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Southlands Hospital

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A Royal Port is a port that has been granted a 'royal' designation by a monarch. In England, historically this designation allowed the port to receive certain goods and collect certain associated taxes.

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55-657: Southlands Hospital is a medical facility based in Shoreham-by-Sea , West Sussex , England, which serves people living in Shoreham itself as well as Worthing and other towns and villages along the south coast and in the inland areas of West Sussex. It is managed by the University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust . The building is served by Brighton & Hove bus routes 2, 59, 59A and 98 . The hospital has its origins in an infirmary which

110-679: A Royal Port . An 18th-century naval chartist and artist, Captain Henry Roberts , who was once a lieutenant under Captain Cook , was a native of Shoreham. The rapid growth of the neighbouring towns of Brighton, Hove and Worthing – and in particular the arrival of the railway in 1840 – prepared the way for Shoreham's rise as a Victorian sea port , with several shipyards and an active coasting trade. Shoreham Harbour remains in commercial operation today. The area became an urban district , with Shoreham Town Hall as its headquarters, in 1910. Originally

165-594: A defence against the Vikings , though it's difficult to pick it out amongst the grassy plats now. It is a mixed farm with corn crops, beef cattle, a bit of livery stabling, and hay meadows. The farm manages the sites of Old Erringham Combe and Anchor Bottom to preserve their natural value. Around the farmstead there is red star-thistle (a Brighton Downs speciality), musk thistle , spear thistle , welted thistle , creeping thistle , teasel , and viper's bugloss , all adding summer colour. Old Erringham Combe ( TQ 205 081 )

220-688: A lack of scrub control has allowed the species-rich Down pasture to be lost to simplified scrub and even secondary woodland. Hazelholt Bottom ( TQ 235 084 ) is a tranquil slope with large flowery glades. There are often roe deer in the wide corn field below the slope. The National Trust own the south slope and Whitelot Bottom further south, but Whitelot was ploughed up after 1945 and has never been returned to public use. Hazelholt has rich old chalk grassland with cowslips in spring and devil's-bit scabious in September. In mid-summer, there are many butterflies, including adonis blue and chalkhill blue . At

275-545: A little Iron Age settlement on the Hill. They were surrounded by a rectangular ditched enclosure and perhaps made into a 'temenos' or temple. Ritual deposits of animals and coins were buried at the site. Evening shadows reveal dips and hummocks at the Hill's southern end, although they are probably due to the trench digging of the large army camp that came here during the First World War. There are three places that were spared

330-457: A nationally important population of the chalkhill blue butterfly on Mill Hill. The underlying rock is chalk on the downs, with alluvium in the old river channels. The Adur district has a variety of habitats in a small area, including natural chalk downs and butterfly meadows, freshwater and reed beds, salt marsh and estuary, brackish water lagoons, woodland, shingle seashore, chalk platform undersea, and large expanses of sand. Southwick Hill and

385-514: A result of the merger of Western Sussex Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust . Shoreham-by-Sea Shoreham-by-Sea (often shortened to Shoreham ) is a coastal town and port in the Adur district, in the county of West Sussex , England. In 2011 it had a population of 20,547. The town is bordered to its north by the South Downs , to its west by

440-516: Is an old-fashioned mosaic of habitats, making it a great refuge for Downland wildlife. The south-facing bank is the hottest place, but below it there are willows and a tiny tongue of wet grassland where lesser marsh grasshopper , autumn lady's-tresses orchid, bastard toadflax , rockrose, betony , wild thyme , and other herbs grow. Summer butterflies in the area include wall brown and clouded yellow , and day-flying moths like yellow belle , dusky sallow , common carpet , and grass moths enjoy

495-562: Is not what it was. Until recent years, it was the best place on the Brighton Downs to get a sense of what Down pasture was like during late Victorian and Edwardian times through to 1940. The tenant farmer continuously grazed the whole Hill and, as a result, it was something of a time capsule from a particular period of Downland history, that of the long agricultural depression from 1876 to 1940, when scrub took over many old pastures and cattle replaced many sheep flocks. In recent years, however,

550-422: Is the ploughed land further east down the combe) has flowery chalk grassland, scrub, rank grassland, and lots of rabbits. The rabbits encourage rabbit-resistant plants like tall woolly mullein (complete with mullein moth caterpillars, hound's-tongue , ground ivy , and eyebright. Until 25 years ago, the combe remained substantially open and the ancient lynchet system was plain to see, but cessation of grazing and

605-536: The Battle of Worcester . Mill Hill ( TQ 212 071 ) is also known as Shoreham bank, as the hillside falls sharply to the River Adur . It is a Local Nature Reserve and has been famous for its butterflies since the 1820s. In May, the hillside is dusted yellow with horseshoe vetch : the butterflies' food plant. In August, the hillside is colourful with knapweeds, pink centaury , the tiny white pinpoints of eyebright , and

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660-609: The Second World War and most of what remained after the war is now long gone, having been replaced by modern houses. The Church of the Good Shepherd, built in 1913, still stands. Along the Adur mud flats adjacent to Shoreham Beach sits (and at high tides floats) a large collection of houseboats made from converted barges, tugs, mine sweepers, and motor torpedo boats . The seaside shingle bank of Shoreham beach extends further east past

715-548: The Southlands Hospital in Shoreham. Local newspapers are the Shoreham Herald, West Sussex Gazette and The Argus . INSIDE Shoreham & Southwick started in 2005 and is a free A5 magazine that goes to houses in Shoreham and neighbouring Southwick each month and carries articles about local people, local history as well as upcoming events and topics of local interest. It is supported by local businesses who advertise in

770-764: The 1873 OS map , and may be centuries older than that. This is the only site in the South Downs that contains the plant saw-wort , which looks like a slimmer version of knapweed , and still blooms profusely in a little glade amongst the gorse. It is a survivor from the days of the Downland heaths. It survives here because the soil must have a strong clay-with-flints influence. The glade where it blooms also contains flowers of betony , red clover , hawkbit , and St John's wort . Old Erringham Farmstead ( TQ 205 076 ) has an old flint farmhouse with great chimneys and part-Horsham slab roofing , and ramshackle old flint barns. It has one of only two remaining medieval manorial chapels on

825-646: The Adur Valley, and to its south by the River Adur and Shoreham Beach on the English Channel . The town lies in the middle of the ribbon of urban development along the English south coast, approximately equidistant from the city of Brighton and Hove to the east and the town of Worthing to the west. Shoreham covers an area of 2,430 acres (980 ha) and has a population of 20,547 (2011 census). Old Shoreham dates back to pre-Roman times. St Nicolas' Church , inland by

880-402: The Brighton Downs (the other at Swanborough Manor ), which now functions as a front garden shed for one of the modern farm workers cottages just to the south of the old farmhouse. It has a tiny ecclesiastical window on its south face. The farm is designated as an ancient monument , incorporating the remains of a medieval settlement and an eleventh century ringwork . It was presumably built as

935-475: The Hill has been split by fencing into a southern half which is seriously under-grazed, with simplified tussocky grassland, and a northern half which remains better grazed. The southern half has now lost its close-bitten down pasture, with its flowerings of tiny herbs and fruitings of old pasture fungi. Nevertheless, as a whole the Hill still has a mixture of archaic pasture and scrub thickets, sometimes mature enough to harbour small maiden oaks, and it retains much of

990-653: The River Adur, is partly Anglo-Saxon in its construction. The name of the town has an Old English origin. The town and port of New Shoreham was established by the Norman conquerors towards the end of the 11th century. St Mary de Haura Church (St Mary of the Haven) was built in the decade following 1103 (the Domesday Book was dated 1086), and around this time the town was laid out on a grid pattern that, in essence, still survives in

1045-637: The Southlands Hospital in 1933. Many of its beds were given over to the care of injured soldiers during the Second World War . The hospital joined the National Health Service in 1948. Staff at the hospital assisted in a major incident when a double-decker bus was blown off the Old Shoreham Bridge into the River Adur on 1 January 1949. The main ward block was opened in 1979. After maternity services were transferred to Worthing Hospital ,

1100-421: The area include common blue , clouded yellow , small heath , comma , red admiral , painted lady , and day-flying moths like treble-bar and dusky sallow . There are glowworms too. In autumn, parts of the short turf may be colourful from the many waxcap and other old meadow fungi. Additional mushrooms include puffballs , blue legs , and velvet shank ; fairy rings also form. However, Southwick Hill

1155-482: The birds are bigger than the noise of the road. This point marks the beginning of Downland tranquility. The ramparts of Thundersbarrow's late Bronze Age and Iron Age camp are still tall enough to walk around, although they get a bit vague on the eastern side because of plough damage, and because the Romano-British villagers built their houses just outside the rampart and right up against the barrow on that side. When

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1210-577: The damage of decades of agribusiness on the hill: an island of old Down pasture on the eastern slope, an old bostal track, which winds down the slope at its southern end, and a patch of hillside a few hundred yards north, surrounded by Iron Age field lynchets . More recently, the use of agrochemicals has stopped, and the hillside is again colourful with herbs. The intact areas have pyramidal orchid , spotted orchid , meadow oat-grass , crested hair-grass , and round-headed rampion . Mossy Bottom ( TQ 226 082 ) derives its name from 'Muster' Bottom, where

1265-474: The drying grassland. The rare Carthusian snail ( Monacha cartusiana) still exists in this combe, possibly due to centuries of cattle grazing. Old Erringham Shaw is a tangled wood of sycamore , ash , elm , and thorn. It's more open at the northern end facing the combe, where the remains of four big old broken beeches and lots of may blossom make it a good place for insects. Slonk Hill ( TQ 222 070 ): there were at least two Bronze Age barrows and

1320-500: The estuary. To the south is the Norman church of Old Shoreham, almost on the banks of the Adur, and next to it are the wooden piers of the 1781 toll bridge, which collected traffic tolls up to the 1960s. Mill Hill now suffers from traffic and aircraft noise . The special mosses and lichens have gone, and the Heath and Carthusian snails are now gone. Despite efforts by volunteers and rangers,

1375-556: The film Woman in Gold . The town is served by Shoreham-by-Sea railway station , located on the West Coastway Line . Local bus services are provided by the Brighton & Hove bus company , Stagecoach South , and a local town route is operated by Compass Travel. Shoreham Tollbridge crosses the River Adur in the west of the town. This bridge is a Grade II* listed building and was

1430-452: The harbour mouth, forming the southern boundary of the commercial harbour in Southwick , Portslade , and Hove . The Monarch's Way long-distance footpath, commemorating the escape route of Charles II to France after the Battle of Worcester , follows the beach westwards from Hove past Portslade and Southwick, ending by the harbour mouth's east breakwater. The River Adur , the downs, and

1485-592: The head of the combe, there are more old grassland and great blackberry thickets. Since 1945, scrub has taken over much of this former open slope. The remaining grassland is only lightly grazed, allowing growth of bramble and thorn and a loss of its ancient down pasture character. Freshcombe ( TQ 230 092 ) is owned by the National Trust, but was leased away from their management . It is threatened by scrub expansion and insufficient grazing. Its slopes have very old gorse thickets; they are shown as well-established on

1540-618: The hill still carries far too great an area of dense and simplified scrub, which has flourished at the expense of the biodiverse turf. Southwick Hill ( TQ 237 077 ) is owned by the National Trust and has some special wildlife areas. In 1985, local residents were presented with the plan for the A27 road bypass cutting through the Hill. Through the vigorous campaigning of activists from ABBA (the Anti-Brighton Bypass Association)

1595-450: The king. These tolls or "customs" on imported or exported goods formed one of the oldest prerogatives enjoyed by Kings of England. The king would appoint Royal Port Reeves to collect the tolls. Ports that did not hold Royal status are historically called franchise ports. The Kings of England designated Royal Ports in Ireland, such as Dublin , as part of their conquest . Perhaps one of

1650-431: The last Sussex toll bridge in use. The bridge was part of the A27 road until it was closed to traffic in 1968. The structure is now too weak to carry vehicles and underwent extensive restoration, then was ceremonially re-opened for pedestrians on 23 October 2008, by Prince Andrew, Duke of York . Adur Ferry Bridge in the south of the town (replacing the old Shoreham footbridge) crosses the River Adur to Shoreham Beach. It

1705-471: The maternity ward closed on 7 June 1997. The transfer of other in-patient services to other hospitals allowed the old Harness Block to be demolished and the surplus land handed over for residential development in 2016. In 2018 a new eye care unit costing £7.5 million was officially opened by the Countess of Wessex . The hospital became part of University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust on 1 April 2021 as

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1760-493: The month, respectively, together with the annual 'Light up Shoreham' Christmas market and event. Most years, in late summer, Shoreham Airport hosts the Royal Air Forces Association (RAFA) Shoreham Airshow . On 22 August 2015, a Hawker Hunter jet fighter taking part in the airshow crashed onto the busy A27 road just outside the airport, killing eleven people and injuring several others. Shoreham (along with

1815-557: The most famous examples would be linked to the Waterford Charter Roll , which resulted in the re-designation of Waterford as a Royal Port. Waterford had been designated as a royal port by Henry II, however nearby New Ross became a competing Port. In a bid to gain favour with Edward III over New Ross, the Roll was drawn up in a pictorial and colourful style showing that the city had had relationships with kings going back centuries. The king

1870-418: The mouth of the river shifted eastwards which restricted trade to the port; by 1810, it was almost opposite Aldrington church. In 1816, work had been completed to fix the position of the river in its present position, flowing into the sea between two piers. Once the harbour mouth was stabilised, it was defended by Shoreham Fort , which was built in 1857. Converted railway carriages became summer homes around

1925-528: The name comes from the Anglo-Norman owners' hometown of Bouce in Normandy . Shoreham Beach, to the south of the town, is a shingle spit deposited over millennia by longshore drift . This blocks the southerly flow of the River Adur which turns east at this point to discharge into the English Channel further along the coast at a point that has varied considerably over time. During the 17th and 18th centuries,

1980-455: The other urban districts of Adur ) is twinned with: Royal Port During the medieval era's manorial system , Royal Ports were the direct property of the King, who would issue the port with special rights, customs and privileges, usually via a charter. Only those designated as royal ports could receive goods such as wine, and collect the associated royal tax on the imported goods on behalf of

2035-475: The people came off the hill to form Findon ) and at Mount Caburn (where people re-located down at Beddingham ), this stranded settlement is three quarters of a mile from the Downs. The church here was extensively re-modelled in the thirteenth century when the shifting river estuary temporarily made Kingston a port town. The 'king' of the name 'Kingston' may have referred to a Saxon king of Sussex. The 'Buci' part of

2090-441: The people of Kingston Buci may have lived at Thundersbarrow. This may have been the centre of a large estate in the post-Roman Dark Ages. However, in early or mid-Saxon times, the people may have re-located down off the hill to Kingston Buci ( TQ 235 052 ), which sits to the east of Shoreham-by-Sea. It has a medieval church, rectory, manor house, and huge old barn which still make it a remarkable cluster – and, like Cissbury (where

2145-460: The publication. Shoreham-by-Sea has a non-League football club, Shoreham FC , who play at Middle Road stadium with a 2,000-seat capacity, and a rugby union club, Shoreham RFC, who play at Buckingham Park. Southdown Golf Club was founded in 1902, but ceased to operate in the 1940s. The town centre hosts monthly farmers' and artisans' markets in East Street on the second and fourth Saturday of

2200-643: The road was re-routed through a tunnel under the Hill rather than a cutting through it. In high summer, on the hill ('bostal') path, there is round-headed rampion , blue scabious , and autumn gentian . On the south side of the bridlepath, there is an un-grazed triangle with a taller sward. Here, there are still rabbits playing on the lawns amongst the purging flax , eggs and bacon , squinancywort , eyebright , and wild thyme , which themselves mingle with tall herb patches of parsnip , greater knapweed , ragwort , hogweed , and St John's wort . There are bushes of raspberry and rose-bay willowherb . Butterflies in

2255-400: The sea support a diverse wildlife flora and fauna in the area. The mudflats support wading birds and gulls, including the ringed plover which attempts to breed on the coastal shingle. The pied wagtail is common in the town in the winter months. Insects include dragonflies over the flood plains of the river. The south- and west-facing downs attract at least 33 species of butterfly, including

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2310-583: The shepherd mustered his sheep. Mossy Bottom slope is statutory access land under the right to roam 'CROW' Act (2000), but public usage is heavily challenged by prohibitive notices and poor access provision. It has boney Iron Age lynchets across it made by the peasant farmers who lived in Thundersbarrow village. They used to be called "Thunder's Steps." There are big old anthills, and plants such as large thyme , dropwort, cowslip, basil, harebell , and round-headed rampion . Brighton City Airport lies to

2365-452: The smaller sites connected to it are the second biggest surviving complex of ancient Down pasture on the entire plateau of the Brighton Downs (the biggest is around Castle Hill, near Woodingdean ). The town is the end-point of the Monarch's Way , a 615-mile (990 km) long-distance footpath , based on the escape route taken by King Charles II in 1651 after being defeated by Cromwell in

2420-490: The start of the 20th century, and 'Bungalow Town', as it was then known, became home to the early British film industry. Francis L. Lyndhurst founded the Sunny South Film Company, which made its first commercial movie on Shoreham Beach in 1912 and built a film studio there. Shoreham Beach officially became part of Shoreham-by-Sea in 1910. Much of the housing in the area was cleared for defence reasons during

2475-511: The town centre. The present church is approximately half the size of the original structure – the former nave was already in ruins by the time of the English Civil War , although evidence of the original west façade survive in the churchyard to this day. Muslim geographer Muhammad al-Idrisi , writing c.  1153 , described Shoreham as "a fine and cultivated city containing buildings and flourishing activity". Shoreham had status as

2530-452: The village was excavated in 1932, two corn-drying ovens were found, still with soot in the flues and bits of charred grain. Erringham Hole ( TQ 231 082 ) is the bushy combe to the east of Thundersbarrow, whose Celtic villagers built the huge field lynchets , parts of which are up to 12 feet in height. It was called 'Erringham Hole' because it was part of Old Erringham Farm. Old Erringham Hole (not to be confused with Whitelot Bottom, which

2585-476: The west of the main town and has been in private ownership since 2006. It is the UK's oldest licensed airport still in operation and has a 1936 Grade II*-listed Art Deco terminal building . The terminal has been a filming location for an episode of Agatha Christie's Poirot (" Lord Edgware Dies "), a Crimewatch-type reconstruction (2000, ITV Meridian ), BBC Tenko series episode, scenes of The Da Vinci Code , and

2640-415: The west, and one of the parish open fields to the east. The hedge contains a lot of maple and ash and may have been bird-sown. As per Hooper's rule , the hedge is three to four centuries old. There is a large flat block of lichen-covered stone ( TQ 238 069 ) by the path to Southwick Hill from Southwickhill Barn, which marks a corner on the old parish boundary between Kingston Buci and Southwick. It

2695-538: The white umbels of wild carrot , wild parsnip , St John's wort , and wild thyme . The Hill is known for its dingy skippers and grizzled skippers in the spring, and in summer the chalkhill blue and Adonis blue are 'flagship' species of this Hill. From Mill Hill it is possible to see Applesham Farm, which was a village at the time of the Domesday Book in 1086. To the north end is another Saxon farm, Old Erringham, which King Alfred's successors fortified to defend

2750-501: The wildlife lost elsewhere on the Brighton Downs. Hedges are very rare on these Downs (except around farmsteads). The Crooked Moon Hedge ( TQ 233 070 ) lies on the top of a prehistoric field lynchet ; these southern slopes of Southwick Hill were covered with an Iron Age field system whose banks lay regularly on east–west and south–north axes. At its northern end, it is the boundary between Kingston Buci and Southwick parishes, and at its southern end it bounded Kingston Buci sheep Down to

2805-641: Was a county palatine for the Earl's of Chester and therefore returned no profits to the crown. Often Royal Ports formed parts of confederations that granted them additional rights and privileges, such as Winchelsea which was part of the Cinque Ports or King's Lynn which formed part of the Hanseatic League . The framework for customs in the Royal Ports was set by the exchequer from as early as 1275. By 1347

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2860-634: Was built for the Steyning Poor Law Union Workhouse and which opened in 1835. After the workhouse moved to new premises at Upper Shoreham Road in 1901, the infirmary moved to the new site as well in 1906. The infirmary's medical staff, who became known as the "Southlands Guardians", looked after many wounded patients during the First World War . The infirmary became known as the Steyning Institution in 1930 and then became known as

2915-468: Was notable enough to show on the Victorian Ordnance Survey maps. Thunders Barrow ( TQ 229 083 ) is a large barrow , although it was partially dug away on its south side in the nineteenth century to make way for a dew pond . It sits just north of Southwick Hill. The origins of its name are unknown. It is only at this distance from the bypass that the silence of the Downs and the sound of

2970-528: Was opened to the public by the Duke of Gloucester on 13 November 2013. Local news and television programmes is provided by  BBC South East and ITV Meridian . Television signals are received from the Whitehawk Hill TV transmitter. The town’s local radio stations are BBC Radio Sussex on 95.3 FM, Heart South on 103.5 FM, More Radio Worthing on 107.7 FM and Seaside Hospital Radio that broadcast from

3025-520: Was persuaded by the Roll and reinstated Waterford's monopoly as a royal port. Some were planned to deliberately compete with franchise ports not owned by the King. For example, Liverpool, was founded to compete with the port of Chester. King John wanted to turn Liverpool into a Royal Port as it offered a natural sheltered harbour, close to royal estates from which supplies could be withdrawn for military purposes as part of his conquest of Ireland. Chester may have been equally well suited for this, but it

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