1
Post Office & Village Shop, Salvington Hill
Image: © Peter Holmes
Taken: 25 Jul 2009
0.00 miles
2
Public footpath 3130
Short cut from Salvington Hill to Furze Road.
Image: © Peter Holmes
Taken: 25 Jul 2009
0.00 miles
3
Village Shop and Barber Shop on Salvington Hill
Image: © Dave Spicer
Taken: 5 Oct 2011
0.00 miles
4
The Village Shop, High Salvington
Located on the corner of Salvington Hill and Furze Road. There are actually two businesses here, the Post Office on the left and a barbers to the right.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 30 Jun 2013
0.01 miles
5
The Little House, Furze Road, High Salvington
The small building in the foreground was originally the estate office opened in the 1920s when the suburb of High Salvington was developed. It certainly predates the house beyond though I'm currently unsure whether the building is part of the house behind.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 30 Jun 2013
0.06 miles
6
Church of St Peter High Salvington
Hidden behind a high hedge this church has a certain appeal and brought back memories of a church in my childhood which was also clad in corrugated iron.
Image: © Dave Spicer
Taken: 5 Oct 2011
0.06 miles
7
Honeysuckle Lane High Salvington
Honeysuckle Lane terminates for vehicles at the Honeysuckle Lane car park but continues as a restricted byway to meet the A280 near Tolmare Farm.
Image: © Dave Spicer
Taken: 5 Oct 2011
0.08 miles
8
Furzeholme, High Salvington
A cul de sac off Furze Road that was developed in the 1960s in the grounds of a former large house of the same name. The house still exists and is located around the corner.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 30 Jun 2013
0.09 miles
9
High Salvington Post Mill
Fully restored during the late eighties, during which time it survived the hurricane of 1987, its first regrinding was April 1991. The mills web site is www.highsalvingtonwindmill.co.uk
Image: © Dave Spicer
Taken: 5 Oct 2011
0.12 miles
10
High Salvington post mill, Furze Road, Worthing
Previously known as Durrington Mill this Grade II Listed post mill is described in the listing as having a fantail but no evidence exists to support this. The earliest written record of a mill in this location is in 1615 but the current mill was built around 1750. The windmill ground flour until 1897 and continued grinding animal feed until 1905. In 1907 the roundhouse was replaced with a concrete tea-room surviving well into the 1950s. Under the care of Worthing Borough Council who bought it for £2,250 in 1959 the mill was renovated in 1961. In 1965 the cottage and outbuildings were demolished. Gale damage in 1976 resulted in the formation of the High Salvington Mill Trust and a program to fully restore the mill. The new 58ft (17.6m) diameter sails were installed in 1987-8 and the new roundhouse built in 1990 before the mill started grinding flour again in 1991. In 1998 a split was discovered in one of the stocks and a new one was made and the sails refitted.
Image: © Jo and Steve Turner
Taken: 25 Sep 2009
0.12 miles