- Rottingdean
infobox UK place
country = England
official_name= Rottingdean
population= 2,500
latitude= 50.815
longitude= -0.065unitary_england=
Brighton and Hove
lieutenancy_england=East Sussex
region= South East England
constituency_westminster=Brighton Kemptown
post_town=Brighton
postcode_district= BN2
postcode_area= BN
dial_code= 01273
os_grid_reference= TQ375025Rottingdean is a prosperous coastal village next to the town of
Brighton and technically within the city ofBrighton and Hove , inEast Sussex , on the south coast ofEngland . It borders the villages ofOvingdean andWoodingdean , and has a historic centre, often the subject of picture postcards.Name
The name is Old English for 'valley of the people associated with Rōta (a male personal name)'. Rottingdean is in a dry valley whose sides in the upper reaches are quite steep, and this valley comes right down to the
English Channel coast. The name was contrasted unflatteringly withGoodwood (another place in Sussex) in a national 1970s advertising campaign for wood preserver.History
Rottingdean has approximately 2,500 inhabitants. For most of its history it was a farming community, but from the late 18th century it attracted leisured visitors wanting a genteel alternative to raffish
Brighton , among them some names famous in English cultural life. Some, in the late 19th century, notably the painterSir Edward Burne-Jones and his nephewRudyard Kipling , made it their home. Kipling's old house adjacent to Kipling Gardens is still standing and the former house of the painterSir William Nicholson is currently open to the public as a library andmuseum . When farming collapsed in the 1920s, much of the farmland became available for building, and Rottingdean increased significantly in population, especially in the area known asSaltdean . A large number of smallholdings appeared in the detached part of the parish calledWoodingdean .Rottingdean is also notable for the black wooden windmill on the hill on its western side. Nicholson made a woodcut that was used as the logo of the publisher
William Heinemann ; this is often said to have been a depiction of Rottingdean mill, but a glance at both will show that this is untrue. The hill is a local nature reserve. It was also well known for sport, having a cricket club founded in 1758 and having been a centre of fox hunting especially in the second half of the 19th century.The shop, The Old Customs House, was the inspiration for the "local" shop in
The League of Gentlemen The parish church
Its most historic other building is its probably 13th-century church of St Margaret, constructed in flint and having a short spire with a cap. An almost exact replica has been constructed at the
Forest Lawn Memorial Park ,Glendale ,California . The Rottingdean church features stained glass by Edward Burne-Jones, whose ashes are buried in the churchyard. Other modestly well-known burials include those of the Victorian novelistWilliam Black , Burne-Jones's granddaughter the authorAngela Thirkell , and the 1920s music-hall star G.H. Elliott, known professionally as "The Chocolate-Coloured Coon". Here is also the grave of the last "squire" of Rottingdean, Steyning Beard, who died in 1909; much of his land was ultimately sold off to pay his debts.Residents
Most of these well-known people were not local, and had settled in or retired to Rottingdean. The village also had home-grown talent of significance, notably the
Copper Family who maintained a long tradition of English folk song, performing for the collectorKate Lee as early as 1892. Its best-known member was Bob Copper (1915-2004), also known as a writer.The first garage for motor cars was run by Charles Thomas, a former pupil of York Place School in Brighton, in the early years of the 20th century. In about 1905 Charles met the American financier Charles Glidden, and the two men embarked together on a round trip of the world, visiting many countries and cities - this was the start of the famous
Glidden Tour . It is thought that Charles Thomas also worked on a machine to achieveperpetual motion , and kept one running in his basement for many months.Most histories of Rottingdean mention that its inhabitants were involved in smuggling when that was especially profitable, mainly in the 18th century. It is impossible to verify all the local stories, or believe all the claims about secret passages under the village, but it is persistently rumoured that the 18th-century vicar Dr Thomas Hooker was deeply implicated. The other face of Hooker was his devotion to education. He opened schools in the village both for the well-off (which developed eventually into the present St Aubyn's preparatory school) and for the local children.
Sid Owen (Eastenders) Lives In The Town
Civil status and former extent of the area
The parish became part of
county borough of Brighton in 1928. [ [http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/relationships.jsp?u_id=10305949&c_id=10001043 "Vision of Britain" website article] ] It recently regained an independent parish council, the only one in what is now the city of Brighton and Hove. The adjacent village ofWoodingdean was formerly (until 1933) part of Rottingdean parish. Also formerly in the parish were most of the district of what is nowSaltdean ,Roedean School , an independent school for girls, andSt Dunstan's , a rehabilitation centre for blinded ex-Service personnel.References
* Carder, Tim (1991) "The encyclopaedia of Brighton." Lewes: East Sussex County Council (1991).
* Coates, Richard (forthcoming) "A history of Rottingdean and Ovingdean through their place-names." Nottingham: English Place-Name Society.
* Copper, Bob (1976) "Early to rise." London: Heinemann (1976).
* Heater, Derek (1993) "The remarkable history of Rottingdean." Brighton: Dyke Publications.
* Rottingdean Preservation Society annual reports and unpublished archives.External links
* [http://www.mapofbrighton.com/ Brighton Map]
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