Hydon's Ball

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Hydon's Ball is a Script error: No such module "convert". hill covering most of Hydon Heath in Hydestile, Surrey, England.

Description

File:Hydon's Ball.jpg
The memorial bench dedicated to Octavia Hill, on the summit of Hydon's Ball

The hill on Hydon Heath, Hydestile, reaches Script error: No such module "convert". and is almost a quarter of the way between Gibbet Hill, Hindhead[n 1] and Leith Hill in the Greensand Ridge.

Sometimes known as Hydon Ball or Cup Hill, the area is under the management of the National Trust. At its highest point is a large stone seat dedicated in 1915 to Octavia Hill, one of the Trust's founders.

It is believed that the term ball refers to a signalling station which once stood at the top of the hill.[n 2] Its shape is similar to other hills named as 'ball'; there are more than six on Dartmoor e.g. Cuckoo Ball, grid reference SX 717902.

There is a short poem associated with Hydon's Ball, which may explain its other alternative name:

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Its slopes are planted with a range of tree species, including native oak, rowan, birch and pine. Two non-native shrubs, Amelanchier and Gaultheria, are said by oral history to have been planted there by landscape gardener Gertrude Jekyll,[1] who lived approximately Script error: No such module "convert". to the north at Munstead Wood, Busbridge.[1]

Hydon's Ball is a meeting spot for local Morris Dancers who gather on the hilltop to welcome the first day of spring.[1]

File:Memorial near Hydons Ball - geograph.org.uk - 1036869.jpg
The Robertson War Memorial

The Grade II listed Robertson War Memorial lies slightly below the summit of Hydon's Ball. The eight-foot obelisk Commemorating the first world and features a plaque designed by Laurence Arthur Turner.[2]

Hydon's Ball is one of the top ten highest points in Surrey. An underground drinking water reservoir is beneath the summit.[1]

Transport

Hydon's Ball is centred Script error: No such module "convert". south of Godalming, which sits by the A3, in central southern England. The nearest village is to the south, Hambledon, which has a large public house (The Merry Harriers) and a village shop.

Around Script error: No such module "convert". away, Milford railway station is nearest to the hill on the direct line between London Waterloo and Portsmouth Harbour.

Lying on the Greensand Way, the hill can be reached on it from the direction of Godalming/Dorking/Sevenoaks Wealds/Hamstreet and from that of the nearby western end of the ridge, Hindhead.

External links

Notes and references

Notes

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  1. Above the Devil's Punch Bowl
  2. Typically, ball signalling stations were used to synchronize the time visually at given points during the day across long distances.

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References

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