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14 |
| An advertisement from 1934 for
houses on the Hartswood estate. |
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16 |
There is no longer a permanent
library at Woodhatch but here it is as it was in 1971
Picture
required of building as it is now |
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18 |
| This car is halfway up the hill
that starts close to the Angel pub; it is just passing
cottages on the corner with Old Pottery Close |
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The top of Cockshot Hill. The
road on the right is Park Lane East, the entrance to
South Park. |
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| Detour into South Park |
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19 |
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20 |
| If, instead of continuing to
Reigate town, the horsedrawn cart shown in the previous
picture were to take a detour along the road to South
Park it would have to descend into that small village by
the part of Park Lane East known as Light Hill, and shown
here on the left. The road on the right was made as a
more even gradient for vehicles coming up and now exists
only as a footpath. |
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To get to the point shown in
the previous picture the driver of the cart would have
just passed Cocks Hut on his left, a large house built
c1800 and formerly known as Bellevue or Belleview. There
is a story that the Prince Regent accompanied by Lady
Fitzherbert once stopped here on his way to Brighton. |
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22 |
| Cocks Hut Cottage is close by
Cocks Hut. The brick built left hand side of it was once
stables and stable lad's accomodation |
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Cocks Hut Cottage in January
1904. The right hand side is much as it was but the left
side has been demolished and rebuilt with greater height.
(Picture and
information courtesy the property owner) |
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24 |
| If the driver continued to the
foot of Light Hill he would have been able to quench his
thirst at the Holmesdale pub, pictured here in 1993. |
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The Holmesdale was subsequently
demolished and redeveloped; the facing houses occupy its
old site in this 1998 picture. |
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26 |
| This early 1900 picture of
Light Hill was taken from a slightly different angle to
the previous one so that the farmland on the left is
visible. The Holmesdale pub sign stands inside a hedge
that once formed part of its perimeter. |
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This is the back of the Croft
Home, an annexe to the London Hospital in Church Road,
South Park, which is a hundred yards or so on the right
up the hill in the picture on the left. This picture is
from a postcard sent to Stoke Newington in 1935 by the
sender, Dorothy, who was convalescing in the country. In
the message she refers to 'a glorious view across 20
miles of country' from her windows, which she has marked
with crosses on the card. Many other cards of the home
exist, many of them referring to it as Mrs Kitto's
convalescent Home, as it was called in years previous to
the date of the above card. |
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28 |
| Priory Road, South Park,
looking west in the early 1900s. The field seen at the
road's end is the one also shown in the above picture.
The grocery shop in the left foreground was that of the
Reigate Industrial Provident Society, which was succeeded
by the South Suburban Co-operative Society in 1936. Next
to the grocer's a lane led to Durrant & Sons Brewery.
Trees a little further along the street belonged to an
orchard on ground later built on. By the lamppost on the
left were Port's the Bakers and Lilley's butchers shop. |
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Turn the camera around and we
have Priory Road looking East. Port's bakery and the
orchard referred to in the previous picture are on the
right while the shop on the left is Albert Truelove's
general store. |
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30 |
| A longer view of Priory Road
looking east. The tree on the right was just one of a
line that once extended to Park Lane East |
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The Barley Mow in Eastnor Road
was run by Mary Matthews from 1937 until the mid-70s.
Many people will remember it as a true character pub with
benches around rough tables, and glasses and some of the
beer in bottles on wooden shelves on the back wall. |
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31 |
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| Eastnor Road stretches away
towards Park Lane, the Barley Mow being along on the
right. The road crossing is Allingham Road and the road
from which the picture was taken is Stockton Road. The
corner plots either side have been built on for many
years. |
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32 |
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Picture
of Allingham Road as it is today to go here |
| Allingham Road, South Park. The
Congregational Church stands next tothe Post Office,
which at this time was also a drapers and tailors run by
the Hood family. |
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| These pictures of South Park were either
taken by the author or are from the postcards that are
in, or were once in, the author's own collection. Similar
pictures and many others appear in a lovely little book
called 'Memories of South Park' published by June Wilcox
in 1996, ISBN
0 9528792 0 4.
June came to South Park with her husband in 1969, the
same year as this author moved out of Stockton Road and
away from South Park. |
| Now
we return to the top of Cockshot Hill and continue into
Reigate |
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33 |
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34 |
| From the top of Cockshot Hill
the road descends into Reigate and becomes Bell Street.
Sand pits dug on the right and a large quarry at the top
of the hill on the left are now the site of housing. The
top of the hill in the background can be seen level with
the car driver but a narrow access road ascends on the
left to a large house called Isbells, near where two
windmills once stood. |
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As the car on the left
travelled a few yards further it would pass one of the
entrances to Reigate Park. These two ladies were pictured
leaving the park in 1894. |
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36 |
| A drawing of the gates from an
even earlier time |
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A picture of the same entrance
c1910. It can be seen that tree on the right have been
felled |
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37 |
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38 |
| A look at the gates from the
other direction showing the road. By the time this
picture was taken even more trees had been felled. |
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This picture from further into
the park explains the fence visible in the picture on the
left. It dates from the days when the Reigate Park, now
sometimes called Priory Park, was open to the public but
the Priory and its grounds were privately owned and were
separated by the fence. The Priory building is now a
school and its grounds and the park are all part of the
same area with public access. |
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39 |
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| If one were to continue up the path in
the previous picture onto the top of Priory Park the
memorial to Reigate resident Mr Randall Vogan (also
remembered in the naming of Vogan Close) would be arrived
at. In 1922 he purchased and presented to the Corporation
Reigate's most notable landmark, the Old Town Hall, which
occupies a central position in the Market Place. This
picture of it dates from 1937. |
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| This whole Priory Grounds
area as well as the Priory building itself will be dealt
with on a separate page. |
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Return to the index page to
choose any of the other Reigate pages. |