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Sutton Green

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17-417: Sutton Green can refer to any of the following: Sutton Green, Surrey , between Guildford and Woking Sutton Green, London , at the north end of Sutton High Street Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sutton Green . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

34-519: A personal possession of the king and thus a personal appointment of great honour, and in 1528, Under-Treasurer of England. He also served as a Knight of the Shire for Berkshire in 1529. His main residences were Cranbourne Lodge , where he was the keeper, and Ufton Court , both in Berkshire , and then Sutton Place, Surrey , which he re-built in a ground-breaking style, the last two being granted to him by

51-592: Is a Surrey Wildlife Trust SSSI . As of the last (2004) 8 to 10-year review, the area is in a slightly redrawn Mayford and Sutton Green one-councillor electoral ward of the Borough. It is in the Woking South County division. There is a range of community facilities serving the local area including the Mayford Centre and the village hall; Local Plan policies resist the loss of community facilities unless there

68-446: Is no longer a need for the facility or where adequate alternative provision is made (policy CUS2). Two primary (4-11) schools and an infant and junior school (subdivisions in Send) are approximately two miles from the centre in neighbouring areas; the closest later education provider is at approximately three miles, George Abbot School . "Built Heritage and Conservation A key feature of

85-503: The Borough of Guildford . Sutton Green is a semi-rural suburban or dispersed settlement and area of Metropolitan Green Belt , between Guildford and Woking , Surrey . Sutton Green neighbours Jacobs Well ; part of its easternmost fields is in the flood risk area of the River Wey , being a purposeful long flood meadow as a consequence of the river's many channels and improvements such as

102-609: The Wey Navigation which passes to the west then east ( Send, Surrey side) of the main channel here. The south of the parish is a prominent terrace above a long meander of the Wey including Sutton Place itself. A low contour of this terrace and brief section, north, is ancient woodland. The land is mostly Historic Landscape, in shades, the centre-south, Ladymead Farm being red and adjoining Sutton Place, deep green. West of Sutton Green are farm-separated Prey Heath and Whitmoor Common that

119-578: The canting arms of Cammel, also of Shapwick , Dorset: Argent, three camels sable . His brother was Sir William Weston (died 1540), the last Prior of the Order of St John in England, deemed Premier Baron of England. His ancestors had long held high office in the Knights Hospitallers. His biographer Frederic Harrison of Sutton Place wrote (1899): There is hardly a single state ceremony or event during

136-673: The Anglican church, there is also a local Roman Catholic church, Holy Family. This started out holding services in the parish hall of All Saints Church. In 1977, the Catholic church built a hall of its own, where services were first held in August of that year. A new church building was constructed in 1988 and dedicated in March 1989. Sutton Green has a 71 par golf course co-designed by former world No.1 Laura Davies completed and opened in 1994. The length of

153-740: The Church of St. Edward the Confessor. In addition, the site of the Old Manor House, west of St. Edwards Roman Catholic Church is nationally recognised as a Scheduled Ancient Monument. The area contains other buildings which are either nationally Listed or Locally Listed for their architectural and historic interest, together with a number of sites where the County Council considers that there may be archaeological remains. The Local Plan aims to [ensure that development]: The original owner and possible architect

170-630: The English contingent sent to assist King Ferdinand of Spain in his campaign against the Moors. Upon his return, Weston visited the court of Spain and received considerable honour. He was knighted by Henry VIII in 1514, and from 1516, was in personal attendance on the king as a Knight of the Body . On 3 January 1518, he was created a Knight of the Bath . In 1519, he was one of the four "sad and ancient knights" who were "put into

187-525: The [ward] is Sutton Park and Place. Sutton Place is a Grade 1 Listed Building which was built for Sir Richard Weston in the 16th Century. Additionally, Sutton Park and the area extending to Sutton Green has been designated by the Council as a Conservation Area to protect its character. There are a further nine nationally Listed Buildings in the Conservation Area including Oak House, Lady Grove Farmhouse and

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204-756: The course is 6,480 yards (5,930 m). Sir Richard Weston of Sutton Place Sir Richard Weston (1465–1542), KB , of Sutton Place in the parish of Guildford in Surrey, was a courtier and diplomat who served as Governor of Guernsey , Treasurer of Calais and Under- Treasurer of the Exchequer during the reign of King Henry VIII . He was born about 1465/6, the eldest son of Edmund Weston of Boston in Lincolnshire by his wife Katherine Cammel, daughter and heiress of Robert Cammel of Fiddleford in Dorset. He quartered

221-482: The eighth Henry's reign in which he is not recorded to have part. A bare list of the offices he held would fill some pages. He is a soldier, seaman, ambassador, governor, treasurer, privy councillor, judge of the Court of Wards . Immediately after his accession on 22 May 1509, Henry VIII appointed Weston to several offices, including that of Governor of Guernsey. In 1511, Weston served under Thomas Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy , in

238-781: The king's privy chamber", i.e. he was appointed a Knight of the Privy Chamber. In 1520, he followed Henry to the Field of the Cloth of Gold , as one of the eight county representatives for Berkshire. In 1521, he sat on the jury which tried and condemned Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham . The royal manor of Sutton was granted to him on 17 May 1521, the day of the Duke of Buckingham's execution. In 1523, Weston served in France under Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk ; in 1525, he became Treasurer of Calais ,

255-449: The king. In 1533, Henry VIII paid a state visit to Weston at his newly built mansion at Sutton Place. Thomas Cromwell was a guest there later. In 1539, Weston was appointed to meet Anne of Cleves on her arrival in England, when he must have been considerably over seventy years of age. In 1542, he surrendered his post of sub-treasurer of England "ob senectutem debilitatam et continuam infirmitatem" (20 January) and died on 7 August. He

272-547: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sutton_Green&oldid=933148236 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Sutton Green, Surrey Sutton Green is a semi-rural suburban settlement and area of Metropolitan Green Belt between Guildford and Woking , Surrey . Sutton Green neighbours Jacobs Well in

289-575: Was Sir Richard Weston a UK politician and courtier with another famous owner being J.Paul Getty , oil magnate and the patriarch of the Getty family who spent the last 25 years of his life at Sutton Place. The current owner is Alisher Usmanov , a Russian businessman. All Souls' Church remains part of the parish of St Peter, Woking so is historically termed a chapel. The parish has two other centres of collective or individual worship: St Peter's Church, Old Woking , and St Mark's, Westfield . In addition to

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