Ranmore Common
Ranmore Common maps (2 available)
Ranmore Common books (21 available)
- 1 photos on Ranmore Common appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Ranmore Common
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Ranmore Common and Surrey
Ranmore Common memories
Take a horse to water
When I was about 11 or 12 in the 50's I used to ride from Bookham over to Ranmore quite often. I would take a packed lunch in a rucksack and off I would go for the day all on my own. When I got to Ranmore, I used to tie my pony to a tree and go in the post office and ask the man for a bucket of water for my pony. Then we would stop on the edge of the woods somewhere, I'd sit on a log or on my jumper or coat on the ground and let my pony graze whilst I ate my lunch and read a book.
Contributed by Paula Clements
Surrey memories
Take a horse to water
When I was about 11 or 12 in the 50's I used to ride from Bookham over to Ranmore quite often. I would take a packed lunch in a rucksack and off I would go for the day all on my own. When I got to Ranmore, I used to tie my pony to a tree and go in the post office and ask the man for a bucket of water for my pony. Then we would stop on the edge of the woods somewhere, I'd sit on a log or on my jumper or coat on the ground and let my pony graze whilst I ate my lunch and read a book.
A memory of Ranmore Common contributed by Paula Clements
Lower Road
My parents were married in St Nicholas Church in 1960 - Valmai Daily (my mother) grew up at 234 Lower Road with her brother, Adrian and parents Dot and Drew. My Grandfather was a local electrician who spent all his free time at Effingham Golf Club and my grandmother (having retired from midwifery) was for many years the nurse at The School of Stitchery. I spent many of my early years in Great Bookham and then every school holiday when I went 'to work' with my Grandmother at The School of Stitchery and made many friends there. Names I can remember are Ellen & Ron Young (friends of my grandparents) and children I used to play with in ...read more here
A memory of Great Bookham contributed by Jane Corby
December 24
My parents, Rose Marston and Roy Sopp were married in this church! I have the wedding photo of them standing in the side entrance.
A memory of Great Bookham contributed by Eunice Livingstone
Extracts From Ranmore Common & Surrey books
West of Dorking up on the chalk
and just inboard of the North Downs
escarpment, and west of the valley
cut by the River Mole, is Ranmore
Common. The village is scattered
along the margins of a long green,
and Frith’s photographer took his
near-obligatory post office view on
the north side of the green. The
house is L-shaped, and it is no
longer either a post office or a tea
room. The telephone box has gone
too. The house is now called,
unsurprisingly, The Old Post Office.
An extract from from"Surrey Living Memories".
Other local churches, claimed to be ‘old and steady’, are Shere,
Leigh, Mickleham, Abinger, Wotten and Betchworth: they have
stood for centuries. St Barnabas’s on Ranmore sits 700 feet above
Dorking on Ranmore Common. Sir Gilbert Scott designed it in 1859
as the estate church for George Cubitt, the first Lord Ashcombe.
In the churchyard lie the founder of Denbies Estate, and his three
grandsons, Henry, Alick and William, who lost their lives in the First
World War.
St Joseph’s Catholic Church, designed by Frederick Arthur
Walters, was erected in 1895 in Falkland Grove, off Coldharbour
Lane.
An extract from from"Dorking Town and City Memories".
he downs are mostly of chalk, and otherwise of
sandstone, and each has its own special flora. The
sandstone hills have their highest point in Leith
Hill, 965ft above sea level, about five miles south-west
of Dorking. From there they fall away in a picturesque
series of steps, rising again to the same level as Leith Hill
at Hindhead and Black Down. Leith Hill and its tower is
a beauty spot not to be missed. With a good eye and on
a clear day all the surrounding counties are visible. ‘With
the assistance of a telescope Windsor Castle, Frant Church,
St Paul’s Cathedral, Dunstable Downs, Ditchling Beacon
and the spires and towers of forty-one churches can be seen.’
(J S Bright, 1876). It has been said that a reflection of the sun
on the sea has been noted. Richard Hull of Leith Hill Place
built the tower in 1766 for his own delight, but also for that
of his neighbours and everybody else. Richard was laid to rest
beneath the tower, buried upside-down: he believed that the
world would have turned on its axis before Judgement Day,
and he ‘wished to stand before his Maker right way up’. This
area is part of the National Trust’s holdings; the estate now
boasts over 900 acres owned by the Trust, and another 300
are under protection.
Box Hill has been called the most popular hill in the world,
and Leith Hill most likely comes second. On each hill grow
beeches, junipers, wild clematis and box, which delight the eye.
The short, sweet, flower-starred turf is restful to the traveller. But
there is a wilder, rugged air about Leith Hill and its approaches,
which are clad in larch and fir and carpeted with scarlet and green
whortleberry and purple heather. It has always been known as a
rambler’s paradise, for there are innumerable paths and bridle-
ways that wind through the plantations and the heath.
The area covering Box Hill, the Holmwoods, Ranmore, Leith
Hill and Coldharbour contain some of the finest woodland and
natural habitats in Surrey. Generous donations of land and money
by many public-spirited contributors over the years have helped to
ensure the upkeep of this fine and beautiful area.
An extract from from"Dorking Town and City Memories".
t was said by many that ‘Dorking lime is undoubtedly
one of the finest quality of limestone in the county, if
not England’, and it was claimed that the chalk burnt
into lime at Dorking was sought after by every mason and
bricklayer in London. The West India and Wapping Docks
were built with Dorking lime. In photograph 79501, right, we
can see the white scar of the Brockham limeworks, worked at
first by the Brockham Brick Company Ltd, and later by the
Brockham Limes & Hearthstone Company Ltd. These works
closed in 1925, and the land is managed by the Surrey Wildlife
Trust as a nature reserve. Important lime kilns survive at the
Betchworth and Brockham sites, and are in the process of being
Scheduled as Ancient Monuments.
An extract from from"Dorking Town and City Memories".
proposed line from Redhill to Dorking was suggested
in 1845. Parliamentary approval was given on 16
July 1846. At first it was suggested that the railway
station should be built adjacent to St Martin’s Church in ‘The
Lordship’ (see picture 53332A on pages 48-49), now known
as Meadow Bank Recreation Ground. By 1849 the railway was
running a service from east to west, and Dorking Town station
was the first to be built at the edge of the town. The line was
principally built for freight traffic.
An extract from from"Dorking Town and City Memories".





