Nutbourne
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Map of West Sussex
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Nutbourne books (10 available)
Nutbourne memories
Nutbourne Post Office Stores
My memories of Nutbourne start when we moved to the Post Office in 1966-67, I was aged around 12 years old. I moved to Nutbourne with my father and step-mother, my younger brother boarded at little green school in Compton. My father came to the UK during WW2 from Czechoslovakia and fought with the RAF.
My bedroom was above the shop at the front of the building, at the time we lived there the road in front of the shop was then the main Portsmouth to Brighton road and very busy day and night,. It took me a long time to settle at night because not only did I have the constant noise from the traffic to put with but I ...read more here
Contributed by Paul Vychodil
manor farm
I remember hand picking blackcurrants where my mother and father lived and worked for Mrs Rhys-Jones. That was soon taken over by machine and then ended when Mrs Rhys Jones died. The farm was sold and the blackcurrants torn up. My parents still live there and I visit often.
Contributed by karen williams
West Sussex memories
Nutbourne Post Office Stores
My memories of Nutbourne start when we moved to the Post Office in 1966-67, I was aged around 12 years old. I moved to Nutbourne with my father and step-mother, my younger brother boarded at little green school in Compton. My father came to the UK during WW2 from Czechoslovakia and fought with the RAF.
My bedroom was above the shop at the front of the building, at the time we lived there the road in front of the shop was then the main Portsmouth to Brighton road and very busy day and night,. It took me a long time to settle at night because not only did I have the constant noise from the traffic to put with but I ...read more here
A memory of Nutbourne contributed by Paul Vychodil
manor farm
I remember hand picking blackcurrants where my mother and father lived and worked for Mrs Rhys-Jones. That was soon taken over by machine and then ended when Mrs Rhys Jones died. The farm was sold and the blackcurrants torn up. My parents still live there and I visit often.
A memory of Nutbourne contributed by karen williams
Extracts From Nutbourne & West Sussex books
The buildings on the corner of High Street and The Broadway
were named Warwick Mansions. This commemorated the fact that
in 1901, they were erected on the site of old Warwick House, which
had been demolished a few years earlier. The trees and flint wall in the
photograph marked the southern boundary of the Warwick estate.
These were retained as a feature when part of the Brighton Road
was widened on either side and renamed The Broadway. A Worthing
Directory for 1919 records the three visible shops at ground level (on
the left of photograph 68989) as Colin Moore, a perambulator depot
(behind the balustrade), Ivens, Kelletts and Childs, chemists and
F C Whittington, bootmaker. Although the buildings remain virtually
unchanged today, the trees and wall were removed in 1928.
An extract from from"Worthing Town and City Memories".
During the 1920s and 30s, Worthing continued to rapidly expand. By 1937 the
town was being promoted as both a summer and winter resort, and hotels now
occupied much of the sea front and the area behind it.
The Beach Hotel had opened at 4 Marine Parade in 1915, expanding into
the whole parade by 1936, when the original red-brick houses that had, in
part, comprised The Prince Albert Convalescent Home were remodelled in
cement Deco-style.
Many of the Victorian boarding houses had been converted into hotels,
and most of the modern hotels illustrated date from this period, albeit trading
under different names.
Although Worthing initially benefited from an increase in the number of
holidaymakers after the Second World War, the town continued to lack any large
hotels. By the early 1970s, Worthing, like most English seaside resorts, was having
to compete with package holidays abroad. Many of the town’s hotels tried to fill
their rooms by becoming conference venues.
An extract from from"Worthing Town and City Memories".
The Corporation’s policy of providing a sufficient number of public parks and recreation grounds for both residents and visitors was actively
pursued during this period of expansion. In excess of fifteen additional areas for outdoor recreation were provided and by 1938 there were seven
separate recreation grounds (amounting to fifty acres) and ten public parks recorded in the borough. Several of these combine formal gardens
and walks with sports facilities.
During the 1930s two additional bowling greens were laid out at separate locations within the borough, one at Marine Gardens in 1930
(see W147157) and one at Church House Grounds in 1937. Marine Gardens, a small park located in West Parade between Grand Avenue and
Wallace Avenue, was laid out on two and a half acres of land in 1930 and contains ornamental gardens (see W147146), a pavilion, one putting
green and one bowling green. Over the years it has maintained its popularity and is still well attended.
An extract from from"Worthing Town and City Memories".
Recreational Facilities
also with those who wish to experience invigorating walks by
the sea during the sometimes less inviting off-season weather.
The playground, which can be seen just beyond the raised
promenade on the left, was constructed in Beach House grounds
and opened in 1951 as Peter Pan’s Playground. The entrance is
just below the white notice-board by the mock fort. Among the
original items of play equipment were the fort, a helter-skelter,
slides and swings. Unsurprisingly, this playground was a great
attraction for children.
An extract from from"Worthing Town and City Memories".
The question of taste was fundamental to Victorian church
building. Classic was denounced as vulgar and pagan. The only true
style for Christian architecture was pure Gothic, preferably that of
the 13th and 14th centuries. St George’s, built in flint and stone to a
design by George Trufitt, displays an original use of the Gothic style.
At first there was only an apsidal chancel and nave and a singular
bell turret. A new vestry and two new porches were added in 1875.
By 1884, a transept had also been added.
Between 1873 and 1879 a new Church was built to serve the
parish of Heene. Funded by subscriptions as part of West Worthing
New Town, the new modern spacious 19th century church of St
Botolph’s was built near the site of an earlier chapel which had, by
the 17th century, fallen into disrepair. By 1778 most of the fabric
had been removed, and only a fragment remains, just beyond the
eastern end of the new church.
St Andrew’s, Clifton Road, was the last parish church to be built
in pre-war Worthing. It was possibly also the most controversial, for
it marked the beginning of Anglo-Catholicism in the town. One
of the underlying factors in the Gothic revival within the Church
of England had been the movement towards greater decency and
ritual in church services. This began in the 1820s and 1830s
among a small group of Oxford dons, and was initially a purely
theological aspiration aimed at restoring a greater awareness of the
historical church and its hierarchical ministry. By the 1860s there
were Anglican churches in both London and the fashionable seaside
resorts, where the use of lighted candles, ornate vestments and
incense had been revived.
An extract from from"Worthing Town and City Memories".




