Nutbourne, Pulborough

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Nutbourne
Sussex
Nutbourne Mill.jpg
Nutbourne Windmill
Location
Grid reference: TQ074188
Location: 50°57’32"N, 0°28’16"W
Data
Post town: Pulborough
Postcode: RH20
Local Government
Council: Horsham
Parliamentary
constituency:
Arundel and South Downs

Nutbourne is a hamlet running north–south along a single road a mile and a half east of Pulborough in Sussex.

The name of the village is believed to mean exactly what it appears to be: 'nut bourn' (in Old English hnutu burna, for a brook where nut trees grow. The village sits on gently sloping terrain with a southerly aspect with fertile soil of loam on greensand, and well watered for cultivation.

At the time of the Domesday Book the Manor of Nordborne was rated at six hides and contained two mills.[1] During succeeding centuries it developed only very gradually.

Today Nutbourne remains a small farming village. It has lost most of its soft fruit growing but has a thriving vineyard with public wine tasting in an old windmill from May to September. There is one public house, the Rising Sun. The shops have gone but a garage remains doing mechanical and bodywork repairs. Behind and within the walls of houses small businesses operate doing various kinds of work.

The village street rises northwards, and is developed on both sides with stone buildings and walls built up to the road frontage on the western side and grassed banks and hedges on the eastern.

Represented in the village are various periods and styles of architecture, ranging from timber-framed cottages to modern red brick houses, all of a simple domestic scale with a variety of design, detailing, texture and irregular positioning and spacing along the road frontage giving the village its basic physical character. Stone is the predominant building material being used extensively for boundary walls as well as buildings. The rural nature of The Street results from the presence of grassed verges and banks instead of separate pavements for pedestrians, together with the abundance of planting along the frontages of properties. This character has been lost in places by the formation of lay-bys to serve new development.

At its northern end The Street divides into two, with the highway bending west and then northwards through a cutting towards Gay Street and North Heath, whilst the other part bends east past the former school to become a non-metalled bridle road. This narrow track becomes a dark, damp passage being bordered by banks and overhung by trees, but in a short distance it suddenly emerges into a small valley containing a mill pond surrounded by high wire fencing. There are stone former mill buildings to the south followed by a series of ponds. In the east there is a vineyard and to the north the valley is contained by a steep tree covered slopes with more ponds created by dams across a small brook. To the west are more gentle slopes with field boundaries defined by trees and bushes. The views outwards are restricted by the topography and as a result this valley is a distinctive environmental area, virtually isolated from the village, but retaining clear evidence of its historical associations with the village.

Outside links

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References