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Litlington

Litlington photos (1 available)

Old photo of Litlington

Litlington maps (2 available)

Old map of Litlington

Litlington books (10 available)

Litlington memories

Life in the village

Litlington, the Village c1960

I was lucky enough to grow up in Litlington and also worked in the village shop/post office for Jack Keeble. I can trace my mothers family(Reed) back to the early 1800's they were from nearby Alfriston, so I have a very strong connection with Cuckmere valley. I had a very happy childhood, firstly in Lullington 1961 to 1966 and then Litlington 1966 to 1980. Village life, it takes some beating.
Contributed by Colin Parsons

East Sussex memories

Life in the village

Litlington, the Village c1960

I was lucky enough to grow up in Litlington and also worked in the village shop/post office for Jack Keeble. I can trace my mothers family(Reed) back to the early 1800's they were from nearby Alfriston, so I have a very strong connection with Cuckmere valley. I had a very happy childhood, firstly in Lullington 1961 to 1966 and then Litlington 1966 to 1980. Village life, it takes some beating.
A memory of Litlington contributed by Colin Parsons

Meeching Court Farm

Newhaven, c1950

My father's aunt and uncle lived in Newhaven. Ted Hoskins was his uncle's name, he was injured in the First World War and later worked at the lighthouse at the end of the breakwater before it was automated. His wife's name was May Jane.  After the Second World War I went with my parents many times to Newhaven for holidays, always in September.  In 1955 we stayed in a caravan on  the Meeching Court Farm site in a caravan with the name 'Amy', it was situated on the hill and you could see the ferries come in and out of the harbour. The milkman came round each morning with the milk, my mother used to buy Channel Islands milk, thick with ...read more here
A memory of Newhaven contributed by Dorothea Smedley

The horse shoe bite

Newhaven, the Promenade at high tide c1965

The small sandy beach at Newhaven was known as the horse shoe bite. It was completely covered at high tide, but as the water receded, it exposed fine golden sand, ideal for making castles and getting in your sandwiches. A row of barnacle-peppered rocks along the breakwater wall also got revealed with the falling tide, where a myriad of crabs hid amongst the clinging seaweed and a wonderland of rockpools formed, waiting to be explored.  
In the distance on the left of the photo you can just see the beginning of the breakwater, it's on the right of the harbour as you look at the sea. It was a good walk to the end, where generally in good weather there'd ...read more here
A memory of Newhaven contributed by Kathy Farmer

Extracts From Litlington & East Sussex books

Litlington, the Village c1960

This leafy flint village is situated in the Cuckmere valley near Alfriston. Nearby is one of the smallest Neolithic long barrows in Sussex. In the picture the Stores has a sign offering ‘Morning coffee and light refreshments,Teas’. There is still a very good tea garden here.
An extract from from"Villages of Sussex Pocket Album".

Hailsham, Western Road 1900

The railway originally ended at Terminus Place (which is hardly surprising), and housing was laid out along the old lane onto the common: this became Western Road, with Summer Heath Road a turning off in the distance of this view. All the houses on the right, apart from the one in the middle distance with two hipped- roofed bay windows, have since been demolished. The 1960s library, together with modern housing estates, have replaced them. The survivor is now a Citizens Advice Bureau and a working men’s club. The recreation ground is on the left.
An extract from from"Hailsham Photographic Memories".

Chiddingly, Muddles Green c1955

Half a mile south of the hamlet with the parish church and Chiddingly Place is another small hamlet, Muddles Green, where cottages fringe a small green. All four buildings in this view are Victorian: the one on the left, Birch Cottage, is of the 1860s, and the one behind the telephone pole, Jubilee Cottage, is dated 1887, while the others are of about 1900. Behind the photographer is the 1906 village school, and on the right the green has been enlarged with new houses built in the 1990s, Willetts Field.
An extract from from"Hailsham Photographic Memories".

Hailsham, Church interior 1900

This interior view of the church shows the 15th- century nave arcades and chancel arch; the ghost of the original roof line can be seen high above the chancel arch. The medieval roof survives, but it was lifted in 1889 when the Victorian clerestory was added. The Victorian improving biblical text over the chancel arch has been replaced by the more familiar ‘Jesus said: I am the way, the truth and the life’.
An extract from from"Hailsham Photographic Memories".

Hailsham, St Mary's Church c1955

This view is taken from the brick four-centred arch into Market Square. The brick footpath heads towards the porch which, with the south aisle, was added in 1870 to designs by H E Rumble. Above are the round quatrefoil windows of the clerestory added in 1889, which must have made the interior much lighter. On the left are the backs of buildings that front the High Street, while the yews and hollies in this view survive today.
An extract from from"Hailsham Photographic Memories".