Rottingdean
Rottingdean photos (31 available)
Rottingdean maps (2 available)
Map of East Sussex
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Rottingdean books (27 available)
- 17 photos on Rottingdean appear in 3 Frith books - View photos of Rottingdean
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Rottingdean and East Sussex
Rottingdean memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in East Sussex below.
East Sussex memories
Life as a young boy in Saltdean
THE LIFE & TIMES OF DONALD CHARLES WILLIAMS
Personal recollections from Don Williams from Hailsham who lived in Saltdean from 1937 to 1952 - Many thanks for these wonderful stories & photo's of Saltdean in the Past.
Mum had answered an advert for a butcher's bookkeeper at Rottingdean, working for a Mr W.R. Dean who had three shops, Barcombe, Rottingdean and Saltdean.
He apparently required a Manager for the Saltdean branch and suggested to Mum, would Dad be interested. He was, so we duly moved to 14 Westfield Avenue on the Mount Estate at the back of Saltdean Sussex about 7 miles East of Brighton. This was a new estate of small bungalows (still there) originally erected for ...read more here
A memory of Saltdean contributed by Don Williams
Shops on Warran Way
The shops were built in 1959/60 and the Steele family took possession of the first 2 shops as soon as they were finished. The shop, on the corner of Falmer and Warran, opened as a hairdressers and was managed by my then fiance Lesley, the adjoining shop opened as a laundrette, run by Lesley's mother. The family lived in the maisonette above the shops and I have many happy memories of that era.
A memory of Woodingdean contributed by Geoff Cann
Day out shopping.
As a child during the 1970s I used to live in Burgess Hill (10 miles away) with my parents and younger brother David. I remember being very small and my mother taking us to Brighton on the stagecoach bus with our next door neighbours. Both women loved to shop and us four children had to go along for the ride.
As we passed Preston Park we always counted the 'pudding trees' (because they were shaped like christmas puddings!) which ran along the side of the road. Also I remember that the rock gardens on the right always looked like a magical place to me as a child and I imagined fairies and such like, but we never got off the ...read more here
A memory of Brighton contributed by angela green
growing up in World War II
I was born to Jewish parents whom had a ladies clothes shop in Kensington Gardens (The Lanes) my Father died in 1941, My Mother now a very young widow decided she wanted us all to live above the shop because of bombs etc, it had 2 rooms upstairs which we used as bedrooms, a small room we used as a dining/living room, with gas fire which she told us if the Germans invaded we would sit in front of it and turn it on, she was terrified as we were all girls and Jewish, NO bathroom, we went once a week to the public baths How Awful UGH!, toilet out side ...read more here
A memory of Brighton contributed by Anita lewis
Extracts From Rottingdean & East Sussex books
Many schools were
established in the
Brighton area, for the
bracing air was ideal for
children. Perhaps the
most famous is Roedean,
established in new build-
ings on the clifftop a few
years after this picture
was taken.
An extract from from"Brighton and Hove Photographic Memories".
Fine sea views can be obtained from the regular summer open-top bus service which runs from Brighton to Rottingdean, a picturesque village situated in a dene, or valley in the downs. For centuries Rottingdean was a typical downland village, but its character was radically changed when modern roads and houses were constructed at the seaward end.
An extract from from"Sussex Revisited Photographic Memories".
Tudor Close House was
a skilful 1920s conver-
sion of much older farm
buildings into seven
houses. They were con-
verted into a hotel, as
seen in this view, but
shortly afterwards the
building was reconverted
back to twenty-nine flats.
An extract from from"Brighton and Hove Photographic Memories".
A hundred years ago, windmills were a ubiquitous feature of the downland landscape. This mill, standing proudly alongside the modern tea kiosk and ticket office for Rottingdean's pitch and putt course, is one of the many wooden smock mills erected in Sussex during the 19th century.
An extract from from"Sussex Revisited Photographic Memories".
As a modern holiday resort and suburb of Brighton, Rottingdean benefited from an increase in holidaymakers immediately after the Second World War. The swimming pool below the retreating chalk cliffs was a popular attraction for both young and old alike.
An extract from from"Sussex Revisited Photographic Memories".






