LOWER BEEDING
THE modern parish of Lower Beeding, (fn. 1) which includes most of the area of the former St. Leonard's
Forest, lies east of Horsham; it is 7 miles (11.3 km.)
long from north to south and just over 3 miles
(4.8 km.) wide at its widest point. In the Middle
Ages Lower Beeding formed a single parish with
Upper Beeding c. 11 miles (17.7 km.) to the south;
the link between the two places was not tenurial,
since Beeding manor in Upper Beeding seems never
to have had tenements in Lower Beeding, but arose
apparently because the tithes of St. Leonard's Forest
were granted to Sele priory in Upper Beeding. (fn. 2) The
Wealden part of the parish was called Nether Beeding in 1279 (fn. 3) and Lower Beeding apparently by
1646; (fn. 4) in 1793 it was alternatively called North
Beeding. (fn. 5) At other times residents of the area were
described as of St. Leonard's Forest. (fn. 6) Usually, however, before the 19th century the combined parish
was referred to simply as Beeding, or Sele, parish. (fn. 7)
Lower Beeding was separate from Upper Beeding
for poor-law purposes by the mid 17th century, and
was included in Horsham union in 1835. (fn. 8) For
ecclesiastical purposes it remained part of Upper
Beeding until 1838, when most of it became a new
ecclesiastical parish called Lower Beeding; Bewbush
tithing, however, the northern part of the modern
parish, remained part of Upper Beeding ecclesiastical parish until 1871, when it was included in the
new Colgate ecclesiastical parish. (fn. 9) The description
of Bewbush as a detached part of Upper Beeding
civil parish in the 1870s and 80s (fn. 10) is therefore an
error: Bewbush was not included in the area of
Upper Beeding whose bounds were to be trodden in
1856, and the mid 19th-century records of the
Upper Beeding parish officers never allude to it. (fn. 11) In
1891 Lower Beeding contained 10,153 a. In 1933 the
south portion of a detached part of Crawley parish,
comprising 421 a., was added to it, and in 1956 the
rest of that part, comprising 136 a., was added too.
At the latter date, however, 24 a. in the north-east of
Lower Beeding, straddling the Horsham-Crawley
road, were added to Crawley. In 1971, therefore,
Lower Beeding contained 4,324 ha. (10,686 a.). (fn. 12)
Land was exchanged in 1972 between Lower Beeding and Nuthurst parishes, Lower Beeding receiving
Newells farm, and Nuthurst Old Park farm and
other land. The parish had 4,230 ha. (10,452 a.) in
1981. (fn. 13)
The present article treats the history of Lower
Beeding parish as it existed in the late 19th century.
The boundaries of the late 19th-century parish are
related to those of St. Leonard's Forest, and are discussed below. (fn. 14)
Geologically, Lower Beeding lies at the point
where the High Weald of eastern Sussex merges into
the Low Weald of the north-west part of the county.
Most of the late 19th-century parish lies on the Tunbridge Wells sandstone of the High Weald, which
also contains some clay. Portions of the northern and
south-western parts of the parish, however, lie on
the Weald clay of the Low Weald which is diversified in both places by outcrops of Horsham stone,
and in the north also by Pleistocene and later river
gravels, which for instance provided the site of
Bewbush Manor House. (fn. 15)
Most of the parish lies above the 250-ft. contour,
but there are abrupt variations in relief. The highest
land is at Colgate (480 ft.), where a beacon erected in
the Napoleonic War (fn. 16) was succeeded by a stone
ornamental tower c. 105 ft. high; built between 1855
and 1857 of stone from nearby quarries, it was later
open to the public, (fn. 17) but was demolished in 1945. (fn. 18)
The modern village of Lower Beeding further south
lies at c. 330 ft. above sea level, and land near the
northern boundary of the parish reaches 350 ft. The
northern part drains north-eastwards to the river
Mole; the tributary stream through Bewbush tithing
runs in a shallow valley which is followed by the
Horsham-Crawley road and railway line. In the 16th
century it was dammed to form a hammerpond for a
furnace at Bewbush, later drained. (fn. 19) South of the
watershed formed by the east-west ridge at Colgate
rise springs which flow west to form the upper Arun;
two were also dammed in the 16th century to form
Hawkins and Hammer ponds, (fn. 20) while another follows a valley through the area formerly of open
heathland called Plummers Plain. Further south
again streams drain south or west to join the Adur,
forming ponds near Newells Farm House and at
Leonardslee; Furnace pond near Leonardslee was
another hammerpond. (fn. 21)
Two east-west roads which wholly or partly
follow prominent ridges seem to be ancient routes.
The more northerly, through Colgate, was part of a
route from Horsham to Ashdown Forest, (fn. 22) and
passes the sites of two prehistoric barrows in Lower
Beeding parish. (fn. 23) It certainly existed in 1650, (fn. 24) and
was known in part in 1982 as Black Hill. The other
road, from Horsham to Slaugham, passes close to
Money mound, a Neolithic and Iron Age site which
retained a religious function in Roman times. (fn. 25) That
road too was used in the early 18th century, (fn. 26) and
evidently also in the late 16th, since its present
course runs along the dams of Hawkins and Hammer
ponds and therefore provided the chief means of
access to the ironworks there. (fn. 27) Part of the road was
called Hammer Hill in the 1870s; in 1981 it was
called Hammerpond Road. It is not clear which of
the two roads was the road from Horsham to St.
Leonard's Forest or St. Leonard's chapel mentioned
in 1362 and later. (fn. 28) A third east-west route in the
late 18th century led from Faygate on the north-west
edge of the parish, south of Holmbush house, and
then by way of Bewbush Manor House and Buckswood Farm (in Ifield) to Crawley. (fn. 29) In the early 18th
century a branch road from Colgate to Holmbush
linked it with the first road described above, to form
one of two roads between Horsham and Crawley. (fn. 30)

Lower Beeding c.1875
(except Colgate and Bewbush)
The east-west road through Colgate was turnpiked in 1771, forming part of a route from Horsham
to Crawley via Pease Pottage in Slaugham. (fn. 31) It was
superseded for that purpose after 1823 when the
modern Horsham-Crawley road through the valley
past Bewbush Manor House was turnpiked, using
parts of the existing road but with new sections cut
north of Holmbush and between Bewbush and
Buckswood Farm. The new road was made by J. L.
McAdam, having been promoted chiefly by Thomas
Broadwood of Holmbush, and was also intended as
a route from Horsham to London since its gradients
were lower than those of the existing road via
Dorking. (fn. 32)
In the south the road from Cowfold to St.
Leonard's Forest, known as Long Hill in 1982,
existed by 1530. (fn. 33) By 1724 the higher southern part
of Plummers Plain, near the modern village of
Lower Beeding, had become a meeting place of
roads from Cowfold, Horsham, Ashington, and
Cuckfield. (fn. 34) The road from Cowfold via Plummers
Plain to Handcross in Slaugham was turnpiked in
1771, (fn. 35) and the road via Mannings Heath to Horsham in 1792. (fn. 36) The linking road which forms the
north side of the triangle of roads near Lower Beeding village became a turnpike in 1830. (fn. 37) In the late
18th century there were many other roads or tracks
across the uninclosed land of the centre of the
parish. (fn. 38) The only one to survive as a through route
in 1981 was Grouse Road, part of which follows a
ridge between Hawkins and Hammer ponds. Meanwhile the road to Maplehurst in Nuthurst which
follows the ridge past Old Park in the south-west had
presumably existed since at least the 17th century
when the farmhouse was apparently built; (fn. 39) parts of
it were called Prings Lane and Park Lane in the
1870s.
The Horsham-Crawley road was disturnpiked in
1873, (fn. 40) and the turnpike roads in the south in 1877. (fn. 41)
By 1976 part of the Horsham-Crawley road had
been made a dual carriageway. (fn. 42) A carrier who lived
at Lower Beeding plied daily to Horsham in 1895,
and the service continued in 1938. By 1922 there
were regular motor buses through the parish from
Horsham to Brighton. (fn. 43) In 1981 that service continued and there were also frequent buses along the
Horsham-Crawley road.
The railway from Horsham to Crawley across the
northern end of the parish was opened in 1848, with
a station at Faygate just outside it; the station at
Ifield was opened in 1907. After 1861 the south part
of the parish was served by West Grinstead station
on the Horsham-Shoreham line. (fn. 44)
Despite much evidence of a prehistoric presence
in the parish, (fn. 45) Lower Beeding in Anglo-Saxon and
early medieval times seems to have been little settled.
The herdsmen who visited the area seasonally (fn. 46) presumably had temporary shelters and, later, the
forest officers and their servants more permanent
ones. Lodges in the forest were recorded from
1441; (fn. 47) the ranger's lodge mentioned in 1635 (fn. 48) survived in the earlier 20th century but had been demolished by 1933. (fn. 49) On the more easily cultivable soil
of the north there was settlement at Bewbush by
1326; (fn. 50) meanwhile small farmers engaged in piecemeal assarting in or on the edges of the forest evidently built scattered houses on their lands. There are
stray references to such settlers: a resident in St.
Leonard's Forest was mentioned in 1285, (fn. 51) and two
residents were said in 1439 to have built a house
recently. (fn. 52) There were presumably enough residents
in the area by the 13th century or earlier to justify
the building of St. Leonard's chapel there. (fn. 53) Bewbush Manor House, however, is the only medieval
building in the parish known to survive. (fn. 54)
Thomas Seymour, Lord Seymour, during the two
years when he owned the forest before his attainder
in 1549, (fn. 55) apparently first thought of laying out a
new village there, (fn. 56) but instead preferred scattered
settlement to nucleated, dividing up part of the
forest area into small farms that evidently included
dwellings. (fn. 57) Residents of St. Leonard's Forest were
mentioned in 1555 and 1588, (fn. 58) and cottagers in
1585. (fn. 59) None of the houses built in Lord Seymour's
time, however, could be identified in 1981. The
establishment of ironworking in the parish after c.
1550 (fn. 60) also brought new settlement. Two forge
houses, one with two attached cottages, were mentioned in 1602. (fn. 61) One was presumably the modern
Hammer Pond Guest House next to Hammer pond,
a timber, brick, and stone building of half-H plan,
comprising south and west ranges of the late 16th or
early 17th century and a later north range. (fn. 62) In 1656
what was perhaps the same building had six rooms. (fn. 63)
The other was perhaps the Old House near Gosden
mill pond, a long, low, two-storeyed building of
17th-century type with a tall central chimney and
faced in brick and hung tiles; it may be one of the
houses in the south end of the parish which Roger
Gratwicke is said to have built shortly before 1585. (fn. 64)
Both houses were later divided into cottages. Similarly, houses were provided for the warreners who
looked after the rabbit warrens which covered much
of the parish in the 17th and 18th centuries. (fn. 65) Besides the ranger's lodge already mentioned there
were in the forest in 1720 the new lodge, Stone
Lodge in the north, Monk's Lodge in the southwest, and lodge houses in Carter's and Docker's
Lodge walks. (fn. 66) Stone Lodge had been mentioned in
1691, (fn. 67) and survived in 1795. (fn. 68) The new lodge may
have been on the site of the modern St. Leonard's
house, (fn. 69) and the last two lodges named were also
very likely on the sites of the later buildings called
by the same names. (fn. 70) The existing house called Old
Park in the south-west seems likely to have been
built at the conversion of Beeding new park to
agriculture. (fn. 71) In the north there were at least five
timber-built farmhouses at Bewbush in 1650, (fn. 72)
while on the Cowfold border west of Crabtree
Sparrow Hall is recorded from 1684. (fn. 73) Other buildings put up before 1800 include Springfield Farm,
north of Hawkins pond, which has an apparently
18th-century west range; an 18th-century house of
sandstone with brick dressings in Colgate hamlet
opposite the church, originally of one storey only;
two possibly late 18th-century buildings in Lower
Beeding village, one of which later became the
Plough inn; and another possibly late 18th-century
house on the Cowfold road at Crabtree. By 1795
there were several houses at Crabtree. (fn. 74)
The turnpiking of roads in the parish after 1771,
which made it reasonably accessible for the first
time, led to the building or rebuilding of houses for
gentry families, a class hardly represented in the
parish before. St. Leonard's house was rebuilt c.
1750, and a gentleman's house existed at Holmbush
by 1776. Docker's Lodge near the modern Lower
Beeding village and Carter's Lodge east of Hammer
pond both seem likely to occupy the sites of lodges
mentioned in 1720. Carter's Lodge in the late 18th
century belonged to a relative of the Aldridges of St.
Leonard's house, though the present building, of
stone in Gothic style, is apparently a conversion
from outbuildings; the front range of Docker's
Lodge is apparently late 18th-century, the back
range being added in the 19th century. In the south
Leonardslee house was built by 1808. (fn. 75)
The reclamation of heathland which was also
made possible by the new roads (fn. 76) was accompanied
by extensive house building. The two chief periods
of reclamation were the years after 1801, and the
decade 1841-51, when many cottages were built. (fn. 77)
A considerable number of new settlers had already
arrived by the 1820s. (fn. 78) In the 1840s the total number
of houses in the parish increased from 146 to 214;
most new ones were in the south for there were only
19 houses in Bewbush tithing in 1851, when 684
people, nearly two thirds of the population, lived
south of Hammerpond Road. (fn. 79) In 1847 the population of the reclaimed area was said to be very scattered: besides Lower Beeding village and Crabtree
hamlet, then each with c. 20 houses, there were cottages in various parts of the forest, some in groups of
five or six, and many difficult of access. (fn. 80) Many small
early 19th-century houses survived in the south in
1981; most were along the road between Lower
Beeding village and Ashfold crossways in the east or
its south-western continuation between the village
and the Horsham-Crabtree road, while others were
along roads leading south-east from the first mentioned road, and in Hammerpond Road. Characteristically they were two-storeyed, of sandstone, of
brick, sometimes laid in 'rat-trap' bond, or with
hung tiles. Their similarity of design suggests that
they were built at much the same time, but it is not
clear which of the two periods mentioned they belong to. Their style suggests the earlier, as does the
remark made in 1822 that the cottages of the parish
were neat and substantial-looking, many being of
stone. (fn. 81) Only a few buildings in the south, however,
were marked on maps of 1813 and 1825. (fn. 82) Some of
the houses built at both periods mentioned were
clearly impermanent. Some from the first period
were of turf; about twelve of them survived in 1867,
when half were occupied by Irish families. (fn. 83) The
houses called New Hovels north-west of Lower
Beeding village c. 1875 (fn. 84) were perhaps two of them;
by 1981 they had gone. Many of the houses put up
in the 1840s were occupied in 1851 by the labourers
employed in the reclamation, and some were evidently destroyed in the next decade, when the number
of houses in the parish decreased. (fn. 85) Witnesses in
1900 remembered a much larger population in the
forest in the past than then existed, many living in
huts rather than houses; c. 50 small holdings were
said to have been given up in the later 19th century. (fn. 86) One larger early 19th-century building away
from any road survived in 1981: Newstead Farm, on
a ridge in the east part of the parish, which is also
built partly of sandstone.
After 1861 the total number of houses in the
parish increased again, rapidly at first but more
slowly during the later 19th century. (fn. 87) In 1867 the
population was still said to be sparse. (fn. 88) Nevertheless
after c. 1850 nucleated settlements began to be more
prominent. The modern Lower Beeding village,
called Plummers Plain crossways by 1848, (fn. 89) attracted
settlement as the site chosen in 1840 for the parish
church. By the 1870s it was known as Lower Beeding. There were then several houses there, besides
an inn and a post office, and a few more were built
by 1896. At Crabtree many 19th-century houses
survived in 1981, both on the Horsham-Cowfold
road and in Mill Lane to the east. There were c. 25
buildings there in 1875, including a chapel and a
public house, and more in 1896. In 1981 Crabtree
had partly the appearance of an estate village. At
Colgate six or seven houses existed in the 1870s, a
church being built in 1871; (fn. 90) by 1878 there was also
a beer house. (fn. 91) More houses were built by c. 1900,
when the hamlet seemed very much a forest settlement. (fn. 92) There were also three or four houses at
Ashfold crossways in the east of the parish c. 1875;
the hamlet acquired a mission room soon afterwards (fn. 93) and later a beer house. (fn. 94)
Gentlemen's houses also increased in number during the later 19th century. In 1862 eleven persons
were listed as private residents, and by 1903 there
were 25. (fn. 95) South Lodge west of Crabtree existed by
1852, and was rebuilt in a free Tudor style in 1883. (fn. 96)
Newells in the south-west was built to the designs of
M. Digby Wyatt c. 1869; (fn. 97) after enlargement (fn. 98) and
conversion to a school in the 20th century (fn. 99) it was
burnt down in 1968. (fn. 1) Also built before 1875 were
Woodlands in the centre of the parish, Kilnwood in
the north, Colgate Lodge south-east of Colgate, (fn. 2)
and Beedingwood (fn. 3) and Hollywood near the Horsham boundary; the latter, afterwards renamed
Roffey Park, has additions on the west side of 1921. (fn. 4)
Land was offered in 1878 and again in 1896 on the
St. Leonard's house estate for building similar substantial houses. (fn. 5) Further houses built before 1900
were Selehurst west of Leonardslee (fn. 6) and Forest
Lodge in Grouse Road. The style chosen for the new
houses was often the revived vernacular, the future
Roffey Park being a particularly overblown example.
The parish remained a favourite residential area in
1907. (fn. 7) One attraction was its wild, romantic scenery,
many houses being sited on south-facing slopes with
views of the South Downs. Another was the sport
available locally. The sporting rights on the Holmbush estate had been advertised as one of its attractions in 1787, (fn. 8) and in 1852 the Leonardslee estate
abounded in game. (fn. 9) Both the St. Leonard's house
estate and Lower Bewbush farm were offered for
sale in the 1870s partly as sporting properties. (fn. 10) At
Buchan Hill it was said in 1824 that game of every
description could be preserved to any extent; (fn. 11) by
1907 the estate was described as purely a pheasant
shoot. (fn. 12)
In the 20th century many of the large houses built
in the 19th century were converted into institutions,
Newells becoming a school, Roffey Park a hospital,
and Beechwood near Faygate an old people's home. (fn. 13)
In the late 1970s the grounds of Newells were used
to build an estate of houses set in parkland on the
American model. During the 20th century many
other new houses were built. Some were on isolated
sites, especially along main roads in the south, and
often again with south-facing views. Others enlarged
the nucleated settlements. At Lower Beeding village
both privately owned and council houses were put
up from the 1930s, notably in closes south of the
church. The role of the village as the centre of the
parish was strengthened when the school and vicarage were moved there in the mid 20th century. (fn. 14)
Some houses were built at Crabtree, especially in
Mill Lane, after 1945, and a close of large houses at
Ashfold crossways. Houses were also built at Colgate both along the roads leading east and south-east
out of the hamlet and in an enclave south-west of the
church. Meanwhile much of the north-east was built
over after 1973 as part of the expansion of Crawley
new town. (fn. 15)
Few figures for the pre-19th-century population
of Lower Beeding exist. Five people were taxed in
St. Leonard's Forest in 1524. (fn. 16) The high figure of
206 communicants recorded in Beeding parish in
1676 may include inhabitants of Lower as well as
Upper Beeding. (fn. 17) In 1801 the population of Lower
Beeding was said to be 230, but that figure may have
excluded dwellers in St. Leonard's Forest as the
figures of 533 for 1831 and 775 for 1841 certainly did.
From 1,081 in 1851 the population rose to 1,309 in
1881. After falling to 1,156 in 1921, it rose again to
1,322 in 1931, and to 1,722 in the enlarged area of the
parish in 1971. In 1981 it was 3,084. (fn. 18)
An alehouse called the Black Dog in St. Leonard's
Forest was mentioned in 1721. (fn. 19) The Crabtree public
house in the south was recorded in 1771 and survived in 1981; (fn. 20) between 1786 and 1810 the Burbeach hundred court was sometimes held there. (fn. 21)
The Plough public house in Lower Beeding village
was recorded in 1838, (fn. 22) and there were beer houses
at Colgate in 1878 (fn. 23) and at Ashfold crossways in
1909; (fn. 24) all three survived in 1981.
Horse races were held between 1834 and 1840 at
a course 1½ mile long west of St. Leonard's house. (fn. 25)
Cricket clubs played in the grounds of Holmbush
and Leonardslee in 1895; (fn. 26) the former survived in
1981. A football club existed at Crabtree in 1909. (fn. 27)
There were a sports ground and community centre
south of Lower Beeding village in 1981. Village
halls had also been founded earlier at Crabtree and
Colgate. A village hall at Crabtree was built in 1875
by W. E. Hubbard of Leonardslee, and in 1905
served as a working men's club and reading room
with a library of 500 volumes. (fn. 28) The county council
had a branch library there in 1957. (fn. 29) In 1975 the
building, near the Crabtree public house, was being
converted into a house. (fn. 30) A village hall at Colgate,
opened in the former school building after 1915, (fn. 31)
was destroyed by bombing in 1940, and was replaced
by a new building opened in 1953, which in 1979
was used by various clubs. (fn. 32) The county council
bought c. 180 a. north-west of Buchan Hill house in
1969 and ten years later dedicated it as a country
park. (fn. 33) A country club existed nearby west of
Buchan Hill house in 1981, its facilities including a
golf course opened in 1974 and three squash courts.
Newells pond in the south-west was restored in 1980
for letting as a trout fishery. (fn. 34)
The large houses of the parish had their own
water supplies in the 19th century, (fn. 35) and Holmbush
by the 1870s its own gas supply. (fn. 36) The Horley District Gas Co. was empowered to supply Bewbush
tithing in 1886. (fn. 37) Mains water was supplied to the
parish by the Horsham rural district council by
1938; (fn. 38) a reservoir to contain 1 million gallons was
constructed at Beedingwood near Colgate c. 1932, (fn. 39)
and another reservoir in Hampers Lane west of St.
Leonard's house after the Second World War. Horsham urban district council was empowered to
supply electricity to the parish in 1930. (fn. 40)
Before the 19th century, owing to the lack of
resident gentry and the absence of strong civil and
ecclesiastical jurisdiction, (fn. 41) Lower Beeding was a
wild and often lawless place; disputes were sometimes settled by force, (fn. 42) and in the late 18th century
the forest was apparently a meeting place for smugglers. (fn. 43) In the 1820s the new settlers of the forest
were said to be notorious for their disorderly and
profligate conduct, the parish being 'the resort of the
idle and worthless from the surrounding neighbourhood'; there was said to be much 'open fornication'
c. 1829, and even several cases of incest. (fn. 44) In the
later 19th and early 20th centuries, by contrast,
the parish was in many ways dominated by its newly
resident gentry families, often interconnected by
marriage, (fn. 45) which were responsible for many benefactions, notably the Aldridges of St. Leonard's
house, the Clifton Browns of Holmbush, and the
Hubbards of Leonardslee. (fn. 46) As late as 1867 it was
said that the parish had only recently begun to be
civilized, (fn. 47) evidently as a result of the erection of the
church at Lower Beeding and of the school nearby. (fn. 48)