Ewhurst, Deblins Green c.1965
Photo ref: E47090
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Photo ref: E47090
Photo of Ewhurst, Deblins Green c.1965

More about this scene

This small green is at the north end of the village - the Bull's Head pub stands on the left out of the picture. This view looks to the west side of the square green, with the bellcote of the Evangelical Church in the distance. To the right, the tile-hung Deblins Green with its hipped tiled roof and tile- hung upper floor dates from about 1700. To the right, Jack Bennett's Esso garage (later renamed Pitt's Garage) recently closed, and the tiled pump canopy and the pumps were removed. Its good timber-framed house behind remains; it is currently awaiting repair (October 2001).

A Selection of Memories from Ewhurst

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Ewhurst

Sparked a Memory for you?

If this has sparked a memory, why not share it here?

My grandfather Edward Chase kept the Windmill Inn on Pitch hill and my father worked for him. My maternal grandfather John Allen kept the Bull Head in the village of Ewhurst and had two daughters, Mona and Lilian. My father Robert Chase ( Ted ) joined the Surrey Yeomanry during the first World War and served in France with this cavalry regiment. He returned to Ewhurst after the war not in the best of health ...see more
In the late 19th century both this inn and the windmill itself, which was a short way away, were run by members of the Coldman family --- brothers I believe.
When my maternal grandparents' house "Hobart", Mount Road, Cranleigh was bombed during World War Two we were housed temporarily above the the Crown Inn whilst the bomb was defused and the house put back in order.
For more information on the men from Ewhurst who served and fell or returned from the First World War, details can be found at www.ewhurstfallen.co.uk. "The number of volunteers from Ewhurst and Ellen's Green was 'second to none'. The memorials show the price they paid" Walter Stemp, one of the village's veterans.