1
Methodist Church, Cuckfield Road, Hurstpierpoint
Built between the wars.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 17 Jul 2014
0.07 miles
2
Fairfield Crescent, Hurstpierpoint
Small estate built in the late 1950s off Cuckfield Road and named after
Image whose land the estate was built on. Both it and another road, St Lawrence Way were built on a field called Middle Piece according to Hurstpierpoint's 1842 tithe map which later became a brick field by the 1875 OS map but had disappeared by the following 1899 one.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 6 Jul 2014
0.07 miles
3
Marchants Road, Hurstpierpoint
Looking eastwards from the Cuckfield Road end. The junction with
Image is to the left and
Image to the right. The road then heads off to a junction with Trinity Road.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 6 Jul 2014
0.08 miles
4
St Christopher's Road, Hurstpierpoint
Small cul de sac off Marchants Road built in the late 60s/early 70s. Beyond the fence is the ground of St Lawrence's School.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 6 Jul 2014
0.09 miles
5
Wilderness Road, Hurstpierpoint
A looping road off marchants Road built in the late 1960s/early 1970s. Named after The Wilderness which is the wood beyond the estate.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 6 Jul 2014
0.10 miles
6
Calico, Cuckfield Road, Hurstpierpoint
The print and web design company has occupied what was once the Sussex Arms, a 19th century brewery tap, since 2006. See
Image for part of the old brewery. Cuckfield Road was built as a turnpike in the late 18th century and was one of a number of competing London-Brighton routes before they were all superseded by a route to the west which later became the A23.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 22 Jun 2014
0.11 miles
7
Weald Close, Hurstpierpoint
A 'T' shaped cul de sac off Western Road built not long after the Second World War. A footpath continues eastwards to Cuckfield Road.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 17 Jul 2014
0.12 miles
8
Hurst Gardens, Hurstpierpoint
Originally the site of a field called Marl Pit Field according to Hurstpierpoint's 1842 tithe map. The field was purchased by one Adam Adams in the same year and landscaped into the Chinese Gardens, a pleasure ground built to cater for day trippers using the newly opened London-Brighton railway. The gardens opened in 1843 containing parkland, a cricket ground and a boating lake, along with a hotel at the southern end. It remained a popular attraction until the 1930s when it was reported that the wrong type of people were visiting and their drunken aggressive behaviour put others off and as a consequence visiting figures began to fall. The gardens limped on until the 1950s when they were finally closed. During the 1960s the lake was drained and the former grounds developed into Hurst Gardens and Chestnut Grove. The hotel survived as a pub and was renamed the Pierpoint, see
Image
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 7 Aug 2014
0.12 miles
9
New Development, Cuckfield Road, Hurstpierpoint
Being built to the rear of the two bungalows is a small cup de sac which if I think is going to be called Sycamore Close.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 6 Jul 2014
0.14 miles
10
Brewery Mews, Hurstpierpoint
A small cul de sac off Cuckfield Road containing residences converted from the former buildings of Hurst Brewery which opened in 1862 and closed after the First World War after which it became a cheese factory before passing into the hands of the sports company Slazenger. The former site was converted into residential dwellings in 2006.
Image: © Simon Carey
Taken: 17 Jul 2014
0.14 miles