

A water vole at the British Wildlife Centre
Horne
 Horne shown within Surrey
Area  14.19 km2 (5.48 sq mi)
Population 811 (civil parish 2011)[1]
    density  57/km2 (150/sq mi)
OS grid referenceTQ3344
Civil parishHorne
DistrictTandridge
Shire countySurrey
RegionSouth East
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town HORLEY
Postcode district RH6
Dialling code 01342
Police Surrey
Fire Surrey
Ambulance South East Coast
EU Parliament South East England
UK ParliamentEast Surrey
List of places
UK
England
Surrey

Coordinates: 51°11′02″N 0°05′28″W / 51.184°N 0.091°W / 51.184; -0.091

Horne is a rural village and civil parish in the District of Tandridge in Surrey, England. The parish includes the hamlet of Newchapel and is home to the British Wildlife Centre. Eastern fields forming a narrow part of the parish are split by the A22 road, a main road to East Grinstead.

The civil parish covers 1,419 hectares (3,510 acres) and is centred 4.6 miles (7.4 km) east of Horley, 4.2 miles (6.8 km) west of Lingfield, 8.0 miles (12.9 km) SSW of Oxted, and 22.0 miles (35.4 km) south-east of Kingston upon Thames. At the 2011 Census the civil parish included the population of Newchapel

History

A British (Celtic) gold coin has been found in Horne, but is more probably a mark of transit than of settlement. Otherwise there are no prehistoric remains, such as are usually found in other Wealden parishes. Horne must have owed such importance as it had later to the iron industry.[2]

The parish lay within the Anglo-Saxon Tandridge hundred, where the wealthy and powerful would meet periodically at a level below that of the shire to decide on strategic matters, and later for settling disputes in the Hundred Court. The earliest reference to Horne by name was in the 12th century. Horne had a chapelry and manor but did not become a parish until 1705, from the southernmost part of Bletchingley (parish).[2]

Mr. Stileman, who was instituted parson in 1728, bought a house near the church, but this was afterwards bought by the parish for a workhouse, and so continued to be used until the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834. Horne Common was inclosed by an Act of 1810 and an order made on 14 April 1813. Jesus College, Cambridge parted with Horne Court Manor in 1891 to allow a parsonage house to be built instead.[2]

In 1953 parish boundaries were changed with the southern part of Horne gaining its own civil parish council, Felbridge, whilst to compensate for this parts of Godstone and Tandridge were added. Although the electoral division at County Hall is named Lingfield, which is well-known throughout the region for its horse-racing course, that neighbouring parish has no other historic connection to the village, nor the others within its division.[2]

Landmarks

Airfield and barrage balloon site

A temporary airfield was established to support the Normandy Landings in early 1944 on farmland straddling Bones Lane. It was constructed in three months and used for just seven weeks from May to June 1944. Thereafter it served as an anti-V-1 rocket balloon site for a month and was returned to farmland in 1945.[3]

Church

The heavily restored church in the heart of the village, dedicated to St Mary the Virgin, has 14th- and 15th-century windows. The south door dates from 1250, and there is a 14th-century oak screen and 15th-century chancel beams. Considerable restoration was undertaken in 1880.,[4] which robbed the building of almost all its archaeological interest and completely destroyed its early history.

The oldest feature now remaining is the south doorway, which dates from the middle of the 13th century, but this may possibly have been inserted in the walls of a 12th-century nave. A slight inclination of the chancel to the north shows rebuilding of the east end of the church, but here again the absence of any original detail earlier than a 15th-century rood stair in the west end of the south wall makes the dating of this rebuilding, if indeed it ever took place, a matter of conjecture.[2]

British Wildlife Centre

The British Wildlife Centre lies in the east of the parish, and has a collection of over 40 species of wildlife. The centre, developed on the site of a former dairy farm, opened in 1997, and participates in captive breeding programmes.[5][6][7]

Geography

The parish except for its far north, yielding sedimentary ironstone, is on the Wealden Clay[2] and was until the 16th century forested, rather than interspersed with six woodlands as it is today. Hornecourt Wood by the northern border is a Site of Special Scientific Interest. At the opposite end of the parish, Home Wood also occupies approximately 5% of the land. Elevations vary from 115m to 48m above sea level and the parish has several sources of the River Eden, Kent.[8]

Position within Tandridge

Demography and housing

The proportion of households in Horne who owned their home outright was within 4% of the borough and regional average. The proportion who owned their home with a loan was 8% greater than the regional average; providing overall a lower proportion than average of rented residential property and of social housing, and close to the average in Surrey.[1]

2011 Census Key Statistics
Output area Population Households % Owned outright % Owned with a loanhectares[1]
Horne (CP)811 324 34.6 38.01,419
2011 Census Homes
Output area Detached Semi-detachedTerracedFlats and apartmentsCaravans/temporary/mobile homesshared between households[1]
(Civil Parish)181 63 13 38 19 10

The average level of accommodation in the region composed of detached houses was 28%, the average that was apartments was 22.6%.

Local government

The United Kingdom Census 2011 considered the parish which is within the ward Burstow, Horne and Outwood, containing three of the four villages of the south-west of Tandridge. The parish borders the extreme south of the two central parishes, Godstone and Limpsfield. At Surrey County Council, one of 81 councillors represents the area who sits at Kingston for a division simplistically named Lingfield.[9]

Transport

The civil parish has no motorways or railways. It is centred 4.6 miles (7.4 km) east of Horley, 4.2 miles (6.8 km) west of Lingfield, 8.0 miles (12.9 km) SSW of Oxted, and 22.0 miles (35.4 km) south-east of Kingston upon Thames, which is the large town in Greater London where Surrey County Council meets. Guildford, the county town is further than this.

Horne is served by bus services 315 to Redhill and East Surrey Hospital and 236 to Crawley via Gatwick Airport.

Eastern fields are split by the A22 road, a main road to East Grinstead,[n 1] which also is used by those closest to the route as opposed to the M23 and main coastal route to access Eastbourne, a large coastal town and the route is a main one for a small portion of East Sussex.

Notes and references

Notes
  1. Shown green on the map.
References
  1. 1 2 3 4 2011 Census Key Statistics; Quick Statistics: Population Density 2011 Census Office for National Statistics
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 H.E. Malden (editor) (1912). "Parishes: Horne". A History of the County of Surrey: Volume 4. Institute of Historical Research. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  3. A Vision of Britain through time University of Portsmouth and others
  4. "St Mary the Virgin, Horne". A Church Near You. Church of England. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  5. "Animals at the British Wildlife Centre". British Wildlife Centre. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  6. "The Story of the Centre". British Wildlife Centre. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  7. "Conservation Objectives". British Wildlife Centre. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  8. Grid square map Ordnance survey website
  9. Division Map Surrey County Council

Media related to Horne, Surrey at Wikimedia Commons

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