Hurst Green, Sussex

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Hurst Green
Sussex

Hurst Green
Location
Grid reference: TQ733271
Location: 51°1’12"N, -0°28’12"E
Data
Population: 1,481  (Parish, 2011)
Post town: Etchingham
Postcode: TN19
Dialling code: 01580
Local Government
Council: Rother
Parliamentary
constituency:
Bexhill and Battle
Website: hurstgreen-pc.gov.uk

Hurst Green is a village in Sussex, in the east of the county, just a miles south of the border with Kent.

The area is entirely contained within the 'High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty'.

The village is located on the A21 road, halfway between Tunbridge Wells (mainly in Kent), in the north and Hastings (firmly in Sussex) in the south; about 13 miles each way. The A265 road starts in the village at the A21, previously starting in Hawkhurst.

The wider civil parish includes two hamlets: Silver Hill and Swiftsden.

Church

The village church is Holy Trinity, a brick-built Church of England parish church

There used to be a Roman Catholic church, of Our Lady Help of Christians, but it has been closed and converted into a community shop, which also contains the village post office.[1]

History

Before the Norman conquest, Hurst Green was part of the parish of Salehurst which belonged to Countess Goda, however it is likely that few people lived in the area.

There is a ridgeway track that runs through Hurst Green via Etchingham to Heathfield, and which was likely to have been in use during the Iron Age.[2]

In 1744 the village green covered a triangular area from the courthouse to the village hall, including land on which some houses in Station Road now stand. "The Cottage" (MES3972) and "Yew Tree" (DES4516) are shown on a map dated 1650, and so must have stood on the edge of the village green.

In the 1870s Hurst Green was described as a "hamlet in Salehurst parish, Sussex; 1½ mile ENE of Etchingham station, and 7 N of Battle. It has a head post office and Iridge Place is adjacent".[3]

The Church of England primary school was originally built in 1862 with an adjacent residence for the master.

The tower and the clock were erected by public subscription in memory of George Burrow Gregory of Boarzell who died 5 March 1892.[4]

In 1952 the civil parish of Hurst Green was created from portions of the parishes of Etchingham, Salehurst and Ticehurst and the ecclesiastical parish was formed in 1907.[5]

By the 1930s, the population of Hurst Green was 628 (counts in 1934 and 1938).

Local legends

  • It is possible that the area known locally as Burgh Hill on the south side of the village was the site of a fort built by King Alfred the Great, this is mentioned in the Burghal Hidage (a record of the forts from Alfred's reign) as being called Eorpeburner.
  • There are reports of possible tunnels under and around the village that were used by the infamous Hawkhurst Gang that ran between the village and Hawkhurst to enable their smuggling operations. However none have ever been found.

Village organisations

  • Bowling: Hurst Green Short Mat Bowls Club

Pictures

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Hurst Green, Sussex)

Outside links

References

  1. "Community Shop Blog". http://www.hurstgreen.com/blog/index.php. 
  2. MES4360
  3. 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales
  4. Memorial Plaque affixed to Hurst Green Court House
  5. Hodson, L.J (1914). A Short History of the Parish of Salehurst, Roberstbridge.