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M25 Big Pickle

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Post to the east Bletchingley North Park


Big Pickle
This is marked on maps and appears to be associated with an earthwork. On earlier maps a square earthwork is marked as Little Pickle. They seem to have been eradicated by the sand extraction and archaeological site (in the square to the south.

Green Lane.
A track running north/south and apparently accessing the sand extraction site. It passes under the motorway as a trackway.

Roughets Lane
Lane through woodland with a number of posh houses on it

M25 Whitehill

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Post to the east Big Pickle
Post to the north Redhill Brook
Post to the west Warwick Wold


Black Bushes
Coppice and site of nature conservation importance


Hextalls Lane
The Hermitage, This large house is now divided into a number of separate dwellings
Old Hextalls.  The house is built of firestone. There is a well to the rear of the houses  It is lined with firestone with a pipe to take water into the huse.

Kitchen Copse
Owned by Surrey Wildlife Trust. Semi natural coppiced woodland

M25

Place Farm Road
Place Farm. This includes the remains of the 16th gatehouse to Bletchingly Place. The house was rebuilt in  the 18th. It is in red and brown brick. A central with a  wood columned portico in the blocked former gateway.
Bletchingley Place The Gatehouse is the only remaining building from Bletchingley Place, built by Duke of Buckingham, appropriated by Henry VIII and given to Anne of Cleves in 1540 after her divorce from the King. The house was demolished in 1680 by the Earl of Peterborough. There have been some excavations finding a medieval or post medieval manor house. The house is said to have been in Brewer Street. The meadow on the west side of the house contains a number of terraces which may be the remains of ornamental gardens.
Cleves Cottage . This is in wealdstone with brick dressings.
Barn. This is 17th made from re-used Tudor bricks.
Bletchingley Place. Drains. These were uncovered during excavations in 1993. It consists of two conduits near  the northern edge of  Place Farm.
Well.  Archaeologists found a 13th well which could have supplied water for the big house.

The Conduit
Bridle Way running north east from Whitehill. Said to be very rough and steep. It is part of a road network made up of private streets and bridleways managed by the Whitehill Residents Association.
Red Gables Court. The house was built in the early 1900’s as a convalescent retreat for the wealthy, It is ‘in the Lutyens style’.In the Great War it was a convalescent home for troops.
Red Gables Lodge, this was built as housing for medical staff.
Tip Cottage. . This was the Acetylene house now converted to housing, The entire development was originally lit by gas generated here,
Mine shafts. These lay between the M25 and The Conduit. There were bumps in a field and also spoil heaps in a nearby copse,


Whitehill
Whitehill Cottage. 17th house
Old Quarry Hall Farm
Becks Cottage. 17th house. This was previously called Little Heckstall.
Conduit Shaw. Woodland site of designated nature protection
Brick field. This is shown on maps in the 19th at the junction with The Conduit. It had closed by 1900.

Sources
Hunter. Web site
Penguin. Surrey
Pevsner. Surrey
Surrey Wildlife Trust. Web site
Wealden Cave and Mine Society. Web site

M25 Rockshaw Road

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Post to the east Redhill Brook
Post to the south Warwick Wold


M25

Pendell Wood
Wood of nature conservation importance

Rockshaw Road
Chaldon Rise Nursing Home. This was Merstham Red Cross Auxiliary Hospital which opened in 1915. It was staffed by the Surrey/84 Voluntary Aid Detachment and later affiliated to the Horton (County of London) War Hospital in Epsom. A recreation room was built in the garden. It closed in 1919. The current nursing home cares for adults with mental health disorders.

Spring Bottom Lane
Said to be quarry and mine remains in the area

Warwick Wold Road
Rockshaw House. The house appears to date from the 1880s and used as a private residence. In the Second World it was initially used as a home for girls guarded by nuns. Later it was used by the Royal Corps of Signals, Canadian soldiers and then REME. Considerable damage was done. After the War it became a furniture depository for Batchelar & Son Ltd which of Croydon. By the early 1950s it was in total disrepair and in 1955 it was demolished. A year later it was replaced and the present house built.
Furzefield Wood. This is ancient woodland with many old oak trees


Sources
Archaeology. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site
Rockshaw Road. Web site

M25 Rockshaw Road Merstham

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Post to the east Rockshaw Road
Post to the south Redhill Brook


Bedlams Bank
Chaldon Bottom There are about 17 kilometres of galleries constituting an mine system from medieval to the 28th. The galleries were dug into a small artificial face by sinking a pit into the ground. The best example is at Bedlam's Bank where firestone for building was quarried. This is a heavily wooded area which includes the entrance to one, two, or more mines..

Heronswood Mere,
Heronswood Mere, This was at one time called New Pond. It is also said when it was realized that the Croydon, Merstham and Godstone Railway would go no further than Merstham, plans were made for a canal to go to Arun by canal. An 1811 plan for this marks the pond which tp be  a feeder reservoir for the canal, It is not known if it existed before 1811 and is not shown on earlier map. It is also said to be an artificially dammed up mill pond for Merstham's second or eastern water mill
This was to have been a point where the Godstone and Reigatte branches diverged on the never built Godstone extension to the Croydon Merstham and Godstone railway (actually a horse powered tramway).

M23
The London – Crawley Motorway, which was planned to extend into London, with a terminus on Ringway 2, the never built replacement for the  South Circular Road.
Junction 8. This is the Merstham Interchange,the junction with the M25. It is one of only three four-level stacks in the United Kingdom.

M25
Junction 7. This is the Merstham Interchange, the junction with the M23

Ockley Wood
The Battle of Aclea took place in 851 between the West Saxons and the Vikings.  It might have been here, or it might have been at the other Ockley to the west.

Radstock Way
NewMerstham,  A housing estate, originally entirely public housing, this was built to a geometric layout in the eastern fields. It was begun after the Second World War and finished in the 1970s.
Furzefield Wood. The woodland has an entrance opposite the end of Delabole Road. There are various structures in the wood and events are organised for local children. It is managed by Surrey Wildlife Trust.
Oakley, a small country house wirh has 19th gothic styling
Oakley Youth Club. This uses Oakley House and some outbuildings


Sources
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
SABRE. Web site
Surrey County Council. Web site
Wealden Cave and Mining Society. Web site
Wikipedia. As appropriate

M25 Merstham Station

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Post to the west Merstham Rockshaw Road
Post to the south Redhill Brook Merstham


Ashcombe Road
The road name could relate to Herbert Ashcombe Walker, at that time General Manager of Southern Region. The road is built along the line of a road descending into a quarry,
Houses. In 1930 20 terraced houses here were built by the Southern Region of British Railways to provide accommodation for its employees.

Brook Road
Brook Road Open Space. Recreation ground with play facilities etc.

Church Hill
St. Katharine's Church. This was originally a wooden church built on a knoll of Merstham firestone which was replaced around 1100, after the first Crusade. It is dedicated to Katharine a Christian Martyr and princess from Alexandria. In an alcove is a figure of her holding the wheel on which she was tortured. The font, and a few stones are all that remain of this church. Around 1220 a new Early English Church replaced it built of the greyish-green Merstham stone. The church was ‘restored’ in 1861 and again in 1875. The church tower is said to have a centre arch built with stone from old London Bridge..  . There is a memorial tablet to Lt. George Jolliffe, R.N., killed at the battle of the Nile. The mosaic floor of the north chapel was the work of Constance Kent in prison for murder. There is a memorial plaque to the dead of the Great War and the Second World War, including civilian dead.
Lych gate. This was made from the remains of Merstham Windmill, dismantled because of railway building in 1896. The tapering cast iron octagonal windshaft is the central  support and on either side are two peak millstones, faceworking side uppermost. This lychgate was given by the Stacey family in 1897.
Grave yard. Tombstone of Henry Hoof contractor on London to  Brighton Railway. There is a detailed memorial to Edward Banks - picture of London Bridge which he built and hus tomb us maintained by Bridge House Estates.

Delabole Road
Furzefield Primary School. Presumably this was built with the estate, post Second World War.

Furzefield Wood
Nature conservation area and woodland used as a local community resource. (the main part is in the square to the east)

Heronswood Mere
(the main part is in the square to the east)

High Street
Merstham Baptist Church. The first chapel was built in 1874 on the site of two derelict cottages bty Redhill Baptist Chapel using stone quarried from Nutfield and Reigate Hill. This remained in use until 1958 when it was demolished. The site is now a shop.
Millennium Clock erected in December 1999 on the corner of School Hill.

London Road North
London Road was part of the Croydon and Reigate turnpike set up in 1818 with a tollgate in the High Street.
St. Katherine’s New Graveyard. This is on the other side of the road from the church and maintained by the local authority.
Merstham Mill. A mill is listed here in Domesday. It is however undocumented until 1784 and by 1801 when water supply problems had begun to result from local quarrying. This was a water mill on a stream or leat which is said to have run from springs on Marlin Glen above Gatton Bottom to form the Merstham brook, a tributary of the Mole. At Merstham there was a large mill pond on the west side of London Road. Eventually it fell out of use and was demolished in 1938. The M25 now runs through the site and there are no remains.

London Road South
War Memorial. This is on the corner with School Lane. It is a granite Celtic cross with names from the Great War on the front and the Second World War on the left hand side. The Inscription says "Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God" .In memory of the men of Merstham who laid down their lives for their country in the Great War. To the memory of those who gave their lives for their country 3rd Sept 1939-15th Aug. 1945,

M25A footbridge carries a footpath from Malmstone Avenue across the M25
Drainage adit. At the northern end of the footbridge is said to be the ext to a drainage adit for Merstham Greystone Lime Works. This was built in 1810 under the Rockshaw Ridge to take water off to the south and to help prevent funding.  It ran for  half a mile but the water table restricted the length of the mine into the hill. It was the removal of this water which led to the Merstham water mill closing. It has been blocked since the 1820s.

Malmstone Avenue
Named after a firestone, known locally as Malm Stone, which was quarried in the area.
Merstham Bund. This is a massive earth bank built to shield Merstham from the noise of motorway traffic and it runs parallel to Malmstone Avenue. It is managed as a nature reserve and community resource.

Railway
There are a number of railway lines in Merstham and there have been more. One line serves the station and another through line bypasses it. There have also been numerous sidings and branch lines to serve the quarries
Merstham Station. The first station called Merstham was to the south (in a square to the south) and was served by both South Eastern and London and Brighton trains, who were in dispute. It existed 1841-1844.
Merstham Station. The present building dates from 1844 and was built by the South Eastern Railway.. The up side booking office was rebuilt in late 1980s and the footbridge dates 1905. This station was not used by London Brighton and South Coast Railway trains which passed through it until after the creation of the Southern Railway in 1923. These trains were on the South Eastern line to Dover.
Quarry Line. The sharing of the line to Brighton through Merstham  caused a great deal of friction between the South Eastern Railway  and the London Brighton and South Coast Railway . Eventually the London to Brighton got Parliamentary approval to build a line through here which bypassed South Eastern stations, including Merstham, this becae known as the Quarry Line. It runs parallel to the original line to the east.
Sidings. In the Second World War sidings were added between the station and the 'Quarry Line' used for goods trains. In the 1970s a siding was added for the construction of the M23 and M25, There was also a coal yard parallel to the west side of the line in an area which is now the station car park.
Land between the lines. This is a tract of derelict land, with chalk spoil tips deposited there as a result of the excavation of the tunnels and cuttings.  The lines went round some existing pits and one of these is now the site of railway housing in Ashcombe Road.  North of the station is an area of workshops and there is also some car parking, Archaeologists found a small section of quarry between the two railway lines west of Football Field. Also note an area known as Windmill Field (see below)
Merstham Signal Box. This was on the downside  platform. It was opened 1905 and built to a traditional design. It was thought to be to the top of an earlier cabin built onto a new brick base. In 1983 it was replaced by a panel in the Redhill 'A' Signal Box and later by the Area Signalling Centre at Crawley
Sidings to Greystone Lime Works. A standard gauge railway siding left the western main line just north of Merstham Station and crossed the eastern main line immediately in front of its tunnel portal. It then ran into the Greystone Lime pits through a cutting. It is said that the abutments of the bridge in front of the tunnel portal are till in place and that the track can still be partly traced.
Siding. Another siding ran south east  from the Lime Works siding soon after it left the main line. This ran to another quarry. By the early 20th this area had become a rifle range.(see note on Stonefield below)

Rockshaw Road
The road was formed in the 1880s when houses were first advertised and built there.
Windmill., This was built in 1756 and stood on the north side of the road.. At the end of the 19th it was disused and in a state of disrepair and it was on the line of a planned railway. It was demolished in 1896. Local children left school early to watch it coe down. Some of the wood was used in the church lychgate, as were some of the stones. Other stones are elsewhere in the area
Windmill Field. A quarry existed here before 1900. A part of the field survives between the railways and some workings were discovered and explored by Croydon Caving Club, east of the Quarry Line, which they called Potato Field Mine, This is thought to hafe been a surface quarry worked in 1839 which later developed to the north into underground galleries some of which have survived on either side of the Quarry Line.
Stone Field. In the 1860s a siding ran eastwards from the limeworks siding to a quarry mouth on the northern edge of the field and lasted until the Quarry Line was built in 1899.. Stone field is said to be east of Windmill Field. Some underground workings may underlie this area but it may also have been an open work site for the extraction of hearth stone.

School Hill
This follows the line of the old pre-turnpike route from Merstham to Reigate
8 The Golden Wheel. Small timber-framed cottage refaced with plaster and some timbering visible, There is a shop window on the front. This was once a dairy or a tea shop and a wheel hung outside on a pub type gantry.  The wheel now appears to be fixed to the front of the house.
8 The Limes 18th house in red brick


Station Road North
Bellway House. Offices and yard for housing developer.
Merstham Village Club. Merstham Village Club is a private members club that was founded after the Great War. Membership is open to Merstham residents..
Village Hall,. This was built in the 1920s
Fire Station. This is now an upholstery business although the words ‘Fire Station” remain on the building. It appears to have been a humble building probably converted from a previous use.
Telephone Exchange – still in use


Sources
Bayliss, Retracing the First Public Railway
British Listed Buildings. Web site   
Bygone Kent
London Transport. Country walks
Merstham Village Hall. Web site
Merstham History. Web site
Merstham Village Club. Web site
Moore. History of Redhill
Old Reigate. Web site
Penguin. Surrey
Pevsner. Surrey
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
Rockshaw Road. Web site
Stidder. Watermills of Surrey.
Surrey County Council. Web site
Surrey Fire Service Museum. Web site
Surrey Industrial Archaeology
War Memorials. Web site
Wealden Cave and Mine Society. Web sitej
Wheatley and Meulenkamp. Follies
Wikipedia. As appropriate

M25 Merstham centre

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Post to the east Merstham Station


Church Path
Footpath leading from Quality Street to St.Katherine’s Church. This path, which was once a main road, once crossed the mill pond via a foot bridge and now crosses the motorway, also by a bridge. It also crosses Church Meadows.
Church Meadows. The M25 now runs across this area.

Gatton Bottom
This road follows a dry valley from Reigate Hill and is an access road to Junction 8. It is on the border between the steep rise of the North Downs and the rise and then fall of Gatton Park to the south. Wellingtonia were planted here in the 19th,
Gatton Mine.  It is said that a brick-lined passage leads to a large chamber with a series of short, blocked passages. This was thought to have been worked by a steam crane in 1819 and was still open about a century.
Merstham House This was the home of the Joliffe family until 1899. William Joliffe had married the coal owning Hylton’s heiress – his son was later to be Lord Hylton. He built here in 1790 Mersham House, which was demolished in 1834. He also enlarged The Cottage which later too was called Merstham House. The family eventually moved to Somerset in the 1930s. The house was  was then let until the Second World War, when it was occupied by the Canadian forces. It was pulled down in the 1950s and the M25 was built through the grounds in the late 1970s. A stone wall, some of which remains, was built to contain a flat lawn in the garden of the house.
Great House. This was opposite to Mersham House but demolished in 1830 for structural reasons.
Wellhead Farm. This includes Wellhead which is a  house built in the late 17th with a timber frame. There is also a barn in Estate Yard which was built of Merstham stone in the 19th
Dovecote. This 14th structure stood originally on the land now used by Merstham Station. When the railway was built it was removed here onto a 19th brick foundation. Inside are stone shelves with nesting holes on each shelf.
Wellhead Wood
Old Church House. This was originally St. Katherine's Rectory. This is a 16th timber framed house with its hearth at the back. A brick house has been added at the front

Grange Court.
This is on the site of Merstham Grange
Merstham Grange. This was demolished in the 1970s or possibly earlier. It was a ‘prep’ school but the headmistress in the 1950s was a Miss Hummel closely involved in local drama and music events. Replaced with housing.

High Street
The short stretch of the High Street is the remains of the original through road. Before the construction of the turnpike in 1807 it would have connected to the south to School Hill and to the north to Quality Street and the current footpath to Marling Glen
Feathers Pub. The present building was built for the brewers in 1911 and on the building are signs for ‘N&C’ the Nalder & Collyer's Brewery Co Ltd of Croydon.Basically an 18th building was given an arts and crafts frontage and inside are art nouveau features – particularly fireplaces have been added. It was previously Ye Olde Feathers Hotel and was a coach stop for the Brighton coach, The building has retained some 18th structure to the back and there are 17th outbuildings.
Small garden with a display of rails and sleepers from the Godstone quarries – similar to those which would have been on the Croydon, Merstham and Godstone Railway. There is also a seat, recently repaired by a local councillor himself.
A tollgate for the 1804 turnpike road was just south of The Feathers.
Horse Trough. Erected 1888 for the Metropolitan Drinking Fountain & Cattle Trough Association
Thatched Barn. This stood here as a local landmark but was burnt down in 1969.
Village Pound. A walled enclosure.
7 Old Smithy. This is marked as ‘smithy’ on old maps and a building at the back show as ‘abattoir’
House, next to the old pub, was the innkeeper’s house. It later became a shop.
Cottage of Content Pub. This closed in the 1960s. They sold Pagden's ale which came from the Hope Brewery in Church Street, Epsom. It is now a private house
Townsend’s Meads, this is the name shown on 19th maps for the meadow land to the west of the High Street. It was also called Towney Mead and was the common land for the town’s men.

Home Farm Place
Housing on the site of  Home Farm. The 1769s barn has been converted to housing and other buildings incorporated.

London Road South
This is on the line of the 1804 turnpike road. Both London Roads north and south were created by the turnpike and thus changed the layout of the town with a new through road.
Merstham Primary School. A school is shown on this site since the 1890s. It would seem reasonable to suppose that this is the school built in 1898 as a replacement for the National School in Quality Street.
Old Saddlery. This sold saddles and stirrups and was restored by Paxton Watson in 1931. It is now private housing.

M25

Quality Street
This would have been the main road north out of the village before the construction of the turnpike road in the early 19th
Quality Street took its name from James Barrie's comedy. Ellaline Terris and Seymour Hicks were in the play and when they lived here the street was named after the play..
Gateposts at the end of the road here the entrance to the estate of Merstham House. The M25 motorway now goes through the estate where the house stood.
Copse next to Priory Mead, This copse was the site of an archaeological dig before the construction of the M25 Motorway in 1972. Two long banks were identified which where thought to be part of the landscaping for Merstham House.
Priory Mead. This is a 17th house which was the lodge to Merstham House.
The Glade House. This was built in the same style as Merstham House in its grounds by architect Gordon Jeeves,.  The ornamental mound from Merstham House is in the grounds.
Manor House. This was the manor house of Chilberton Manor . It has the date of 1598 on it and is a timber framed building fronted in red brick. It was restored by Paxton Watson in 1905 who also added Court Cottage alongside
National School. Set up in 1847 and was moved to London Road South in 1898, It is a half-H-shaped building with a timber frame but which has been rebuilt inside..
Almshouses and poorhouse. These are behind the school and are now three houses, A tablet on them records that "This Poorhouse was rebuilt and the land given by Hylton Joliffe Esq. 1816".
Merstham Cricket Club. Founded in 1864 and played at the Quality Street ground from 1890 thanks to Lord Hylton who also provided a pavilion nd a chain for protecting the pitch from cattle, Apart from breaks for the two world wars they have played here ever since.
Old Forge. This is the remains of a late mediaeval house which was, timber framed with brick infill. It was previously called 'Cromwell House', but was renamed by the Hicks family of actors. It was restored by Paxton Watson.
The Barn House. Built in 1902 by Paxton Watson for himself. Rough cast with plaster reliefs. It replaced the old wheelwrights shop.
Meadowside. Home of Paxton Watson’s sister
The Refreshment Rooms and White Elephant Coffee Tavern. This was in the cottages, dated 1897 which are now partly taken up by the garage in London Road.

Reigate Hill Golf Course
The Golf Course was designed by the David Williams as an 18 hole, par 72 course layout in 1995. The course appears to take up much of what was the grounds of Mersham House plus some common land

Rocky Lane
The lane was originally built as an entrance drive to the Gatton Estate
Middle Lodge. Single story house.

Sources
Archaeology database. Web site
Bourne Society. Web site
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Feathers. Web site
Geocaching. Web site
Historic England. Web site
London Transport. Country Walks
Pastscape. Web site
Penguin. Surrey
Pevsner. Surrey
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
Sowan. Firestone and hearthstone mines in the Upper Greensand of East Surrey 
Surrey County Council. Web site
Wikipedia, as appropriate. Web site

M25 Gatton Bottom

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Post to the east Merstham Centre


Ashstead Hill
Hill with what may be remains of prehistoric earthworks

Gatton Park
This square covers only a small part of the park. The town hall, the school and various monuments are in the square to the south.

Jubilee Plantations
Sites of nature conservation interest

M25

Rocky Lane
Whitehall Farm. Farm with barns where soft fruit was once a speciality. There are mine shafts on the site.
North Lodge. This lodge marks the main entrance to Gatton Park and the Royal Alexandra and Albert School. It is a small square, single storey building from the early 19th. White-washed and thatched with a thatch cat and bird on the roof, It is surrounded by a picket fence and a  gate with wrought iron ornament.
Orpington Nurseries. This nursery was well known post Second World War for its prize winning chrysanthemums and irises.

Tower Wood
This is predominantly beech and Yew with a sub canopy of box.
Stone mine. This was a source of Reigate Stone, used extensively for medieval and post-medieval buildings in London and the Home Counties. Quarrying was carried on in the 19th and was amongst the 109 quarries surveyed in 1834. Commercial quarrying was carried out until the 1870s. In the 2000s this quarry was opened for investigations and a. permanent access shaft of concrete rings was installed . Inside The pillar-and-stall quarry has seven or eight sub-parallel extraction tunnels running steeply down-dip, linked by narrow man-ways. The walls and working faces have toolmarks and low-level axle marks where low wheeled trolleys were used,


Sources
British Listed Buildings.
Gatton Park.Web site
Industrial Archaeology News
London Transport. Country walks
Penguin, Surrey, 
Pevsner. Surrey
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
Subterranea Brittanica. Web site
Surrey County Council. Web site
Wheatley and Meulenkamp. Follies

M25 Upper Gatton

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Post to the east Gatton Bottom


Crossways Lane
Crossways Farm. This is a dairy farm

Gatlands Shaw
Woodland, first noted in 1770

Gatton Field Shaw
Woodland

Glebe Shaw
Woodland. Ancient and semi natural

High Road
The Old Forge.This site is shown as a smithy until the 1930s.

Majority Plantation
Woodland

M25

Manships Shaw
Woodland

Upper Gatton Park
This square covers the house of gardens of what was a grand estate. There is an 18th mansion, once used as a servants wing to a now demolished 19th house.

Sources
Archaeology Data Service. Web site
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Oxford Dictionary of Place names of Surrey

M25 Gatton

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Post to the north Upper Gatton


Catsbrains Shaw
Woodland

Gatton Bottom
Little Buck Wood
Jubilee Plantation
Great Buck Wood. Woodland

Gatton Park
This is the southern section of Gatton Park. Most of the features, and the school lie in the square to the northeast
Half Moon Clump. Woodland
Nut Wood
Wingate Hill
Tower Lodge Cottages. These are at an entrance to Gatton Park and are built of Gatton stone.

M25

Reigate Hill
Bridge House Hotel

Wray Lane
Path off to the east going down to Gatton is the original carriage drive of the park.  This runs on to the North Downs Way.
National Trust woodland 
Car park at the top of Wingate Hill. Refreshment stall, toilets, and a bridge over the road to lead to Reigate Hill.


Sources
Gatton Park. Web site
National Trust. Web site

M25 Reigate Hill

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Post to the east Gatton
Post to the west Colley Hill

Blackhorse Lane
The end of the road has been diverted slightly to the north of its original route, to make way for the M25 junction.
Old chalk pit. This is shown on 1890s maps as lying on the north side of the road, on a site which now appears to be part of Junction 8.

Brighton Road
Crossways House. This stood at the junction of Brighton Road and Reigate Hill. It offered refreshments – and dinner, bed and breakfast for six shillings. It also appears to have been the home of Arthur Sherwell, MP and temperance reformer. The site is now under the mway junction 8.

Fort Lane
Margery Hall. The house was built by George Taylor. He was the owner and operator of a hearthstone mine on Colley Hill, to the west, and the local water company. He wanted to provide Reigate with fresh water.  He sunk a well with feeder adits at the base near Margery Hall area, but wanted to tap the water from below. His idea was to drive boreholes upwards into the roof of mine galleries, and tap the water. His water company was bought by East Surrey Water Company before he could do this. Margery Hall, was supplied with water pumped from a well at the base of Colley Hill. At Margery Hall a pitch covered waer main has been found.
Furzefield Copse. In the 1890s two small covered reservoirs are shown here. The copse was north of Margery Hall.
Two Acre Wood. This wood is now south of Junction 8. In the 1890s it is shown as an old chalk pit
British Broadcasting Association Reigate Radio Transmitter Station
National Air Traffic Services Mast
Blackhorse Wood, woodland
East Surrey Water tower plus two telecoms masts.
Rock Farm
Reigate Fort. This was built in 1898 as part of the London Defence Scheme and was decommissioned and sold in 1907. In the Great War it was used for storing ammunition. It was reopened in the Second World War and is thought to have been part of the communications network for the army's South East Command which was based in nearby tunnels. After the war the fort was used by the Scout Association. It was designated as a Scheduled Ancient Monument in 1972 and has since been restored with the help of various grants and volunteers. The whole area of hillside below the fort is said to be full of tunnels, now inaccessible, where military activities took place during the Second World War.
Memorial on Bomber Crash site. In 1945, an area of mowed, open grass is where a US Flying Fortress bomber crashed having been on its flight home from a bombing raid on the Czech border. Clouds had made visibility impossible in the plane had descended to 300ft and collided with the hill.  In 2015  a sculpture was installed at the site, It is two wing tips the size and shape of a B-17(G) by sculptor Roger Day. Molten fuselage aluminium, from the crash site, has also been incorporated into it.
Fort Lodge. This was built in the 1940’s and used as the home of the Bishop of Woolwich.
East Fort Cottage. Hilltop Holiday Home for Cats.
Four Acre Upper Woods, Woodland

M25
Reigate Lane Interchange Junction 8. The M25 here is crossed by the A217 Brighton Road via Reigate


Margery Lane
Margery Hall Pig Farm. This was in fact a well known garden where specialist varieties of exotic plants were developed, An arboretum is shown on site.
Kiln field pit – south of Margery Lane this seems to have been another chalk pit – maybe with lime kilns.
Margery Hall Nursery. This is a stables and stud
Margery Farm, Farm with a large covered reservoir on site


Sources
Lower Kingswood Village News. Web site
National Trust. Web site
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
Royal Automobile Society. Web site
SABRE. Web site
Surrey County Council. Web site
Wealden Cave and Mine Society. Web site
Wikipedia. As appropriate

M25 Colley Hill

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Post to the east Reigate Hill


Buckland Road
This is a bridle way for the stretch which is on this square

Colley Hill
The National Trust along with Reigate and Banstead Council own the whole of the ridge here,.
Water tower,, Built in 1910 and owned by Surrey & District Water Co.
Colley Hill Hearthstone mines 1890, Reigate Mines until 1961, The main site is in the square to the south of this. There were also whiting extraction sites.
Natural chalk cave. This was in the area of the water tower. It appeared as a result of subsidence in 1966. It had a cavity 30ft long following the slope of the hill. In heavy rain  water flows into the cave and chalk is dissolved extending the cave.
Inglis Memorial drinking fountain. This was donated to the Borough by Lt Col Inglis in 1909. It was then for use by horses and was at the top of the original route up Reigate Hill. It houses a direction indicator and retains its mosaic roof
Obelisk. This is in memory of George Simpson Captain 5th Battalion The Queen's Royal West Surrey Regiment.
The Saddle Knob. This is a grassy slope, with an old quarry at its foot

Dents Farm. Stable and livery

Footpath between Margery Grove and Colley Hill
City of London Coal Tax post on the north side

Margery Grove
City of London Coal Tax post east side 200 yards from the south end
City of London Coal Tax post east side 100 yards from the south end
City of London Coal Tax post east side at the south end,. This is the most southerly post

Margery Wood
Woodland described as ‘fragmented habitat’ with lots of bluebells.

M25

Queen's Park
Parkland. This is an area of Colley Hill, presented to the borough of Reigate in 1902 by Mr. George Taylor as a pleasure ground.  This site is between 600 and 700 feet above sea-level with extensive views.

Sources
Chelsea Speleological Society. Newsletter
Coal tax duty posts. Web site
Dent’s Farm. Web site
London Transport. Country walks 
North Downs Landscapes. Web site
Penguin. Surrey
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
Wheatley and Meulenkamp. Follies

M25 Mogador

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Post to the east Colley Hill


Coneybury Hill

Juniper Hill

M25

Margery Grove
Swiss House. Is owned by the Seva Corporation, or another organisation, connected to Prem Rawat, and used as his home. He heads a US based spiritual organisation with many different existences. The house appears to date from the 1930s when it was called Lueg is Land.

Mogador
This is a hamlet of which the south west portion is covered in this square. This appears to consist of 1930s housing on unnamed bridle paths.
There are two City of London coal tax posts in the area of houses and bridle paths west of Margery Grove and south of Mogador Road

Mount Hill

Sources
Avator. Lord from Heaven. Web site
Coal tax sites. Web site
Wikipedia. Mogador. Web site.

M25 Walton Heath

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Post to the west Dorking Road Walton


Chequers Lane
Sturt House Priory Hospital. This is a private hospital for men with mental health issues. It provides a locked rehabilitation service in a rural setting. It is in a 19th listed building.

Dorking Road
Walton Oaks. This includes the commercial Headquarters in the Uk of Pfizer. They are – this an international innovative biopharmaceutical company working in medicines, vaccines and consumer healthcare.
Reservoir– this dates from 2007 and stores water to keep the golf course in good condition

M25

Walton Heath
Walton Heath Golf Course. The Club was founded in 1903.  The course was laid out by W. Herbert Fowler, as his first course venture; he was to become a leading course architect the UK. and US. It resembles a traditional seaside links from heather, gorse and bracken and is still one of the top 100 courses in the world. A new course opened in 1907 also designed by Fowler. The Old Course has hosted nearly 90 major championships including the Ryder Cup.


Sources
Pfizer. Web site
Priory Hospital. Web site
Walton Heath Golf Club. Web site

M25 Dorking Road Walton

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Post to the east Walton Heath


Dorking Road
Toll Cottage. This was apparently a toll house on a turnpike road under the (Sutton (Surrey), Reigate and Povey Cross Road Act. Now a private house.
Queens Wood

Herring Grove
Woodland, apparently which has suffered bad storm damage

M25

Sturts Lane
DEP Frith Park. Frith Park was used by DEP Ltd - a company making printing ink. It had been founded in Frankfurt by Samuel Kahn in 1908 and moved to England to escape the Nazis persecution, Samuel brought his family and business to Britain and establish. Later the company moved here and became DEP Ltd with products for the Offset printing industry. Production is now based in Runcorn.
Frith Park. The mansion and other buildings are to be turned into flats and other housing.
Frith Park Farm. Farmhouse.  Half of the current build is 16th with a timber-frame but refronted in late 17th and extended again in the 19th and 20th. There are also stables and a flint walled piggery. The farm is surrounded by deciduous woodlands separated by fields, and the area is crossed by a network of accessible paths

Sources
Banstead and Reigate Council. Web site
British Listed Buildings. Web site
DEP. Website
Turnpike and Toll House database. Web site
Woodland Trust, Web site

M25 Walton Park Wood


M25 Hurst Road Walton

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Post to the south Walton Park Wood

Great Hurst Wood
The woodland is mainly coppiced hazel with a show of bluebells in the spring and is ancient woodland

Hurst Road
Ede’s Barn. This has an 18th or earlier flint boundary wall.
Ede’s Barn Cottage. House in flint and brick
Albion Stud. Horse riding school and livery
Mid Surrey Branch Pony Club. This club is based mainly in the square to the east but their Trial Course is here south of Hurst Road

M25

Sandhill Wood.
Natural woodland. A Neolithic adze was found here in 1948.

Sources
Pastscape. Web site
Pony Club. Web  site
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
Surrey County Council. Web site


M25 Headley

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Post to the east Hurst Road, Walton



Costal Wood
Wood with ‘regimented conifers’.
Headley Clay Pigeon Shoot – takes place in the wood on specific dates

Hurst Lane
Old Telephone Exchange
Hook Wood, Wingfield Stables – livery
Headley Park Farm. Livery stables

Hurst Road
Walton Hurst Farm. The farmhouse is 16th with a timber frame and brick infill.
Dovecote. This is at the farm and is probably 19th in flint. Inside the upper walls are lined with wooden nesting boxes.
Steeple cottage –house with a steeple

M25

Oyster Hill.
Woodland. Deposit of fossilised oyster shells found here. Said to have been an extensive deposit in Thanet Sands. The wood was bought for the National Trust as the result of local gifts in 1980

Tilley Lane
Headley Park. This was first called Headley House and owned by the Ladbroke family with a interest in horse racing and the development of Ladbroke Grove, In 1895 it was sold to the John Mappin of Mappin and Webb, Jewellers who added to the house but it was burnt down in 1896.. It re built in 1898. Second World War it was split into 5 houses, including Farriers, below.
Farriers , In the second world war this was a temporary home to Joseph Kennedy, the American Ambassador to Britain. It is actually a wing of Headley Park. It was later used by the Canadian High Commission. It is now private housing.
Oyster Hill Forge. This is now an interior decoration shop. In 2009 it was Bubear & Jones' blacksmith and forgemaster. The building is 18th in flint with some weatherboarding A chimney serves an  interior furnace at the back,.

Sources
British Listed Buildings. Web site
Headley Clay Pigeon Shoot.  Web site
Headley. The Parish Plan. Web site
Leatherhead Local History Society. Web site
Mole Valley Council. Web site
Reigate and Banstead Council. Web site
Surrey Life. Web site

M25 Stane Street

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Post to the west Leatherhead Ermyn Way


Addlestone Wood
Ancient semi-natural woodland. Hazel under oak with flora

M25
Where the M25 crosses Stane Street (Pebble Lane) it is alleged a tunnel was built for badgers.

Pebble Lane Stane Street
Stane Street is a Roman road and as such on this stretch is a designated ancient monument. Roman roads were artificially made-up routes built by the Roman army from AD 43. They were to facitate the Imperial mail service, were also commercial routes and provided a network for settlement and industry. Many of them have continued in use and are beneath modern roads but the 3km length of Stane Street from Mickleham Downs survives well as part of a major route originally from Chichester to London. It has a central agger with a ditch on each side - visible in places as a U-shaped depression. South of Thirty Acres Barn the road forms a terrace cut into the chalk. Pebbles from the original construction have given the lane its current name. The lane is now subject to restrictions because of adjacent wealthy properties.
Concrete blocks where the lane crosses Headley Road. These look like defence strucrture


Shepherds Walk Stane Street
Thirty Acres Barn. This is a racehorse training establishment
Barrow mounds appear to show in aeriel photographs of  the area around the barn

Sources
Archaeological Database. Surrey. Web site
Historic England. Web site
Mole Valley Council. Web site

M25 Leatherhead Ermyn Way

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Post to the east Stane Street


Ermyn Way
Rayon Manufacturing Company. From 1926 artificial silk was made here by the Rayon Manufacturing Company. It closed because of a shortage of water on site and because of complaints about smell.
Goblin. Goblin took over the Rayon Company site in 1938, having moved from Fulham. Cecil Booth had designed and patented the prototype cleaner in 1901, setting up what became Goblin where the first portable cleaner was made in 1904, electrically driven from 1911. In the Second Wold War they made munitions and other equipment. Post war they made vacuum cleaners and large fixed plants for major buildings and ships.  In a market now dominated by Hoover they also diversified into gadgets like the Teasmade. By the 1970s the factory needed modernising and the site was sold and the company moved to Hampshire. The factory was demolished in 1984
Esso House. This is a headquarters for Esso opened in 1990. They are now part of Exxon Mobile.
Milner House. This was originally a 19th private house called The Long House. It was, bought by the Ex-Services Welfare Society for the Mentally Disabled after the Great War.  It is now a private nursing home
Remploy factory. Hunter's Workshops  were built adjacent to Milner House for access by their residents.  It was later taken over by Thermega Ltd who made woollen goods, electric blankets and medical heating pads. They employed disabled people from Milner House.  In 1981 Remploy took it over employing registered disabled people and later recycling electrical goods. It was closed down in 2007.

M25

Warren Way
Chace Farm Stud.  Livery Stables.
Vodaphone Mast

Sources
Industrial Archaeology of the Mole Valley
Mole Valley District Council. Web site
Remploy. Web site
Vardey. Leatherhead

M25 Leatherhead - Fortyfoot

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Post to the east Leatherhead Ermyn Way
Post to the west Leatherhead



Beechwood Park
Housing on part of the site for the Royal School for the Blind.

By pass road
This is divided by the roundabout at The knoll. North of the roundabout it is the A243, south is the A24 which continues that road which has joined it from the east and which originally continued in to the town centre.

Epsom Road
Downsend School. Pre-‘preparatory’ department in a building originally called The Rowans.
Christ Church. This dates from 1829 when it wass an independent Congregational church, joining the United Reformed Church in 1972. The current church was built in 1935 about to replace building in the town centre
Cottage Hospital. This was opposite the end of Garlands Road on the site now covered by Victoria House. The Leatherhead and District Victoria Memorial Cottage Hospital was opened in 1904 and enlarged in 1927. Later a house opposite, Fairmead, was added as the X Ray department. Patients were expected to provide their own bed wear and changes of bed linen.  In time it was decided to build a new hospital and fund raising began. The Cottage Hospital closed in 1940 when the new Leatherhead Hospital opened. In 1960 the former building was converted into a home for disabled people by the Voluntary Association for Surrey Disabled and renamed Victoria House.  By 2000 it was too the old and the home closed in January 2011. Victoria House is a block of flats built in 2005.


Forty Foot Road
This road was built before 1895. It was referred to as a private road and has never been adopted.
The Beeches. A residential care home,
Fortyfoot Recreation Ground. This was opened in 1925 by Leatherhead Urban District Council. It includes a small children's playground and football pitch and a bowling green which is used by Leatherhead Bowling Club. There is also an informal woodland area with a number of paths
Leatherhead Bowling Club. The club was founded in 1908 and moved here in 1925. They have hosted several Surrey County matches. In 1966 the Leatherhead Ladies Bowling Club was formed but in 2012, Ladies and Men’s associations merged nationally.
Fortyfoot Hall. This is also Epsom and Leatherhead Mencap Hall and likely to be replaced with flats above a new hall.
Woodlands School.   The school caters for pupils with severe or profound learning difficulties from across Surrey.
St.Marys Church of England Infants School. The school's name changed when it moved here from Poplar Road and it was officially opened in 1986 and closed in 2006.


Green Lane
This may be on the line of a long distance Bronze Age trackway called the Harroway.  A Saxon mass grave was found in this area in 1927.

Highlands Road
56-66 Kingston House. Royal School for the Blind.   This was founded in Southwark in 1799 and moved here in 1902. Was one of the largest such institutions in the world with the King as patron.  In 1939 at the start of the Second World War the school became King's College Hospital‘s Emergency Medical Service. With an operating theatre and laboratories, etc.   Part of the School was damaged by bombs in 1940. It was decommissioned in 1946 and the Chelsea Pensioners infirmary until 1956.  It was eventually re-opened in 1958. In the late 1990s the buildings were sold  and main building is now flats; Lavender Close and more blocks have been added. The Chapel is now serviced offices.
Entrance to the Royal School. The pillars remain without the gates. The Lodge is now a private house.

Knoll  roundabout
The Knoll was a house on the corner of Epsom Road and what became the ByPass Road. It was used as a school in the Second World Warl

Leatherhead road
Downsend School. Private fee paying ‘prep’ school. The school was founded, owned and run by the he Linford family. It first opened in Hampstead in 1898.  In 1940 it was set up at the Downsend site. By 2002 there were no more Linfords and it was sold to Asquith Court Schools Ltd, It is now run as a profitable business by Cognita

M25

Poplar Road
Leatherhead Community Hospital & Clinic. In 1938 work began on a new hospital to replace the Cottage Hospital in Epsom Road.  It opened in 1940 and immediately joined the Emergency Medical Service.  In 1948 it joined the NHS as a modern GP hospital. In 1959 Dr C.W. von Bergen one of the founders died. A plaque to his memory was unveiled by Lord Beaverbrook. In 2006 the Hospital became the responsibility of the Central Surrey Health a not-for-profit community services provider owned by its employees who continue to run it.
Church of England School, this was on site here for for 102 years but moced to new buildings on the Fortyfoot Road site in 1986. The old Poplar Road school was converted to maisonettes.

Quarry Gardens
There was a chalk pit in this area

Sources
Christ Church. Web site
Downsend School. Web site
Leatherhead Bowls Club. Web site
Lost Hospitals of London. Web site
Mole Valley District Council. Web site
SABRE. Web site
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