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Present
Day Aspect and Character
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Central
Village Green
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orplesdon
is a heathland village with a shaggy green on a hill at the
centre. The village is bisected by the busy main road between Woking
and Guildford. However Worplesdon does retain a village
character spared from over development at the turn of the century
probably because Worplesdon Railway Station is some distance
away. The green is large enough to give the ancient houses on
its south side some protection from the noise and disturbance of the
road and the village is still genuinely rural although the outskirts
of Guildford are very close indeed. It is a village of mostly mellow brick houses on
undulating terrain backing onto Whitmoor Common. Some properties will benefit from views south towards the Hogs
Back. The situation of the central St Mary's church is
particularly pleasing.
To the north
of Worplesdon there is a group of no less than three golf courses Worplesdon,
West Hill and Woking.
Accommodation
Worplesdon Place Hotel, Perry Hill, 21 letting rooms makes this an ideal
base for exploring the many nearby attractions. This old
country house became a hotel in the early 1900s set in a huge garden
with a small lake with wildfowl. Tel: 01483 232407.
History
The railway came to Worplesdon some 160 years ago, but the station
which is an important commuter link on the Waterloo line is some way
from the village centre. In the age before the railway,
Worplesdon also had a station on the semaphore line for the
Admiralty to Plymouth. That link, which was never completed,
branched off the London to Portsmouth signalling line at Chatley
Heath and messages were received and passed on at a tower next to the
parish church. This early 19th
century form of an 'information
superhighway' lasted for six years until the line was abandoned in
1831 and the Worplesdon Glebe station was demolished 20 years later.
Historic Buildings
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St
Mary's Church
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St Mary’s church above the village shows itself off well in
its position with 13 th centurychapel and restored in 1866.
Views to the south go down to Hogs Back. There are a lot of genuine
restored old houses mostly in Worplesdon and in
neighbouring Jacobs Well. On the south side of the
green a lane leads to Merrist Wood, a
house by Norman Shaw built in 1877 on an exquisite site looking
south to
the Hogs Back. It is now an
Agricultural College and one of Norman Shaw’s best houses.
The public have limited access to the grounds and during the year
there are a number of agricultural demonstrations. Of the
number of old houses in the village and around it, the best are two
17th century timber fronted farmhouses, Pitch Place (formerly
Cobbett's and
dated 1683) and Norton Farm northwest of the village which
is part
half-timbered and part Burgate stone. Built in 1877 it stands on a ridge with
a view over its own well tended farm land and again towards the Hogs Back.
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