Upwaltham
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Upwaltham is a scattered settlement and civil parish in the South Downs, in the District of Chichester of West Sussex, England. It surrounds a parish church, which is about Script error: No such module "convert". south-southwest of Petworth on the A285 road.
The parish is about Script error: No such module "convert". long north – south, up to Script error: No such module "convert". wide east – west and has an area of Script error: No such module "convert"..[1] The northern part of the parish includes part of North Down, a hill Script error: No such module "convert". high.
The 2001 Census recorded a parish population of 25 people, living in 10 households.[1] The scattered settlement is in a dry valley. Around the parish church are two farmsteads and two cottages. The barns of one of the farmsteads, Upwaltham House Farm, are now a conference and wedding venue.[2]
About Script error: No such module "convert". south of the church are a few houses at Benges, where the A285 to Chichester leaves the valley. From Benges the parish extends south as far as Jackdine Farm.
Public transport
Compass Bus route 99 between Petworth and Chichester serves Upwaltham six days a week, from Monday to Saturday. There is no service in the evening, or on Sunday or public holidays.[3]
History
Prehistoric remains in the parish include a set of Bronze Age round barrows on Waltham Down in the north of the parish.[4][5][6][7] Also Middle Bronze Age are the cross dykes on Upwaltham Hill.[8][9]
"Waltham" is a common English place-name, derived from the Old English weald, meaning wood, and hām, meaning meadow or enclosure. The prefix "Up" indicates that it is higher than a neighbouring settlement.[10]
From the Middle Ages onward, Upwaltham was in the hundred of Boxgrove in the Rape of Chichester. The Domesday Book of 1086 records it as having 11 households including one slave; resources included woodland, and land for ploughing and for pigs.[11] There were two manors: one of six hides and the other of four.Template:Sfn
At Church Farm, just west of the parish church, is a 17th-century barn. It has a timber queen post frame, weatherboarded walls and tiled roof. It is a Grade II* listed building.[12]
Parish church
The Church of England parish church of St Mary the Virgin is now part of a combined Benefice with All Hallows, Tillington.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
The church building is 12th-century Norman. It is built of stone and flint, with walls Script error: No such module "convert". thick.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The font and piscina are Norman. The font is plain, but the piscina seems to be made from a reused Norman column capital.Template:Sfn The chancel is an apse, linked to the nave by a 13th-century pointed arch. Some of the windowsTemplate:Sfn and the arch for the south door are 14th-century. The porch and floor tiles are 19th-century.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The church is a Grade I listed building.[13]
Parish records of births and deaths from 1592 are held by the West Sussex Records Office.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Air crashes
There have been at least two notable air crashes in the parish. In 1944 an RAF Avro Lancaster crashed on Waltham Down. In 1945 a USAAF Douglas C-47 Skytrain crashed into Upwaltham Hill. In 1949 two RAF Gloster Meteors crashed in the area, one of them possibly in Upwaltham parish.
The Lancaster was from 617 Squadron at RAF Woodhall Spa in Lincolnshire.[14] On 12 February 1944 it had landed at RNAS Ford on the way back from a mission, and on the morning of 13 February it took off to return to Woodhall Spa. There was low cloud and visibility was poor. The Lancaster hit trees on Waltham Down, broke up and caught fire.[15]
Of the eight airmen aboard, seven were killed on impact. Local farmworkers rescued the pilot from the cockpit, but he was badly burned and died two days later in St Richard's Hospital in Chichester. The pilot and two other crewmen were from the Royal Canadian Air Force. Two other members of the crew were from the Royal Australian Air Force.[15]
The Skytrain was from the 27th Transport Group. On 11 February 1945 it was on a flight from Paris–Le Bourget Airport to RAF Grove in Berkshire.[16] It crossed the Sussex coast about 1125 hrs at an altitude of only Script error: No such module "convert".. The weather was worsening, visibility had decreased to Script error: No such module "convert"., and the crew may not have realised they were no longer over the sea. The aircraft's port wing hit trees on Upwaltham Hill and was torn off. The aircraft seems to have cartwheeled before breaking up. All seven men aboard were killed.[15]
On 25 November 1949 two Gloster Meteor Mk IV aircraft of 43 Squadron at RAF Tangmere crashed on the South Downs, killing their pilots. Some reports suggest that one of the aircraft crashed in Upwaltham parish.[17]
In 2003, a local resident, Dione Venables, started work on creating a permanent memorial to commemorate the 15 airmen killed in the Lancaster and Skytrain crashes, and in 2009 an engraved stone plaque was unveiled in St Mary the Virgin parish church including a rare flypast of a World War Two Lancaster Bomber.[15][18]
References
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- ↑ Upwaltham Barns
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Bibliography
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- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". (Available at the church)
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