East Grinstead High Street contains one of the longest continuous runs of
14th-century timber-framed buildings in
England. Other notable buildings in the town include
Sackville College, the sandstone almshouse built in 1609 where the
Christmas carol "
Good King Wenceslas" was written by
John Mason Neale. The college has sweeping views towards
Ashdown Forest. The adjacent
St Swithun's Church, stands on the highest ground in the town and was rebuilt in the eighteenth century (the tower dating from 1789) to a perpendicular design by
James Wyatt; its imposing building dominates the surrounding countryside for many miles around
. In the churchyard are commemorated the East Grinstead
Martyrs; and in the south-east corner is the grave of John Mason Neale. The
Greenwich Meridian runs through the grounds of the historic 1769
East Court mansion, home of the
Town Council, giving the visitor an opportunity to stand with a foot in both the east and west. The mansion stands in a parkland setting. In
1968 the East Grinstead
Society was founded as an independent body both to protect the historically important buildings of East Grinstead (and its environs) and to improve the amenities for future generations.
On the outskirts of the town is
Standen, a country house belonging to the
National Trust, containing one of the best collections of arts and crafts movement furnishings and fabrics.
Off the
A264 to
Tunbridge Wells, there is a
1792 historic house called
Hammerwood Park (the first work of the future architect of the
United States Capitol) which is open to the public twice a week in summer. East Grinstead
House is the headquarters of the (
UK and Ireland)
Caravan Club.
Local attractions include Ashdown Forest (where the Winnie-the-Pooh stories are set) and the
Bluebell Railway, a preserved heritage line with steam locomotives.
The town is also the site of
Queen Victoria Hospital, where famed plastic surgeon
Archibald McIndoe treated burns victims of
World War II and formed the
Guinea Pig Club. A statue of Sir Archibald McIndoe caring for an injured airman was erected in June 2014 outside Sackville College and was unveiled by
HRH The Princess Anne, the
Princess Royal. The town is well located to visit
Chartwell the country home of
Sir Winston Churchill,
Hever Castle home of
Henry VIII's second wife
Anne Boleyn, and
Penshurst Place home of the
Sidney family.
Kidbrooke Park (today
Michael Hall School), a home of the
Hambro family, was restored by the noted
Sussex architect and antiquarian,
Walter Godfrey, as was Plawhatch
Hall.
During the
Second World War, the town became a secondary target for
German bombers which failed to make their primary target elsewhere. On the afternoon of Friday 9 July 1943, a
Luftwaffe bomber became separated from its squadron, followed the main railway line and circled the town twice, then jettisoned seven bombs. Two bombs, one with a delayed-action fuse, fell on the
Whitehall Theatre, a cinema on the
London Road, where 184 people at the matinée show were watching a
Hopalong Cassidy film before the main feature. A total of
108 people were killed in the raid, including children in the cinema, many of whom were evacuees; and some twenty
Canadian servicemen stationed locally, who were either in the cinema when it was hit, or arrived minutes later to help with rescuing survivors. This was the largest loss of life of any single air raid in Sussex.
The Church of England has four places of worship in the town. St Swithun's Church was founded in the
11th century.
Architect James Wyatt rebuilt it in local stone in 1789 after it became derelict and collapsed.
Near the entrance to the church, three stones mark the supposed ashes of
Anne Tree,
Thomas Dunngate and
John Forman who were burned as martyrs on 18 July 1556 because they would not renounce the
Protestant faith
The inscription which runs across the three stones reads thus:
“
Beneath these stones are interred (as is believed) the ashes of Thomas Dunngate, Anne Tree, and John Forman, who were burned to death in
High St, East Grinstead, in 1556 for adherence to the Reformed
Faith. FIDELES USQUE AD MORTEM”.
http://www.lewesbonfirecelebrations.com/lewes-sussex-protestant-martyrs-reformation-4/
http://www.broadleys.co.uk/broadleys-footsteps-through-time/
http://sackvillecollege.org.uk/index
.html
http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/england/west+sussex/east+grinstead#.Vll9p_nhDIU
http://www.eastgrinstead.gov.uk/articles/news/
2012/03/an-eye-witness-remembers-the-bombing-of-the-whitehall-cinema/
- published: 28 Nov 2015
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