|
|
|
|
ABOUT RIDDLESDOWN... Riddlesdown is a mainly residential and rural area between Purley and Sanderstead comprising a number of attractive tree-lined streets. It has all the advantages of town (with Croydon a few miles away, and London only 30 minutes away by a good train service) and countryside, with Riddlesdown Common, one of its most beautiful attractions on the doorstep. The following information may be of interest. Also, see the picture pages accessed from the Home Page.
THE FOLLOWING IS
TAKEN FROM THE WELCOME TO RIDDLESDOWN RIDDLESDOWN FOR HISTORY The Corporation of London bought most of the land in 1883 to stop the lord of the manor enclosing it. With the Croydon to Oxted railway line being completed the following year, and the Gardener's Pleasure Resort established in 1892 at the foot of Riddlesdown, Victorian day trippers began flocking to the Downs in their thousands -for donkey rides, swing boats, tea rooms and even a miniature railway! Its predominant use was to graze sheep and cattle, and the traditional landscape of the Common has been a lot more open than it is today. Grazing halted in the 1930s and woody scrub immediately crept back across the open areas, apart from where grass was mown around the car park and on the flatter land cut for hay. Since the late 1980s, however, this loss of important grassland has been stopped and the animals are back! RIDDLESDOWN FOR PEOPLE Riddlesdown plays a central part in the lives of local people. Every summer the Common is host to the Residents' Association's Fun Day, full of children's activities, races, face-painting, picnicking families, and, well, fun! Join regular guided walks and talks about the Common advertised on notice-boards, at the site office and in the car park, and in our biennial newsletter. If you want to contribute to the protection and improvement of the area, why not join the Downsfolk - the site's very own band of trusted volunteer helpers? RIDDLESDOWN FOR WILDLIFE Its chalk bedrock creates soils that support an unusual community of flowers and grasses. In the meadows, resplendent common spotted, pyramidal and rare bee orchids can be found alongside downland herbs such as perforated St.John's wort, marjoram and salad burnet. Feeding on the anthills are green woodpeckers. Woodland birds, such as nuthatch and tree creeper, live amongst an impressive range of trees and shrubs. The site is renowned for its population of yew trees, the uncommon spindle, and the tiny, but nationally rare juniper - restricted in the south of England to open chalky slopes. During summer, keepers regularly spot over twenty species of butterfly, from the easily distinguished red admirals, speckled woods and meadow browns, to the less obvious ringlets, brown argus, green veined whites and Essex skippers. If you're lucky you might catch sight of the nationally rare chalkhill blues. Deep in the heart of the woodland areas, the rare dormouse lives out its nocturnal and secret life eating hazelnuts and blackberries and sleeping in nests of stripped wild clematis.
RIDDLESDOWN COMMON Area In 1877 Byron, the Squire of Coulsdon, was taken to the Court of Chancery for encroaching on Common land of the Manor (Land adjoining Riddlesdown chalkpit) The case was brought by William Hall of Little Roke House, which stood off the western corner of Riddlesdown just below the railway, and his brother. As landowners themselves, they would have benefitted if the land had in fact been enclosed. Apart from its immediate effect ,the case of Hall vs. Byron resulted in a large quantity of records about the local people, customs and land holdings at the time. Judgement was given for the Halls, and an injunction restrained Byron from enclosing common land. Hall’s solicitors then sued him for their costs, amounting to £1,000 as no judgement was given on this item. His total costs in the affair were £3,510. The City of London Corporation provided the final solution by paying £7,000 plus the costs for Byrons freehold and rights of commonage. The purchase of local land for preservation as open space continued in 1883 when the London Corporation bought the other Coulsdon Commons: Farthing Downs, Coulsdon Common and Kenley Common, to add to the existing Riddlesdown acquisition. The name ‘Riddlesdown’ was first recorded in 1331 as ‘Ridelesdoune’ and is believed to be mediaeval English `riddeleah’ - cleared woodland. It is also believed that the Down was once capped with Beech trees which are common on chalk because of the good drainage provided. The area of land which runs from Honister Heights to Hamsey Green was purchased as Greenbelt land and arrested the spread of housing. The land was once leased to a local farmer for hay and arable crops though now it is managed for wildlife. People are now free to wander over the meadows forming part of the Riddlesdown to Whyteleafe Countryside Area. There is a Trig point on the side of the track which runs across the area showing that the point is 525 feet above sea level. The 1910 Ordnance Survey plan shows a ‘Rifle Range’ on the downland and also Markers Hut and Rifle Butts. Riddlesdown is of Archaeological interest and in 1962 three graves were found and may have been connected with a Saxon Cemetery that was found at the junction of Riddlesdown Avenue and Mitchley Avenue. Stone Axes have also been found on Riddlesdown and have been dated to new Stone age or the Neolithic. Running underneath Riddlesdown is a tunnel half a mile long which carries the railway line from Riddlesdown Station to Oxted. Riddlesdown has been designated a Site of Special Scientific Interest by the Nature Conservancy Council, scrub and covers the steep south west Chalk slopes and the woodland flora includes an orchid which occurs nowhere else in Greater London. Scrub clearance of the land owned by the London Borough of Croydon had also resulted in the re-emergence of several Orchids including the Pyramidal and Man Orchids, the rarer Great Butterfly Orchid was also recorded which was thought to be extinct in Croydon.
The following is an article by Andrew Scott of the Corporation of London, written for the April 2005 Riddlesdown Recorder:
THE ROMAN ROAD ON
RIDDLESDOWN The exact course of the full length of the Roman road was deduced from a mixture of finding actual remains at certain points including their alignments, i.e. the direction surviving fragments pointed, as well as inferences from straight lengths of modern road and significant place names. Ivan Margary published his account of the road’s course in Surrey Archaeological Collections in 1937 on which this article is based. The nearest section of Roman road to Riddlesdown that has been excavated lies about half a mile north of Caterham station near Tillingdown Hill. Here it was found to be about 25 feet wide and layered with 12 inches of flints. It’s thought that rainfall here was higher in the Roman period than it is today and therefore the winter flooding of the Bourne would have been a real obstacle to road builders. In fact it wasn’t until 1790 that the Godstone Road was built along its present course in the valley bottom. So the Romans avoided the wet valley by building their road over Riddlesdown. They probably didn’t metal their road, relying on drainage ditches to keep its surface dry. No physical traces of the Roman road have been found here (a possible investigation for the future?). Based on the alignment of Riddlesdown Road over the highest part of Riddlesdown and the crossing in Purley, Margary was convinced that the original Roman road then continued northwards along the line of the public footpath which continues as Downs Court Road. Saxon graves were discovered when houses were built along Riddlesdown Road in 1927 and when a trench was dug in their gardens in 1962. Their alignment suggests that a route across Riddlesdown was still in use some 1400 years ago. Certainly the road over Riddlesdown was the main route for traffic to Brighton and Lewes in the eighteenth century. Horses were changed at the coaching inn at the foot of the steep climb from the Godstone Road on their way to London. This inn is known today as the ‘Rose and Crown’, but when it was built in 1743 it was known as the ‘Rose’. Although the construction of the Godstone Road marked its decline as an important road for traffic, motor vehicles continued to use it as late as the 1970s, when it became maintained by Croydon Council as a bridleway.
|
|
Our address for those who wish to write to us
is:
|