- Adversane
infobox UK place
country = England
static_
static_image_caption= Cottages at Adversane
latitude= 50.99891
longitude= -0.4707
official_name = Adversane
population =
civil_parish=Billingshurst
shire_district= Horsham
shire_county=West Sussex
region= South East England
constituency_westminster= Horsham
post_town=
postcode_district =
postcode_area=
dial_code=
os_grid_reference= TQ073232Adversane is a
hamlet in the Horsham District ofWest Sussex ,England , located 1.5 miles south ofBillingshurst . It consists of a cluster of houses and apublic house (the "Blacksmith's Arms") at a crossroads on theA29 road , on theRoman road namedStane Street .The hamlet was known as Hadfoldshern until the 1850s. [From Hadfoldshern to Adversane, "Deborah Evershed" 2007 ISBN 0-9553608-0-3 Published by South Grove Books 3 South Grove Petworth West Sussex GU28 0ED Tel. 01798 343496 ] The Blacksmith's Arms stands beside the site of the blacksmiths shop, where Gaius (George) Carley was the last of many smiths to work the forge until it closed in the 1960s. He lived at Grigg's Cottage, a half-timbered cottage opposite.
Stane Street cottages, opposite the pub, were probably built using the Roman road as their foundation, as the road deviates slightly at this point, returning to its straight line a little distance further on, and the sandstone houses are precisely in line with both sections of Stane Street. They are in fact a single building, converted in the 1930s from a malt warehouse built by the Allen brothers of Horsham, whose activities are catalogued in 'A History of Horsham' produced by Horsham Museum. They were maltsters who smuggled malt from the continent during the Napoleonic wars and hid their contraband in secret cellars under this and several other warehouses in the Horsham area. The cellars had a tendency to flood and were filled in during the 1950s together with the reputed secret passage to the pub! The malthouse was part of the setting for 'Martin Pippin in the Apple Orchard' by Eleanor Farjeon, published by W. Collins & Sons Ltd in 1921 and by Oxford University Press in 1952.
References
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