Tilgate Park is a large recreational park situated south of Tilgate , South-East Crawley .
45-403: Originally a 2,185-acre (8.84 km) part of the ancient Worth Forest, the park and adjacent areas (including the modern-day Furnace Green , Three Bridges , part of Southgate and Tilgate Forest) were part of the larger Tilgate Estate . Although visitor activity is mostly focused on the area surrounding Tilgate Lake and on the adjacent gardens of a former country mansion, a large area of
90-511: A round barrow cemetery was established west of Pease Pottage on the ancient ridgeway running along the watershed above the park (now the set of roads from Horsham to Pease Pottage, Handcross and Turners Hill ). There is now evidence of Iron Age activity in the region, after a recent re-excavation of a major Roman ironworking site at Broadfield , just west of the park. Beginning of activity here, and in Southgate West just north,
135-558: A private house). Confusingly, a deer park was established north of the Mansion, occupying the area of the present neighbourhood south of Shackleton Road and west of Worcester Road. This had Fallow deer . A new farmstead called "Stone Barn" was built at what is now the south end of the latter road. In the late 19th century, the Park and Forest became nationally known for several botanical rarities (apparently mostly now extinct here) including
180-542: A silent initial 'w' as in 'one', and including the Saxon letter ' ð ' which sounds a soft 'th'. The Domesday book's entries for Sussex, by comparison, list Worthing as "Ordinges" and Petworth as "Peteorde"). With the creation of Crawley New Town, Worth village became part of it, in the Pound Hill ward; the title of the ward was changed in 2004 to Pound Hill South and Worth . It is common for signposts to be altered to use
225-399: A third of its original size. Despite their names, neither Worth Abbey , an English Benedictine monastery , nor Worth School are located in the modern Worth civil parish. They are in what is now Turners Hill civil parish. Worth village is now an area within the neighbourhood of Pound Hill in the borough of Crawley . It was formerly a separate village, and its name is still used for
270-470: Is a medieval land term used in Great Britain and Ireland , well established by the 13th century. A burgage was a town (" borough " or " burgh ") rental property (to use modern terms), owned by a king or lord. The property ("burgage tenement") usually, and distinctly, consisted of a house on a long and narrow plot of land ( Scots : toft ), with a narrow street frontage. Rental payment ("tenure")
315-779: Is a relic. The alleged manor passed with that of Slaugham down the Covert family line, before passing to another family, the Sergisons , in 1702. However, the London Gazette of 1827 referred to it as a "reputed manor" because the estate has never been part of the English manorial system. Later that century, the Sergisons embarked on a massive set of improvements to the Forest. These included drainage ditches, still to be found in
360-544: Is considered to be of late Iron Age origin. However, a recent (2011) archaeological survey of Tilgate Forest found no positive evidence of Roman ironworking activity there. The only possibly Roman feature was a single "mine-pit" found south of the Tilgate Forest Recreation Centre, west of Titmus Lake at TQ269343 and so near the Roman ironworks. "Mine" is Sussex dialect for iron ore, and the feature
405-412: Is no discernible traces of a deer park in the modern Tilgate Park. If any deer park was here, it might have been on the site of the present Tilgate Playing Fields, where a random scatter of large, spreading oak trees was recorded on the 1875 large-scale Ordnance Survey map (a few survive). The landscape of the Park area changed drastically when the blast furnace was introduced into English ironworking in
450-487: The "Tilgate Forest Recreation Centre" grew up (it was never a public amenity). In 1950, the Forestry Commission bought the Forest and began to plant conifers over most of it, with areas of beech and American oak. The biggest lake in the park, Tilgate Lake, is most famous for its association with Malcolm Campbell , who carried out flotation trials for his boat "Bluebird" but not water speed trials there. It
495-617: The 8th millennium BCE. The major find-spot is now on the Golf Course, at TQ28593458. Geologically the park is on the Hastings Beds , dominated by sandstone with pockets of clay and iron ore. This produces poor, acidic and nutritionally deficient soils which, paradoxically, supported a varied natural plant cover. After the end of the Ice Age, especially after the extinction of the herbivorous megafauna , tree cover began to dominate
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#1732780766851540-663: The Estate up for auction. No bidder was found, so the auctioneers split the property into separate lots which were sold off individually. During the War, as part of the build-up for D-Day Canadian army troops were billeted at a camp in woodland west of Titmus Lake, featuring Nissen huts . After the War, in 1947, the site was acquired by the Crawley Development Corporation and the huts began to be rented out to leisure clubs and societies seeking premises. In this
585-561: The Forest south of the sawmill at "Old Stone Cottage Farm". The firm supplied sapling trees for the New Town. Tilgate neighbourhood was built between 1958 and 1960. The Park project was delayed, however, leading to conflict between the private landowners and trespassers, especially children. Crawley Urban District Council (Borough Council from 1974) purchased the Walled Garden in 1962, and the lakes and Mansion in 1964. It demolished
630-437: The Forest the Estate included four farms: Tilgate, Furnace, Maidenbower and "Highwood's" (Malthouse?). Maidenbower Farm was only part of the present Maidenbower estate, which also covers the former Frogshole and Forest Farms. The 1813 map shows the lane from Crawley continuing on top of the lake dam to Worth Furnace, then through Greentrees Farm and down what is now Crawley Lane to Balcombe. 19th-century improvements suppressed
675-462: The Lodge in the later 1860s. The architect was Thomas Henry Wyatt. The present gardens were laid out between 1875 and 1900 over the previous formal garden and Home Farm fields, with many rare specimen trees and shrubs. The top end of Tilgate Lake was extended to Silt Lake, two islands formed and a Cascade created. Also, the Walled Garden was built with a "Head Gardener's Cottage" on its access drive (now
720-653: The Tunbridge Filmy Fern ( Hymenophyllum tunbrigense ). On Sarah's death in 1904, the estate went to her son John Ashburner Nix , who died in 1927, and then to his brother Charles George Ashburner Nix ; the Nix family is included in Burke's Landed Gentry under the title "Nix of Tilgate." The latter's grandson was the banker Paul David Ashburner Nix, the father of Alexander Nix , the CEO of Cambridge Analytica . Together
765-646: The Worth name instead of Pound Hill by local residents. The ecclesiastical parish, part of the Diocese of Chichester , maintains the distinction, and is formally entitled "The Parish of Worth, Maidenbower and Pound Hill." Worth Park House, a large country house, once stood on the Milton Mount housing estate, now part of Pound Hill, Crawley . The house was home to Sir Joseph Montefiore and his family. The gardens have recently been restored. Burgage Burgage
810-433: The Worth tithe map of that year shows them, but the woodland took over the northern ones later. Also, the family moved Tilgate Manor. The first Ordnance Survey map, 1813, shows "Tilgate Farm" (Lower Tilgate) and "Tilgate Lodge" next to the later Mansion. To the south of the Lodge was a formal garden, and beyond this to the west and south were small fields cleared from the Forest to create a "Home Farm". In 1827, as well as
855-420: The air flow did not pulse). The very important point about the furnace was, it had to operate continuously throughout its lifespan. A shortage of any one of its three ingredients (ore, charcoal, air) would destroy the furnace. The ironmasters had to plan very carefully to ensure a continuous supply of the three. The first local blast furnaces were two at "Worth Furnace", erected by one Willam Leavitt in 1547. This
900-409: The bloomeries. The first possible reference to Tilgate as a place is in 1296, when a tax return mentions one William Yllegate. This is analysed as "Illan Geat" or "entrance into the forest belonging to Illan". Speed's map of Sussex, published 1610, shows Worth Forest with two enclosed deer parks -Paddockhurst (now Worth Abbey ) and Tilgate. Paddockhurst Park still features on modern maps, but there
945-622: The brothers were great horticulturalists and members of the Royal Horticultural Society. They planted the Pinetum in 1906, and began conifer plantations in the Forest. A sawmill was built on the A23, at the beginning of a forest ride running east to where the pylons are now. This was called The Avenue. Fossilised dinosaur remains have been recovered from a Mesozoic geologic formation named after Tilgate Forest. The find-spot
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#1732780766851990-474: The civil parish in which it was originally situated. Worth village has Saxon origins: Worth Church still retains its Saxon floor plan. The Wealden iron industry flourished here in the 17th and 18th centuries. The coming of the railway in 1855 brought more employment to the area, but the line closed in 1967. The place appears under Surrey in the Domesday book, with the old spelling "Orðe" (pronounced with
1035-431: The former. The only evidence of activity by Neolithic (c4500 to c2500 BCE) farmers around the park have been two finds. The Mesolithic site on the Golf Course, mentioned above, also produced a polished flint axe. Also a polished arrowhead and broken polished axe were found in a field to the south of the park -the recorder thought that this evidence had ritual significance. In the following Bronze Age (c2500 to 800 BCE)
1080-402: The furnace was too fragile to carry far, so must have been sourced locally. The 2011 archaeological survey found two charcoal oven platforms in the Forest. A steady supply of charcoal was so important that Wealden ironmasters were entering into coppice wood futures , buying supplies before they had grown. The myth is that the iron industry destroyed woodland. This is completely false, but rather
1125-430: The government in the 16th and 17th centuries was opposed to the conversion of timber woodland to coppice woodland for strategic reasons (building ships needed good timber) and what it called "wasted woods" were those lacking timber trees. The last reference to the working furnace dates to 1664, when the furnace was demolished and rebuilt. There is a reference to a road to the furnace in 1685. However, in 1690 "Tilgate Farm"
1170-618: The landscape from about 8500 BCE which marks the beginning of the Mesolithic Age. However, the vegetation of the High Weald , of which the park is a part, was more vulnerable owing to the poverty of the soils and so supported open woodland shading into grassland and heathland on high areas, with thick woodland confined to the narrow valleys. This landscape was very attractive to hunter-gatherer groups, who might have encouraged grassland and discouraged tree growth by summer burning of
1215-560: The late 19th century into the Thirties - Small white orchid (Pseudorchis alba). The nearest colonies are now in mid Wales. Charles was in difficulties by 1932, when he leased the Walled Garden and its greenhouses to FW Burke & Co as a Horticultural research Station. This would have marked the end of intensive gardening at Tilgate, and the loss of flower beds. Before the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939, Charles put
1260-488: The late Middle Ages. The first was erected in 1490, and it transformed the Wealden iron industry . Unlike a clay pot bloomery, in which the iron didn't quite melt, a blast furnace provided a continuous supply of liquid iron. It was a hollow brick tower, with iron ore and charcoal put into the top and molten iron tapped out of the bottom. A strong blast of air was provided by a pair of huge water-powered bellows (a pair so that
1305-547: The latter in 1965, and replaced it with the striking modern "Lakeside Restaurant". In this period, roe deer returned to the Forest. Worth, Crawley Worth is either a civil parish in the Mid Sussex District of West Sussex , or a distinct but historically related village in Crawley . Worth is a civil parish in the Mid Sussex District of West Sussex , a county in southeast England. It includes
1350-415: The narrow valleys. The Yeakell and Gardner 1783 map shows the Forest as heath, also the two Park lakes and the surviving Furnace lake next to "Furnace Farm". The lane to the latter from Three Bridges was to become the main drive to the Mansion. The mediaeval farm had probably been rebuilt by 1647, which is the year of the first reference to " Tilgate Manor Estate". A huge Sweet chestnut near "Lower Tilgate"
1395-536: The park is former silvicultural forest. This is now managed as a Local Nature Reserve called Tilgate Forest . The park also contains the Tilgate Nature Centre featuring captive breeding of some vulnerable and endangered animal species and varieties. Worked flint tools of the Mesolithic "Horsham Culture" have been found in numbers in the park, including so-called "Horsham Point" arrowheads of
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1440-545: The portions from Crawley to Tilgate and in Worth Forest (the latter has been recently reinstated as a bridle path). The Sergisons sold out in 1814. After a succession of owners in the early 19th century, the estate was inherited in 1862 by a wealthy businessman from India, George Ashburner . Back then, as well as the Forest the Estate included all the farmland south of the road between Crawley and Three Bridges. It had acquired Hogs Hill Farm (now Southgate West estate), also
1485-481: The present Hardriding Farm next to Pease Pottage. Ashburner's daughter Sarah married John Hennings Nix , in 1865 at St Nicholas' Church, Worth . The groom was partners with his brother Edward Winkelmann Nix in the London bank Fuller, Banbury, Nix & Co (since absorbed by NatWest ). The couple took over the estate from her father when he died in 1869. It was Nix who built a large French-style mansion to replace
1530-516: The present Worth and Highbeeches Forests. None has been found in the present Tilgate Forest, however, but later improvement works may have removed them. Tilgate Lake had a corn-mill in the 18th century, first mentioned in 1702. This was still in operation in 1827 later a house called "Lakeside" (not to be confused with the later restaurant). The use of the Forest for rabbits suppressed coppice woodland in favour of short grassland with pollard beeches and oaks, some heathland and also woodland surviving in
1575-401: The slag was scavenged for road making. Crawley was formally founded in 1202 when it received its market charter, and evidence has been found of ironworking on its first burgage tenements . Iron ore outcropped in the clay around Crawley as well as in the sandstone of the park, and there would have been less work to dig it out of the clay. The latter would have also provided the material for making
1620-545: The villages of Copthorne and Crawley Down , and covers an area of 1,995 hectares (4,930 acres). The population at the time of the 2001 census was 9,888. In the 2011 census it had increased to 10,378. The parish of Worth was one of the larger West Sussex parishes, encompassing the entire area along the West Sussex/ Surrey border between the town of Crawley, east of its High Street, and East Grinstead . The creation of Turners Hill civil parish brought Worth to
1665-474: The wooded area. If the 2011 archaeological survey is correct in surmising these ditches to date from that time, then the Sergisons intended to clear the present Forest for farmland. They did clear the central tier along Parish Lane and turned it into four farms -Hardriding (formerly Belle Vue), New Buildings, Starvemouse and Mount Pleasant. The first farm listed was very odd. It included a set of circular fields surrounded by woodland. These still existed in 1841, as
1710-825: Was a bell pit which might have been dug much later. It is now accepted that the Romans were managing the entire High Weald as a strategic asset of military significance for the sake of its iron, and so were discouraging civilian settlement. The chain of command involved the Classis Britannica . The Saxons were certainly interested in using the thick woodland fringing the High Weald for pannage or transhumance involving feeding pigs on acorns. Local place names ending in -ley or -den indicate woodland clearings, mutating into farmsteads as transient swineherds became sedentary farmers and were joined by other immigrants. Crawley
1755-456: Was a quarry at Whitemans Green near Cuckfield , but the name given to the stratum led to the erroneous idea that the Forest was the find-spot. This mistake has influenced scholarly works. The finder was Gideon Mantell , who was collecting in the quarry by 1813 and named the "Tilgate Forest Stratum". The dinosaur concerned was the Iguanodon . A very rare orchid was collected at Tilgate from
1800-466: Was called Campbell's Lake for some time afterwards, although it was sold to a Mr Baker in 1952. He ran a fishing club. Bluebird was still tested on the lake into the late 1950s early 1960s. The Mansion was sold to BT Estates Ltd in 1940, which used it as offices and let the gardens go derelict. Rhododendron ponticum thickets took over large areas, including the lakesides. In 1950, the Walled Garden became "Tilgate Park Nurseries" which had another site in
1845-582: Was called a landgable or hawgable . Burgage grants were also common in Ireland; for example, when the town of Wexford received its royal charter in 1418, English settlers were encouraged into the town and were given burgage plots at a rent of one shilling per year. The term was translated into Irish as buiríos , and the element " Borris " survives in many Irish place names. Rothe House in Kilkenny
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1890-695: Was on the Stamford Brook in the present Worth Forest, just to the north of the eastern end of the railway bridge on the Parish Lane from Pease Pottage (the bridle path here crosses the site of the old millpond, south of the dam and slag heaps). "Tilgate Furnace" first appears in 1606, when a lease was renewed so it had already been in production by then. The two furnaces, Worth and Tilgate, were associated with forges downstream at Blackwater (now in Maidenbower ) and at Tinsley . Charcoal for firing
1935-470: Was one of these, and the dense woodland belt north of the sandstone of the Park would have been settled in this way. Public information about the park mentions the possibility that there was mediaeval ironworking here. The method of the period involved digging up an iron ore outcrop and reducing it in a "bloomery" or clay pot-furnace using charcoal and muscle-powered bellows. This exiguous procedure would leave very little archaeological evidence, especially if
1980-482: Was operated as a tenancy and the tenant farmer was responsible for keeping the lake dams in repair. They had become fish-ponds, so the furnace was gone. From that time, Tilgate began its evolution into a landed working estate . After the closure of the Furnace, the Forest was converted to commercial rabbit warrens . This involved creating so-called "pillow mounds" for the rabbits to burrow into, which can be found in
2025-406: Was usually in the form of money, but each "burgage tenure" arrangement was unique and could include services. As populations grew "burgage plots" could be split into smaller additional units. (Amalgamation was not so common until the second half of the 19th century. ) Burgage tenures were usually money-based, in contrast to rural tenures, which were usually services-based. In Saxon times the rent
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