1
Old Shoreham Road, Hove
The former A27 until the completion of the Brighton Bypass in 1991 it is now the A270. Between Hove Cemetery in the east and the junctions with Boundary Road/Carlton Terrace and Hangleton Road in the west the road provides the dividing line between the Knoll Estate to the north and Hallyburton Estate to the south, both developed from the 1920s onwards having once been part of the parish of Aldrington. The road was made a dual carriageway in the mid 1970s necessitating demolition of houses on the northern side of the road and curtailment of gardens on the southern side.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Dec 2016
0.03 miles
2
Isabel Crescent
Part of a small estate built between the railway, Old Shoreham Road, Boundary Road and Hove Cemetery in the 1920s. Taken from the junction with Olive Road.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 14 Jan 2009
0.06 miles
3
Isobel Crescent, Hove
The crescent is located to the east of Olive Road and was once the western end of a field called North Gores according to Aldrington's 1840 tithe map much of which became Hove Cemetery after 1882 whose boundary is marked by the line of trees beyond the houses to the right. Part of Hallyburton estate that was built in 1925 and named after the landowner, his and the builder's daughters.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 3 Dec 2016
0.06 miles
4
Graves, Hove Cemetery
On the western side of the southern section with Old Shoreham Road beyond the flint wall.
Hove Cemetery consists of two parts, the original section south of Old Shoreham Road that was first consecrated in 1882 and a second to the north of the road that opened in 1923 as an extension
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Jan 2017
0.06 miles
5
Olive Road, Hove
A road that links Old Shoreham Road, once the A27, to Portland Road, which was originally a farm track belonging to Aldrington Farm which was located south of the railway. Built up in 1925 as part of the Hallyburton estate whose roads were named after both the landowner and his and the builder's daughters.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 3 Dec 2016
0.07 miles
6
Hove Cemetery
The north western end of the cemetery that wasn't consecrated until 1912 although it was purchased at the same time as the rest in 1882. For three decades it was used as a hay field. The flint wall in the distance marks the location of old Shoreham Road beyond which is the northern part.
Hove Cemetery consists of two parts, the original section south of Old Shoreham Road that was first consecrated in 1882 and a second to the north of the road that opened in 1923 as an extension
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Jan 2017
0.08 miles
7
Stapley Court, Stapley Road, Knoll Estate, Hove
The block of flats are located on the eastern side of the road adjacent to the junction Old Shoreham Road, the A270. Originally the site of numbers 1-9 Stapley Road which appear to have been demolished along with houses on Old Shoreham Road when the road was widenedned in the mid 1970s. Flats look like they were built in the 1980s.
The Knoll Estate is located in the former northern portion of the parish of Aldrington which was once three open fields called The Knowle East, The Knowle West and The Knowle North according to its 1840 tithe map. The area was developed by Hove council from 1926 and mostly completed by 1939, the remaining undeveloped part at the northern end of Stapley Road was finished in the late 1940s.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Dec 2016
0.08 miles
8
Stapley Road
Residential road that links Old Shoreham Road, the A270, with Hangleton Road, the A2038.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 7 Jan 2010
0.09 miles
9
Hove Cemetery
The south western section which was not consecrated until 1912 despite being purchased at the same time as the rest which opened in 1882. For three decades it was used as a hay field. Beyond the trees to the south is the railway line.
Hove Cemetery consists of two parts, the original section south of Old Shoreham Road that was first consecrated in 1882 and a second to the north of the road that opened in 1923 as an extension
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Jan 2017
0.10 miles
10
Hove Cemetery
An unmade path on the western side. The western section wasn't consecrated until 1912 despite being purchased at the same time as the rest which opened in 1882. For the intervening thirty years it was used as a hay field.
Hove Cemetery consists of two parts, the original section south of Old Shoreham Road that was first consecrated in 1882 and a second to the north of the road that opened in 1923 as an extension
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Jan 2017
0.10 miles