1
Hurst Drive
Road named after William Hurst Flint, senior partner of surveyors Humbert and Flint, who in 1895 had purchased the area containing Hurst Drive and Heath Drive. Heath Drive was developed first, with the earliest houses in Hurst Drive dating from 1914-15.
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.07 miles
2
Hurst Drive
Road named after William Hurst Flint, senior partner of surveyors Humbert and Flint, who in 1895 had purchased the area containing Hurst Drive and Heath Drive. Heath Drive was developed first, with the earliest houses in Hurst Drive dating from 1914-15. The house on the right, Roslyn Lodge, is much more recent, having been completed in c2018.
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.07 miles
3
Hurst Drive
Road named after William Hurst Flint, senior partner of surveyors Humbert and Flint, who in 1895 had purchased the area containing Hurst Drive and Heath Drive. Heath Drive was developed first, with the earliest houses in Hurst Drive dating from 1914-15.
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.07 miles
4
Footpath
Footpath running from Breech Lane towards Walton Heath, crossing various roads en route, the path pre-dating the early 20th Century development of much of the village. This section is the part linking Hurst Drive and Dorking Road. Note the upside down wording on the sign - the other side of the same finger is the right way up, as are both sides of the opposite finger.
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.08 miles
5
Heath Drive
Road first developed in the early 1900s. On the right is Heath Lodge, built in 1905 - see
Image
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.10 miles
6
Brackenwood
Development of 10 apartments on Heath Drive, completed in 2013 and built on the site of an earlier house of the same name built in 1925 and designed by Arthur Geen.
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.10 miles
7
Chequers Corner
House in Hurst Drive, built in 1914 and believed to have been designed by architects Alfred Trehearne and Charles Norman. The first resident was Harry Nuttall, Member of Parliament for Stretford from 1906-18. Hurst Drive itself was named after William Hurst Flint, senior partner of surveyors Humbert and Flint, who had purchased for development the area containing Hurst Drive and Heath Drive in 1895.
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.11 miles
8
Heath Lodge
House on Heath Drive built in 1905, designed by its builder, James Darvill. From c1914-22, it was home to Sir Robert Donald, editor of the Daily Chronicle and later managing director of United Newspapers.
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.11 miles
9
Russell Close
Cul-de-sac off Heath Drive. On the left is Walton Heath Cottage, originally called Abbotsford, built in 1907, designed by its builder, James Darvill. From c1918-22 it was home to Sir Hedley Le Bas, publisher and advertising executive, most remembered for the World War I recruiting campaign built around the slogan "Your country needs you".
Image: © Ian Capper
Taken: 10 Jan 2020
0.13 miles
10
Grazing land west of Chequers Lane
Looking north from the corner of Love Lane.
Image: © Stefan Czapski
Taken: 23 Mar 2018
0.13 miles