Ticehurst

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Ticehurst


Bell Hotel

Ticehurst (East Sussex)
Ticehurst

Ticehurst shown within East Sussex
Area[1] 12.5 sq mi (32.5 km²)
Population 3421 (Parish-2007)[1]
3393 {2001 census}
3118 {1991 census}
2894 {1981 census}
 - Density 273/sq mi (105/km²)
OS grid reference TQ689302
 - London 39 miles (63 km) NW
District Rother
Shire county East Sussex
Region South East
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WADHURST
Postcode district TN5
Dialling code 01580
Police Sussex
Fire East Sussex
Ambulance South East Coast
European Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Bexhill and Battle
Website: Ticehurst Parish Council
List of places: UKEnglandEast Sussex

Coordinates: 51°03′N 0°25′E / 51.05, 0.41

Contents

[edit] Ticehurst

Ticehurst is both a village and one of the villages which comprise a large civil parish in the Rother district of East Sussex, England. The parish lies in the upper reaches of both the River Teise before it enters Bewl Water and in the upper reaches of the River Rother flowing to the south-east. The parish includes the Parish wards of Ticehurst, Flimwell and Stonegate[2]. It lies to the south east of Tunbridge Wells, and is about ten miles (16 km) distant.

Ticehurst is not mentioned in the Domesday Book, although the manor came into being in the 14th century; Pashley Manor[3] is also mentioned at the same time, and is within the parish.[4]

[edit] Village Name

The village name derives from Old English; there are two possible derivations. The most plausible one is that it means wood on the Teise from the river; the second roughly translates as 'The wooded hill where young goats graze', ticce(n) + hyrst. [5] (1248, Tycheherst)

[edit] The villages

[edit] Ticehurst

Bookshop
Bookshop

There is a very active Village Club, which runs regular social events, and a monthly newsletter "News & Views" is produced by a team of volunteers. The village school serves both Ticehurst and Flimwell[6].

Ticehurst House Hospital (now part of the Priory Group) specialises in the treatment of psychiatric disorders and is located in the village. Samuel Newington opened the original Ticehurst House in 1792 as a place dedicated to the care and treatment of psychiatric illness [7]

In the centre of Ticehurst there is a general village shop incorporating a post office, a butcher, a dry cleaner's, a hairdresser, an antiquarian book seller, a green grocer, a chemist, an Indian takeaway, a car salesroom, a car repairer and MOT centre, an estate agency, a bank (National Westminster), two antique furniture dealers and two pubs, The Bell (currently closed) and the Chequers Inn. Further out, there are a smokery and two more pubs (The Bull at Three Leg Cross, and The Cherry Tree in Dale Hill) and a hotel/golf course at Dale Hill.

The village is the headquarters of the Antiquarian Horological Society.

The village is also home to the first Pick-Your-Own fruit farm to open in Britain, Maynards Fruit Farm, (est. 1955) a family-run business selling fruits as varied as plums, morello cherries and strawberries. The farm made the Times "Top 50 places to eat outside in Britain" list[8]

One claim to fame is that the Scottish singer/guitarist Bert Jansch lived in Ticehurst in the late 1960s and recorded tracks for the classic 1971 "Rosemary Lane" album at his house in the village.

[edit] Flimwell

Main article: Flimwell

[edit] Stonegate

[edit] Parish Churches

The three village churches are at Ticehurst: a 14th century parish church dedicated to St Mary the Virgin[9][10]; Flimwell: Stonegate: St Peter; and Flimwell: St Augustine.

There is a railway station nearby, at Stonegate (it was originally called Ticehurst Road; and before that Witherenden); and there is a bus link to Wadhurst station.

[edit] References