Official Name: | Lurgashall |
Country: | England |
Civil Parish: | Lurgashall |
Region: | South East England |
Static Image Name: | Lurgashall.JPG |
Static Image Caption: | Lurgashall Village Green |
Area Footnotes: | [1] |
Area Total Km2: | 20.97 |
Population: | 609 |
Population Ref: | 2011 Census[2] |
Population Density: | 28/km2 |
Os Grid Reference: | SU936271 |
Coordinates: | 51.0362°N -0.6663°W |
Post Town: | PETWORTH |
Postcode Area: | GU |
Postcode District: | GU28 |
Dial Code: | 01428 |
Constituency Westminster: | Chichester |
London Distance: | NE |
Shire District: | Chichester |
Shire County: | West Sussex |
Website: | http://www.lurgashall.org/ |
Lurgashall is a village and civil parish in the Chichester district of West Sussex, England, 6.5 km (4 ml) north west of Petworth, just inside the South Downs National Park. The population at the 2011 Census was 609.[2]
The church has had many additions over the years, it still retains some evidence of the original Saxon structure.
The village had become almost extinct in 1100, and finds no mention in the Domesday Book of 1086. After the Norman Conquest, the King gave the Lurgashall area to a Norman family called Alta Rippa, who built a Manor House there in about 1100. The Manor House itself has not survived but the area that the estate occupied is now Park Farm, which gets its name from the Deer Park which the Alta Rippa family established in about 1200. The coming of the Manor revived the village's fortunes and it grew in importance throughout the feudal period.
An account of what it was like to live in the village in the early part of the 20th century is given in the book A view of Edwardian Lurgashall by H. S. Roots. It was re-published in 2000[3] and is based on the memories of a child called Harold who came to the village aged four in 1899. His father was the headmaster of the village school for 10 years and the book is an account of Harold's time growing up in the village and giving accounts of rural life as it was then in what was a fairly isolated village on the northern outskirts of Petworth.
There was at one time a mill which has been transferred to the Weald and Downland Living Museum, leaving just the mill pond.[4]
The Rev A. A. Evans wrote in 'A Countryman's Diary':"This was Lurgashall. have been to it several times since and with heightened appreciation... its beauty increases with familiarity, it endures, while the merely catchy and trivial wear away".
Lurgashall cricket club plays on the village green, and is often the guest team at the Ebernoe Horn Fair. Some of the sheep's horn trophies won by highest scoring batsmen[5] used to be displayed in the inn. There is a village hall for indoor activities such as bingo, parties and receptions.[6] There is a football pitch to the south-east of the green.