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Chiddingly

Coordinates: 50°55′N 0°11′E / 50.91°N 0.19°E / 50.91; 0.19
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(Redirected from Muddles Green)

Chiddingly
Chiddingly in the snow
Chiddingly is located in East Sussex
Chiddingly
Chiddingly
Location within East Sussex
Area17.6 km2 (6.8 sq mi) [1]
Population1,247 (Parish-2011) [2]
• Density148/sq mi (57/km2)
OS grid referenceTQ543142
• London43 miles (69 km) NNW
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLEWES
Postcode districtBN8
Post townHAILSHAM
Postcode districtBN27
Dialling code01825
PoliceSussex
FireEast Sussex
AmbulanceSouth East Coast
UK Parliament
Websitehttp://www.chiddingly.gov.uk/
List of places
UK
England
East Sussex
50°55′N 0°11′E / 50.91°N 0.19°E / 50.91; 0.19

Chiddingly (/ˈɪdɪŋl/ CHID-in-lye) is an English village and civil parish in the Wealden District of the administrative county of East Sussex, within historic Sussex, some five miles (8 km) northwest of Hailsham.

The parish is rural in character: it includes the village of Chiddingly and a collection of hamlets: the largest of these being Muddles Green and Thunder's Hill; others being Gun Hill, Whitesmith, Holmes Hill, Golden Cross, Broomham and the westernmost extremity of Upper Dicker.[3] It covers 7 square miles (18 km2) of countryside. Of the more than 340 dwellings in the parish, over fifty have the word "Farm" in their postal address.

Geography

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The parish is in the Low Weald. As with Rome and Sheffield, it is situated over seven hills: Thunders Hill; Gun Hill; Pick Hill; Stone Hill; Scrapers Hill; Burgh Hill, and Holmes Hill,[4] which is on the A22 road in the south of the parish. Tributaries of the River Cuckmere flow both north and south of the village. The parish is situated in the Hundred of Shiplake, and within Pevensey Rape.

Link here to a Parish Map delineating the parish boundary over a zoomable Ordnance Survey map, courtesy of the very fine Saturday Walkers' Club

Governance

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Chiddingly is part of the electoral ward called Chiddingly and East Hoathly. The population of this ward taken at the 2011 Census was 3,220.[5]

History

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The presence of low-grade iron ore in the local sandstone supported Roman mining and smelting in the area.

The final -ly of the name shows Chiddingly to have had Saxon origins. The Domesday Book of 1086 refers to Cetelingei with just three households, including a miller and mill.[6]

The 'Chiddingly Boar', found in 1999, was a gilt-silver badge likely to have belonged to a supporter of Richard III during the Wars of the Roses, and probably lost or discarded in the 1480s; it is now in the British Museum and has been adopted as the emblem of the parish Bonfire Society who process through the streets of Sussex each autumn bearing a taxidermy wild boar's head (called Sue) by way of a standard. Many contemporary badges of a similar design were made of pewter, but the Chiddingly example is one of only three known pieces fashioned from precious metals - another having been found on the site of Richard's dénouement at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, and the third on the foreshore of the River Thames.[7]

There are a large number of manorial buildings in the parish, including Chiddingly Place, rebuilt c. 1574[8] by Sir John Jefferay, Chief Baron of the Exchequer in 1577; scattered remnants of its E-shaped wings remain, such as the east wing, later called "The Chapel/Chapel Barn" and now known as 'Jefferay House', and sections of the main range west of the demolished Great Hall.[9]

The village was on the periphery of Sussex's endemic smuggling trade in the 18th century, but even this insubstantial link has left an indelible mark on the area - albeit one of somewhat dubious provenance - by way of 'the ghost of the staggering smuggler'. As reported in the Derby Mercury of 1786, a violent and wide-ranging confrontation took place between a gang of smugglers and a group of excise officers which culminated in a pitched battle at the eastern end of Stalkers Lane in the July of that same year. This encounter left one of the freebooters fatally wounded - 'miserably cut about the head and other parts of the body' - and he reputedly sought refuge in the outbuildings around Stream Farm where he duly expired. It is claimed that on occasion his spirit has been seen staggering around, as if mortally wounded and in search of its deathbed...

Points of interest

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The Granary, the Farm and Chapel-Barn of Chiddingly Place

Burgh Hill Farm Meadow is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) within the parish.[10] This is a hedgerow-surrounded meadow of an uncommon grassland type.

Chiddingly church

The Church of England parish church at Chiddingly is of unknown date and dedication, but references to it occur from the 13th century.[11] Today the parish is part of a united benefice with the neighbouring parish of East Hoathly. A Congregational chapel was founded in Chiddingly in 1901.

Chiddingly has a primary school.[12]

The Golden Cross

The annual Chiddingly Festival hosts an eclectic selection of artistic endeavours in and around the village each autumn, with performers of not insubstantial renown having taking their place in the programme over the years .[13] Chiddingly had four public houses: The Six Bells Inn, in the centre of the village, and The Gun Inn - both of which are still open - The Golden Cross Inn (which closed in 2015 and has now been converted to flats) and The Bat & Ball at Holmes Hill, closed for many years and now a private residence.

The parish is also home to the Gun Brewery, which serves its own produce via a popular tap room, and hosts many functions and events during the course of the year.

Chiddingly has a village hall.

Chiddingly also has a museum and archive.[14] The Farley Farm House gallery features the lives and work of Roland Penrose and Lee Miller and is open for guided tours on pre-determined days.

Stone Hill is a well preserved medieval hall house dating from the 15th century, with a large park garden.[15] In the early 20th century, the house was owned by J.M. Barrie, author of Peter Pan, who lived here until 1934. In the 1970s/1980s the property was owned by composer and pianist Keith Emerson (founder of The Nice and Emerson, Lake & Palmer), who lived here with his family. At his Steinway piano in the barn he composed famous music pieces, such as Karn Evil 9 and Piano Concerto No.1.

Chiddingly Parish Bonfire Society

There is a thriving bonfire society which represents the Parish during the Sussex Bonfire season, and hosts its own event in late November. Given the importance to the village of the iron industry since its first manifestation under the Romans, these celebrations also include reference to Old Clem's Night - traditional festivities intended to celebrate St Clement, patron saint of blacksmiths. At other locations where the same folk ritual is observed - and attended by genuine blacksmiths - a high point is 'the firing of the anvil' where a charge of black powder is placed in the hardy or pritchel hole of a real anvil, and ignited to general acclaim. The bonfire society instead fabricate an enormous anvil from heavy-duty cardboard, stuff it with pyrotechnics and blow the thing to pieces as a precursor to their main firework display.

Historical pursuits in the village included a biannual 'rook shoot' around Latchett Wood which provided the staple ingredient of rook pie for the participants - a welcome addition to their usual impoverished agrarian fare - and, more esoterically, the recreation ground opposite the present school is marked on several older maps as a 'wrestling place'. The village cricket club has been extant for many years, disporting themselves with enthusiasm and no little skill across the grounds of the county, although football and rugby seem only to have had prompted more fleeting interest, by way of irregular teams raised by patrons of The Six Bells .

In 1971 the film director Philip Trevelyan made the documentary film The Moon and the Sledgehammer[16] about the Page family, who lived in a wood outside the village and operated two traction engines: an Allchin[17] and a Fowler.

A maze of willow trees near Whitesmith was planted by a local farmer in the shape of a quotation from the bible.[18]

It is to be noted that Chiddingly village is adjacent to East Hoathly (a mile and three quarters away, as the crow flies); in West Sussex, to the south east of Crawley, the hamlet of Chiddinglye can be found in similar proximity to West Hoathly...

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^ "East Sussex in Figures". East Sussex County Council. Retrieved 26 April 2008.
  2. ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  3. ^ "Map showing location of Chiddingly". Archived from the original on 24 January 2008. Retrieved 6 April 2008.
  4. ^ "Parochial history of Chiddingly". Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2008.
  5. ^ "Chiddingly and East Hoathly ward population 2011". Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  6. ^ "Open Domesday: Chiddingly". Retrieved 5 December 2024.
  7. ^ British Museum: The Chiddingly Boar".
  8. ^ A date formerly in stained glass of the Great Hall, noted by Mark Antony Lower, Parochial history of Chiddingly :22.
  9. ^ Mark Antony Lower, Parochial history of Chiddingly 1862:21ff; a A watercolour view of the north front in 1783 is in the British Library.
  10. ^ "Natural England - SSSI". English Nature. Archived from the original on 25 May 2011. Retrieved 29 May 2008.
  11. ^ Chiddingly parish church
  12. ^ Chiddingly Primary School Archived January 22, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Chiddingly Festival
  14. ^ Farley Farm House official site
  15. ^ "Stone Hill. Official list entry". Historic England: National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
  16. ^ The Moon and the Sledgehammer official website
  17. ^ Allchin Files about Wm. Allchin traction engines Archived 2009-03-02 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ "A-maze-ing Sussex field with message from above". The Argus. 7 February 2013. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
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