Sir Laurence Gomme’s original idea for a county history was realized by the publisher Herbert Arthur Doubleday, who not only gained Queen Victoria’s consent that the History should bear her name, but secured a special arrangement with the Public Record Office. The first volume (Hampshire I) appeared in 1900 and new volumes continue to be published, now much improved and updated, but remaining comprehensive, factual, reliable and unbiased reference works, based on original research.
Part 3 of Volume VI covers the north-eastern part of Bramber Rape including Crawley New Town, and the Burbeach, Singlecross, Tipnoak and Wyndham Hundreds. Off-mint.
The volume gives the history of the eleven parishes that form the north-eastern part of Bramber rape, from Upper Beeding in the south to Ifield in the north, together with that of Crawley new town, founded in 1947. The area lies mostly on Wealden sands and clays, where settlement was chiefly scattered. Many settlements originated as outlying holdings of manors centred in the south end of the rape; the parish of Beeding lay in two parts, Upper Beeding astride the scarp of the South Downs, and Lower Beeding eleven miles to the north. St. Leonard's Forest in Lower Beeding was roughly divided in the Middle Ages between woodland and heath; its present appearance is the result of 19th- and 20th -century afforestation and reclamation for agriculture, and settlement was later there than elsewhere. The 19th century saw a great influx of wealthy new residents, some of whom built large houses or laid out parks or gardens like those at Sedgewick Park or Leonardslee. In the mid 20th century the villages or hamlets of Upper Beeding, Hen-field, and Mannings Heath in Nuthurst have been much expanded. Crawley, part of whose built-up area lay in Ifield parish, was already a town by the later 19th century; of other places, only Henfield was larger than the average, offering some urban functions. There is little evidence of open-field agriculture except in the south; St. Leonard's Forest was largely used as rabbit warrens in the 17th and 18th centuries; and market gardening and fruit and flower growing were prominent, for instance around Albourne, in the 20th. Industrial activities before the foundationof Crawley new town included medieval saltworking in the Adur valley, ironworking, quarrying, and fishing, together with varied woodland industries, and cement manufacture at Upper Beeding.
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https://www.psbooks.co.uk/history-of-the-county-of-sussex-4516603The Victoria History of the County of Sussexhttps://www.psbooks.co.uk/media/catalog/product/5/1/516603_1c4f9edd61befdb4c42ba8bab12a9ea0.jpg15.9915.99GBPInStock/Academic/Highlights/Victoria County Histories/Academic/Categories/History/Almost Gone/Almost Gone History/Almost Gone/Almost Gone Academic/AcademicSir Laurence Gomme’s original idea for a county history was realized by the publisher Herbert Arthur Doubleday, who not only gained Queen Victoria’s consent that the History should bear her name, but secured a special arrangement with the Public Record Office. The first volume (Hampshire I) appeared in 1900 and new volumes continue to be published, now much improved and updated, but remaining comprehensive, factual, reliable and unbiased reference works, based on original research. <br><br>Part 3 of Volume VI covers the north-eastern part of Bramber Rape including Crawley New Town, and the Burbeach, Singlecross, Tipnoak and Wyndham Hundreds. <i>Off-mint</i>.Hardback00add-to-cartrrp_info:£75.00productId:61567bic_code:HBGHBG£75.00Ed. TP HudsonAcademic312x224mmOxford UPNoHardbackGeneral & World