Worplesdon Explained

Country:England
Type:Village and civil parish
Coordinates:51.272°N -0.612°W
Official Name:Worplesdon
Map Type:Surrey
Static Image Name:St Mary's church, Worplesdon - geograph.org.uk - 57286.jpg
Static Image Caption:St Mary's Church
Grade I architectural listing
Population:8,529
Population Ref:(Civil Parish 2011)
1,503 (village and closest neighbourhoods only in 2001)[1] [2]
Area Total Km2:17.94
Civil Parish:Worplesdon
Shire District:Guildford
Shire County:Surrey
Region:South East England
Constituency Westminster:Guildford
Post Town:Guildford
Postcode District:GU3
Postcode Area:GU
Dial Code:01483
Os Grid Reference:SU9753

Worplesdon is a village NNW of Guildford in Surrey, England and a large dispersed civil parish that includes the settlements of: Worplesdon itself (including its central church area, Perry Hill), Fairlands, Jacobs Well, Rydeshill and Wood Street Village, all various-sized smaller settlements, well-connected by footpaths and local roads. Its area includes Whitmoor Common, which can be a collective term for all of its commons.

History

Early history

South of Broad Street, east of Wood Street Village on a farm in Broad Street Common are ruins of a Roman Villa – for further details see the Guildford article, as it is directly by the major town's western edge however in this parish.

Worplesdon has a Grade I C of E church, St Mary's with a 13th-century chancel and later additions.[3] [4] Worplesdon's single manor appears in Domesday Book of 1086 as Werpesdune held by Turald (Thorold) from Roger de Montgomery. Its domesday assets were: 6½ hides; a church, 9 ploughs, a mill worth 2s 6d, 8acres of meadow, wood worth 60 hogs. Its 22 households (of which one was a serf's)[5] rendered £10 sterling per year to its overlords.[6]

Early manorial owners includes (all cited as "de..."): Basseville, Holeye, (13th century) Wykford, Wintershall/Wintershull, Seymour (14th century); Ditton, Hegham, Wykford. Then we see Jasper Tudor (Earl of Pembroke, then created the Duke of Bedford) who was attainted, however following Edward IV's grant to the Duke of Clarence in 1474, it reverted to the last Duke of Bedford of the medieval creation (who died, childless).

Sir Anthony Browne and his son, Anthony Browne, 1st Viscount Montagu, gained a royal lease of the manor in the Tudor period, followed by Lord Annandale in 1625 for three lifetimes. The Harbord family next held it followed by John Payne of Hurtmore and Thomas Newton of Stoke (next Guildford) who owned it in 1670. Its owners until 1911 acquired what remained of the estate as early as in 1681, the Onslow family, historically Earls of Surrey.

The parish was divided into four tithings: Perry Hill, about the hill on which the church stands; Burpham, on the east side; West End; and Wyke. The last, which was separated from the rest of the parish, was added to Ash in 1890.

Later Manors

FrenchesThe reputed and lost Frenches manor represented the knight's fee held there by Richard le French in 1349. In 1402 John French released the manor of Frenches to Robert Oyldesborough, brewer, of London, having briefly been held by William Hamonde, probably in trust and passed to Robert Russell in 1598. It is probably represented by Russell Place Farm. Anthony Russell was living in Worplesdon when Symmes wrote, about 1676.
Merist WoodIn 1582 the queen, by charter, granted a lease to George More of Loseley of Merest Wood described as of wood and wooded ground in the Forest of Windsor, in Worplesdon at £3 8s. per annum. In 1742 a related fine (lease premium) for this was sued for among two men of the Grenville family.
  • WykeIn 1279 William of Wyke was holding this westerly manor. Divided between descendants Katerina, Joan and Christine in 1353, under the legal principle of female inheritance, "in moieties". Part holders' surnames thereafter included: Logge, Osbaldeston, Harding, Parker, Manory, Vyne, White in 1580 and in 1584 sold outright to William Harding, who thus acquired the whole again. Henceforth it descended with the manor of Claygate in Ash, Surrey.
  • Post-Industrial Revolution

    Adjacent to the church a London to Portsmouth semaphore tower (now demolished) served in the Napoleonic wars. The east window was embellished with stained glass, collected and arranged in 1802, at the expense of the Rev. W. Roberts and by the 1840s the whole parish's population was 1424 (which then included Burpham and Wyke).[7]

    In 1911 the Victoria County History's guide to the area included the agricultural and economic description:

    This pinpoints the area's sands (and hence its low agricultural natural fertility) as being key to Worpledon's abundance of heath and woodlands. In traditional parish descriptions such unproductive land is described as "waste".

    In the 2021 Census, the parish was given an estimated population of 8,500, which is almost identical to the 2011 census figure.[8]

    Landmarks and amenities

    Whitmoor Common

    See main article: Whitmoor Common. A large common is at the heart of the parish that has mixed landscapes of heather, copses of woodland, grasslands and bracken.

    Clustered around the village centre and its lightly developed localities are heavily wooded commons, managed by Surrey Wildlife Trust, including Broadstreet & Backside Commons, Stringer's Common, Littlefield Common, Whitmoor/Whitmore Common, Jordan Hill, Rickford Common, and Chitty's Common.

    Memorial hall and recreational grounds

    Worplesdon is served by the Worplesdon Memorial Hall,[9] built in 1922 to recall those who died in World War I; it and the adjacent recreation grounds are managed by trustees representing the donors and the Parish Council. A caretaker lives nearby. Beside the Hall are a playground and tennis and cricket facilities. There are a large events room, a meeting room, and the Sidney Sime Memorial Gallery.

    Hotel and convenience shopping

    Worplesdon itself has few shopping facilities; however it has the Worplesdon Place Hotel and the rail station north-east of the village centre.

    Wood Street Village and Stoughton amenities

    Wood Street Village is, unusually, a larger "village" within the historic parish as well as the 19th-century created, civil parish.[10] Stoughton, Guildford has a diverse parade of shops and is well-situated for access from most of the village and other settlements.

    Transport

    Worplesdon railway station has up to three services per hour to London Waterloo, on Mondays to Saturdays on the Portsmouth Direct Line. The station is between Woking and Guildford, in the east of the village.[11] This is separated from parts of the main village by the gently elevated northwestern flank of wooded Whitmoor, Jordan Hill and Rickford Commons, all of which are part of the village.

    Economy

    Taking the parish as a whole: 213 people at the time of the last census were employed in finance and insurance industries. Despite the heathland covering the parish, only 0.8% of residents in 2011 were employed in quarrying, forestry and agriculture, similarly real estate accounted for 1.2% of residents' occupations.[12] Technical/scientific employers employed 10% of the population, bolstered by the University of Surrey and Institute for Animal Health (with associated major employers in life sciences, space exploration and computing).

    Greater than this, education employed 12% of the population (549 people). Wholesale and retail trade, and the sale/repair of motor vehicles was the most important single category with 639 people. Next, just behind education, was health and social work employing 495 people. Accommodation and food service activities, combined with the category of arts, entertainment and recreation, employed a similar figure of 440 people.

    Two neighbouring villages to the northwest are Pirbright and Deepcut with significant UK Army presences, although the latter's barracks has been redeveloped into homes. Public Administration and Defence; Compulsory Social Security's total of people was 38 fewer than manufacturing, which gave employment to 239 people in 2011.

    Demography, Housing and Religion

    + 2011 Census Homes
    Output area Detached Semi-detachedTerracedFlats and apartmentsCaravans/temporary/mobile homesshared between households
    (Civil Parish)1,082 1,395 572 346 60 1
    The average level of accommodation in the region comprising detached houses was 28%, the average comprising apartments was 22.6%.
    + 2011 Census Key Statistics
    Output area Population Households % Owned outright % Owned with a loanhectares
    (Civil Parish)8,5293,456 40.5% 37.2%1,794
    The proportion of households in the civil parish who owned their home outright compares to the regional average of 35.1%. The proportion who owned their home with a loan compares to the regional average of 32.5%. The remaining % is made up of rented dwellings (plus a negligible percentage of households living rent-free).

    In the 2021 census, it was found that 88.2% of residents live in a house or bungalow, which is 10.8% higher than the national average; 10% of residents live in a flat or maisonette,12.2% lower than the national average, and 1.7% live in a caravan or mobile home.

    83% of residents were born in the UK and 17% were not, which is on a par with the average for England.

    The religious make-up of the parish population is as follows:

    2021 Census Religion Data!Religion!Christianity!Islam!Hinduism!Sikhism!Judaism!Irreligious!Other Religion!Did Not Answer
    Percentage53.61.51.20.20.235.80.36.5

    Education

    Merrist Wood Agricultural College stands on the hill in the west of the village, encompassing:

    The village's Perry Hill School closed in 1976 to be replaced by Worplesdon Primary in Fairlands. Worplesdon Primary School caters for 539 students from the ages of 4–11. The head teacher is Mrs K O'Brien.[13]

    Youth outreach

    The Normandy Youth Center serves the area by sponsoring community-based programs targeting youth in the area (especially marginal groups and minorities) for the purpose of increasing exposure to educational opportunities and building a stronger community.[14]

    Sports

    Cricket

    The Worplesdon and Burpham Cricket Club[15] traces its origins to 1890,[16] and Worplesdon & Burpham CC was established in 1999 following the merger of Worplesdon CC and Burpham CC.

    There are two teams playing on Saturday in the Fullers Brewery Surrey County League and one team on Sunday playing in The Village League. A new pavilion was opened in 2008 providing much larger facilities, a brand new bar and kitchen to supply the all-important cricket teas and post-game drinks.

    DirectionsTake the A322 leaving Guildford towards Bagshot. When you enter the village of Worplesdon (signposted and still on the A322) the ground is on the left hand side (with the entrance in the lay-by), 100 yards past the Worplesdon Place Hotel.

    Other Sports

    There is also Worplesdon Phoenix FC playing in the Surrey Counties Intermediate League and Guildford and Woking Alliance League[17] and, since 1991, Worplesdon Tennis Club,[18] with a new clubhouse (2005).

    Worplesdon Rangers FC[19] is another football club based in and around the parish; the club was founded in 2001 and caters for pre-reception to Under 18 age-groups playing in the Surrey Primary League. Committee meetings are held monthly at Jacobs Well Village Hall.

    Notable residents

    In the early 20th century, Worplesdon was home to the artist Sidney Sime, best known for magazine illustration and work in the books of the varied, particularly fantasy, author Lord Dunsany.

    In his later life Frederick Selous chronicled many of his adventures from his home in Worplesdon. Selous was a British explorer, officer, hunter, and conservationist, famous for his exploits in south and east of Africa. His real-life adventures inspired Sir H. Rider Haggard's Allan Quatermain character.[21] [22]

    Local Government

    There is one representative on Surrey County Council, Conservative Keith Witham whose physically large ward extends into Normandy, Surrey.[23] There are three representatives on Guildford Borough Council:

    Last electedMember[24] Ward
    2023Bill AkhtarWorplesdon
    2023Honor BrookerWorplesdon
    2023Philip BrookerWorplesdon

    Freedom of the Parish

    The following have received the Freedom of the Parish of Worplesdon.

    External links

    retrieved 6 April 2007

    Notes and References

    1. http://www.surreycc.gov.uk/sccwebsite/sccwspublications.nsf/591f7dda55aad72a80256c670041a50d/1c602ea59c869c9180256e600054b26c/$FILE/Town%20populations.pdf Surrey County Council census data
    2. http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk Key Statistics; Quick Statistics: Population Density
    3. St Mary's Church
    4. http://www.worplesdonparish.com/ Worplesdon Parish
    5. http://domesdaymap.co.uk/place/SU9753/worplesdon/ Domesday Map
    6. http://www.gwp.enta.net/surrnames.htm Surrey Domesday Book
    7. Web site: Worplesdon. Samuel. Lewis. Samuel Lewis (publisher). Institute of Historical Research . 1848 . A Topographical Dictionary of England . 27 May 2013.
    8. Web site: Build a custom area profile - Census 2021, ONS . 2023-08-24 . www.ons.gov.uk .
    9. Web site: Worplesdon Memorial Hall - a popular village hall near Guildford in Surrey. www.worplesdonmemorialhall.org.uk.
    10. http://www.parish-council.com/Worplesdon/ The Parish Council
    11. http://www.nationalrail.co.uk Official timetables
    12. Web site: Local statistics - Office for National Statistics. neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk.
    13. Web site: Worplesdon Primary School - GOV.UK . 2023-08-24 . get-information-schools.service.gov.uk . en.
    14. http://www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/s/2080377_award_for_mother_who_transformed_her_village Award for Mother Who Transformed Her Village
    15. Web site: Worplesdon & Burpham Cricket Club - Home. Barny. Leavers. www.wbcc.org.uk.
    16. Web site: Worplesdon & Burpham Cricket Club - History. Andy. MacAskill. www.wbcc.org.uk.
    17. Web site: Worplesdonphoenixfc.org.uk.
    18. Web site: Worplesdon Tennis Club. Worplesdon Tennis Club.
    19. Web site: worplesdonrangers.org.
    20. Ingalton, William.
    21. Mandiringana . E. . T. J. Stapleton . 1998 . The Literary Legacy of Frederick Courteney Selous . History in Africa . 25 . 199–218 . 10.2307/3172188 .
    22. Web site: Theodore Roosevelt, Chapter XI: The Lion Hunter . 18 December 2006 . Pearson . Edmund Lester . Humanities Web .
    23. Web site: Surrey CC Councillors Elected by Ward 2013. Surrey County Council. 27 May 2013.
    24. Web site: Borough Election Results 2019. Guildford Borough Council. 7 May 2023.
    25. Web site: Sandra Morgan Is First Recipient of Freedom of The Parish of Worplesdon . The Guildford Dragon . 14 December 2021 . en.