Holmbury St Mary

Holmbury St. Mary
St.Mary's church at Holmbury St.Mary

Holmbury St. Mary is a village in the Guildford borough of Surrey, England. It is located within the Hurtwood, which is the largest area of common land in Surrey.[1] Nearby to the south is Holmbury Hill, which at 857 feet (261 m) is the fourth highest point in Surrey. The village is named after both the hill and the large Victorian church at its heart. St. Mary's Church, which overlooks the Village Green, was initiated and paid for in 1879 by George Edmund Street,[2][3] who had built himself a large house in the village between 1873 and 1876, also known as Holmdale.[4] Holmdale later became home to Thomas Sivewright Catto, the Governor of the Bank of England from 1944 to 1949.

From 1947 to 1986, the village was home to the Webb Memorial Trust, a memorial to Beatrice Webb.[5] The Beatrice Webb House was opened by Clement Attlee and served as an important education and discussion facility for the Fabian Society, British Labour Party and trade unions. The Fabian Window, designed by George Bernard Shaw (who Co-Founded the London School of Economics (LSE) with Sidney and Beatrice Webb) hung in the house until it was stolen in 1978. The window was later recovered and is now on loan to the LSE.[6]

Holmbury-St-Mary is also home to the UCL Department of Space and Climate Physics Mullard Space Science Laboratory, a Department of University College London and the UK's Largest University-Based Space Science Research Group.[7] The village has three schools: Belmont School,[8] and Hurtwood House,[9] catering for ages 2 to 13 and 16 to 18 respectively. Moon Hall School[10] provides special education to children with dyslexia.

Holmbury St. Mary has two football teams, Holmbury St. Mary 1st XI and Holmbury St. Mary 2nd XI, both of which compete in the Guildford and Woking Alliance. The 1st XI are in the Premier Division and the newly formed 2nd XI are in the 3rd Division.

Holmbury also has two cricket teams. The first XI plays in Division Two of the Surrey Downs League and the second XI plays in the Second Division of the Village Cricket League. The Village Club, The Hollybush Tavern, also has its own cricket side which plays friendly matches.

Holmbury St. Mary has its own annual bonfire and fireworks night in the Glade, made possible by local village men (The Bonfire Boys) who gather wood from the Hurtwood and put on a fireworks show on the weekend following Halloween. Thousands attend and all profits are donated to charities.

Holmbury St. Mary is believed to be the basis for the fictional village of Summer Street in A Room With A View. Its Author, E.M. Forster, was a long-standing resident in the neighbourhood of Abinger Hammer.[11]

References

  1. Hurtwood Control
  2. Folkes, J. Homery The Victorian Architect and George Edmund Street Transactions of the Worcestershire Archaelogical Society. Third Series Vol 4 1974 p9
  3. St Mary, the Virgin, Holmbury from A Church Near You
  4. "George Edmund Street (1824-1881)". Victorianweb.org. 2007-08-29. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  5. "News - News - News and media - Home". .lse.ac.uk. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  6. "UCL Department of Space & Climate Physics - Mullard Space Science Laboratory". Mssl.ucl.ac.uk. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  7. "Home". Belmont-school.org. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  8. "Hurtwood House, one of the best Public Schools in the country". Hurtwood-house.co.uk. 2011-01-27. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  9. "Moon Hall School". Moon Hall School. Retrieved 2014-05-28.
  10. Keith Parkins. "Surrey Writers". Heureka.clara.net. Retrieved 2014-05-28.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Holmbury St Mary.

Coordinates: 51°11′42″N 0°24′54″W / 51.195°N 0.415°W