Bevendean

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Bevendean
Bevendean Estate, Bevendean, Brighton (September 2018) (3).JPG
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Bevendean
Location within East Sussex
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town BRIGHTON
Postcode district BN2 4
Dialling code 01273
Police Sussex
Fire East Sussex
Ambulance South East Coast
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
East Sussex
50°50′29″N0°06′08″W / 50.8414°N 0.1021°W / 50.8414; -0.1021 Coordinates: 50°50′29″N0°06′08″W / 50.8414°N 0.1021°W / 50.8414; -0.1021

Bevendean is a district of the city of Brighton and Hove, in East Sussex, England.

Contents

The estate lies to the north-east of central Brighton, and was largely developed after World War II with a mixture of council housing and private development. A large proportion of the council houses are now privately owned. The area has limited local facilities and there is only one road access route into and out of the area.

The manor of Bevendean was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086. The name is derived from 'Beofa's valley'. [1] It was later divided into two estates, Upper Bevendean on the hill and Lower Bevendean in the valley. Some housing development began in the 1930s, with the population expanding rapidly from 1948 onwards. An industrial estate was developed from the mid-1950s. [2]

The two local churches are: the Church of the Holy Nativity, built in 1963 as a Modern-style building in brick by architect Reginald Melhuish, ARIBA, and The Salvation Army - which occupies a building that was previously a baptist Chapel built around 1950s. The local school is Bevendean Primary School, a community school that educates children from the range of 3 to 11.

The Bevy opened on 12 December 2014 making it the first co-operative pub on a housing estate in the UK.

Notable areas

Bevendean Down (Local Nature Reserve) Bevendean Down (Local Nature Reserve), Bevendean (May 2020) (3).JPG
Bevendean Down (Local Nature Reserve)

Bevendean is in a valley and the South Downs which surround the valley offer beautiful views.

Bevendean Down

Bevendean Down, above Heath Hill Avenue and Norwich Drive, is known for its butterflies and in the area there have been key butterfly species including adonis blue, grizzled skipper, dingy skipper, small blue, green hairstreak, chalkhill blue, and dark green fritillary. Other species include common blue, marbled white, wall brown and small and large skippers. [3]

Hogtrough Bottom - grazed access downland Hogtrough Bottom - grazed access downland - geograph.org.uk - 1862437.jpg
Hogtrough Bottom - grazed access downland

Hogtrough Bottom, is on the east slope of the Down and has a mixture of taller grasses, short sheep’s fescue turf and scrub. Some years on the shorter ground are large swarms of autumn ladies tresses. There are lots of scarce species such as bastard toadflax, waxcap and webcap fungi, four-spot orb-weaver and purseweb spiders, but David Bangs, Sussex field naturalists says, "the main delight is the tapestry of summer colours - purple knapweed and felwort, blue scabious, yellow hawkbit and rockrose". [4] :293 The south slope of Bevendean Down and Hogtrough Bottom have been designated as a Local nature reserve.

Far up the dean, beyond the Primary School, a wood tumbles down the slope between Norwich Drive and Heath Hill Avenue. Within the wood is a remarkable secret glade that the Victorians called Bevendean Bank. Local conservationists guard its precious turf, mowing and pushing back the ever encroaching wood. There are lots of old grassland flowers and butterflies and a large population of purse-web spider. [4] The site is so special that the entire woods has been designated a Local nature reserve with Bevendean Down and Hogtrough Bottom.

Heath and Race Hill

The south side of the Bevendean estate is a place of horse paddocks and scrub thickets, old allotment sites and cattle grazing. At the eastern end Upper Bevendean Farm ( TQ 350 062 ) looks down from the higher slope. It was once one of many farms and an outlier of the old Bevendean Manor, which nestled in the valley where the Primary School now is. It has now become the only farm in the valley. [4]

The hill running from Auckland Drive to Warren road is called Heath Hill ( TQ 342 060 ) and as its name implies it was once a place of heather and gorse. in the past there were areas of old Down pasture on the hill (such as TQ 340 060 ) where great green bush-cricket were present in high summer, but these areas have returned in scrub and no longer support such diversity. [4]

On Race Hill the paddocks around the Southdown Riding Stables ( TQ 335 058 ) and Inglesíde Stables, to the east, receive no agro-chemicals and have become rich in wildlife over the past half century. Swallows and swifts, bats and dung beetles, rooks and woodpecker and the troll-like hornet robberfly all survive on the rich supply of insects attracted by the pony dung. [4] Worryingly for those concerned by nature loss, both the farmsteads of Southdown's and Ingleside Stables are targeted for housing development within Brighton and Hove City Council's draft City Plan (Part 2). The loss of these two farmsteads, which organise the grazing and management of these nature-rich pastures, would put the pastures at risk.

Cultural references

Bevendean is referenced in the chapter "The Baffling Business of the Bevendean Bat" of the fantasy novel The Brightonomicon . [5]

Related Research Articles

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Whitehawk Human settlement in England

Whitehawk is a suburb in the east of Brighton, England, south of Bevendean and north of Brighton Marina. The area is a large, modern housing estate built in a downland dry valley historically known as Whitehawk Bottom. The estate was originally developed by the local council between 1933 and 1937 and included nearly 1,200 residences. Subsequently, the Swanborough flats were built in 1967, and in the 1970s and 1980s much of the estate was rebuilt by altering the road layouts and increasing the number of houses. Whitehawk is part of the East Brighton ward of Brighton and Hove City Council.

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Plumpton, East Sussex Human settlement in England

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St Ann Without Human settlement in England

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Westmeston Human settlement in England

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Ditchling Beacon

Ditchling Beacon is the third-highest point on the South Downs in south-east England, behind Butser Hill and Crown Tegleaze. It consists of a large chalk hill with a particularly steep northern face, covered with open grassland and sheep-grazing areas. Situated just south of the East Sussex village of Ditchling and to the north-east of the city of Brighton, it is the highest point in the county of East Sussex. A road runs from Ditchling up and across the northern face and down into the northern suburbs of Brighton, and there are car parks at the summit and the northern base. Various charity, sporting and other events which are run regularly between London and Brighton incorporate this steep road as a challenging part of their route. It was also featured as a climb on the first of two days' racing in Britain in the 1994 Tour de France. The Tour organisers gave Ditchling Beacon a climb category of 4. 20 years later it was included as part of the route of the seventh stage of the 2014 Tour of Britain from Camberley to Brighton.

Clayton to Offham Escarpment

Clayton to Offham Escarpment is a 422.5-hectare (1,044-acre) linear biological Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) which runs from Clayton in West Sussex to Lewes in East Sussex. Its ownership and management is divided between over fifteen landowners and farmers. Parts of Ditchling's Downs, e.g. TQ 323 133, and the scarp between Blackcap and Mount Harry, e.g. TQ 378 124, are owned by the National Trust. What remains of Ditchling Tenantry Down common at Ditchling Beacon is leased to the Sussex Wildlife Trust.

Bevendean Down

Bevendean Down is a 64.6-hectare (160-acre) Local Nature Reserve in the Bevendean district in Brighton, East Sussex. It is owned by Brighton and Hove Council and managed by tenant farmers and others. It is mainly chalk grassland and there are also areas of woodland and scrub. This site is in five separate blocks.

Ladies Mile, Brighton

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Ashcombe Bottom English valley

Ashcombe Bottom is a 66 hectare woodland valley owned by the National Trust that runs south from Blackcap, East Sussex, England. The area is nested in the South Downs and can only be reached by walking or cycling from Lewes, Falmer, Ditchling Beacon or up the Clayton to Offham escarpment from Plumpton. It sits in the parish of St John Without and East Chiltington. The name Ashcombe refers to a Saxon named Aecci, not ash trees as might be assumed.

References

  1. Mawer, Allen (2001). The place-names of Sussex. Frank Merry Stenton, John Eric Bruce Gover. Nottingham: English place-name Society. ISBN   0-904889-64-5. OCLC   495468780.
  2. "Bevendean Estate". Bevendean History Project. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  3. "Bevendean LNR". Butterfly Conservation - Sussex Branch. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Bangs, Dave (2008). A freedom to roam Guide to the Brighton Downs : from Shoreham to Newhaven and Beeding to Lewes. Brighton: David Bangs. ISBN   978-0-9548638-1-4. OCLC   701098669.
  5. Rankin, Robert. The Brightonomicon. Gollancz, 2006.