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History of Horsham

The History of Horsham, a market town on the upper reaches of the River Arun on the fringe of the Weald in West Sussex, England, can be traced back to 947 AD, and there is evidence of earlier settlement.[1]

Middle Ages edit

 
de Braose monument in St Mary's Church, Horsham, Samuel Hieronymus Grimm, 1781.

The first mention of Horsham was in King Eadred's land charter of AD 947. The town had connections to the sale of horses and recent ideas suggest the name might be derived from "Horse Ham", a settlement where horses were kept. [a] None of this older descriptions that cover the Genealogy of the Shelley, Middleton and Michell families mention this derivation about horses. Just stating that it is likely linked to the mythical Saxon Horsa.

An alternative explanation is that "Horsham" is a contraction of "Horsa's Ham" named after the Anglo-Saxon warrior who was said to have been given lands in the area.[b]

Despite having been in existence for some 140 years at the time of the survey, Horsham is not mentioned in the Domesday Book[4] either because it was never visited by inspectors, or was simply 'left out' of the final version. It lies within the ancient Norman administrative division of the Rape of Bramber and the Hundred of Singlecross.

In ancient times Horsham was controlled by the powerful de Braose family.[5] Later the Eversfield family, which had risen from Surrey County obscurity into a powerhouse of ironmasters and landowners, built Denne Park House, their seat.[6] The family later represented Horsham in Parliament, and controlled the Eversfield Estate in St. Leonards-on-Sea, where the seaside promenade is named for the family.[7]

Horsham Castle, built by William de Braose in the late eleventh century, was abandoned around 1154. The castle earthworks can be found near Chennells Brook.[8][9]

Horsham had two weekly markets in the Middle Ages,[10] and was noted locally for its annual fairs.

Modern era edit

Despite a local iron industry which stayed until the 17th century and a prosperous brewing industry, Horsham remained primarily a market town serving the many farms in the area until the early 20th century, when other industry and residential developments began to proliferate. One of these was the manufacture of bricks from the Wealden clay on which Horsham sits. Warnham and Wealden Brickworks still operate two miles north of Horsham and there are disused workings throughout the area, notably at Southwater which is now developed as an education centre and leisure park.

 
Register of birth from St. Mary's in Horsham. This records refers to Samuel Carpenter, born 1649, who emigrated to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and was a prominent citizen and leader.

Horsham prospered during the Victorian era and early 20th century. The town, along with others, has been well documented photographically by Francis Frith. The pictures record many of the landmarks that are still in place today, although some, such the war memorial, Jubilee Fountain and Carfax Bandstand, have been moved.

Horsham remained a prominent brewery town until 2000, when the King and Barnes Brewery was closed on merger with Hall & Woodhouse, brewers of Dorset. King & Barnes was formed in 1906 from the merger of King & Sons, maltsters existing from 1850 and G H Barnes & Co., brewers whose origins date back to 1800. The brewery remained in the King family hands until the merger in 2000 when production ceased permanently. Their most famous brews included: Sussex Ale, Wealden Ale, Broadwood, Festive and the seasonal Old and Christmas Ales. The last member of the King family involved in the company brewed in Horsham at W J King & Co (Brewers) and now brews at Firebird Brewery in Rudgwick. There are four other small brewers currently operating in Horsham: Hepworth's is run by a former head brewer at King & Barnes, and Welton's, a company who were formed in Capel, Surrey, and have been in Horsham since 2004, Kissingate Brewery, and Brolly Brewing formed in 2017.

The town has grown steadily over recent years to a population of 55,657. This has been facilitated by the completion of both inner and outer town bypasses. The location of any new growth is the subject of debate. Plans by the District Council include a large neighbourhood directly adjacent to Crawley.

Legal history edit

The last man to die by pressing in the whole of England was John Weekes of Horsham.[11]

He was charged with robbery and murder of a woman along with three accomplices, one of whom was a small boy used to sneak inside the woman's house and open access for the other three. When police found stolen property in the possession of the men, they easily persuaded the boy into turning King's evidence. Two of the other accomplices were convicted, but when John Weekes had his turn to plead, he refused to say anything. Once the judges brought in eight witnesses who swore Weekes could talk and was not dumb, they gave him time in the cells. When he refused further to say a single word, the judges were forced to find him not guilty of murder. Instead, he was convicted of 'standing mute through malice'. Weekes was placed under three hundredweight boards, and the sixteen stone gaoler jumped on top of him. Local folklore continues the story, extending it to include the death of his executioner days later, sometimes in the same spot where the execution was carried out. Some think that he was a mute.

Public executions generally took place at a place called North Heath, now a suburb of Horsham. The road to the execution site was known for many years as Gibbet's Road but was later renamed Giblet's Road with an extension now called Giblet's Way. The last man to be put to death for homosexuality in England was in Horsham in 1835.[12]

Timeline edit

  • c. 950 - small Anglo-Saxon village.
  • 1200 - Horsham first described as a borough.
  • 1278 - Edward I visits Horsham for the first time.
  • 1299 - Edward I visits Horsham for the second time.
  • 1324 - Edward II dates deeds at Chesworth House 1 mile south of Horsham.
  • 1488 - Henry VII visits Horsham.
  • 1519 - Henry VIII visits Horsham.
  • 1525 - Five brewers in Horsham.
  • 1532 - First Horsham Grammar School founded.[13]
  • 1560 - Suffered Plague.
  • 1574 - Suffered Plague.
  • 1588 - Master of the grammar school, James Alleyn, Raises a troop of soldiers at his own expense to defend Horsham against the threatened Spanish invasion.
  • 1608 to 1609 - Suffered Plague.
  • 1648 - Horsham was the scene of a rising of 500 or 600 royalists, supported by the borough bailiffs and constable, in protest against the policies of the parliamentary county committee: the magazine of arms kept in what was presumably the town hall was seized, but the rising was quelled by parliamentary troops under Sir Michael Livesey, at least three townsmen and one soldier being killed.
  • 1659 - Around 5,000 Fifth Monarchists met at Horsham.
  • 1659 - Suffered Smallpox.
  • 1673 - Horsham described as being ruled by two bailiffs and two MP's.
  • 1735 - John Weeks becomes the last ever man to be pressed to death, which happened in Horsham, after he murdered Elizabeth Symonds.
  • 1755 - Horsham connected to London by road.
  • 1776 - Ann Cruttenden was the last person to be burned at the stake in Horsham for murdering her husband (petty treason).[14]
  • 1791 - First bank in Horsham founded.
  • 1796 - Barracks built to house 1,500 men.
  • 1801 - Population of 1,539.
  • 1804 - Travelling library at Collyers School.
  • 1804 - Ammunition depot built.
  • 1811 - Library Society founded and opened.
  • 1812 - Town hall built by Duke of Norfolk.
  • 1815 - Barracks shut and soldiers left. It was soon demolished.
  • 1829 - Horsham Mechanics' Institution opened.
  • 1830 - Book and Tract Society at the Unitarian Church.
  • 1835 - John Sparshott becomes the second to last man to be put to death for homosexuality in England, dying at the age of 19 in Horsham.[12][15]
  • From 1836 - Horsham was lit by gas.
  • 1839 - A police force was founded in Horsham.
  • 1840 - A fire brigade was founded in Horsham.
  • 1844 - John Lawrence becomes the last man to be executed via hanging in Horsham and the last man to be executed in Horsham after he bludgeoned Chief Constable Henry Solomon over the head with a poker causing him a head injury from which he later died. [16]
  • 1844 - Horsham Library Society closed.
  • 1844 - Last time ever in Britain a wife was sold. They were sold for 33 shillings in the town centre.[citation needed]
  • 1847 - Literary and Scientific Institution established.
  • 1848 - Horsham was connected by rail to Brighton.
  • 1851 - Population of 6,000.
  • 1852 - A cemetery was founded in Horsham for the first time.
  • 1860 - Horsham Mechanics' Institution closed.
  • 1866 - Corn exchange and water company formed in Horsham.
  • 1875 - Local government board formed.
  • 1892 - Horsham hospital opened.
  • 1900 - Population of 10,000.
  • 1902 - Christ's Hospital school moved to Horsham.
  • 1902 - Electric street lighting placed in Horsham.
  • 1910 - Horsham cinema opened.
  • 1920 - War memorial built.
  • 1925 - Town Hall library opened.
  • 1928 - Carfax branch opened.
  • 1929 - Horsham Museum opened.
  • 1934 - St Mark's Church Hall.
  • 1935 - Horsham swimming pool opened.
  • 1936 - ABC cinema (now the Capital) is opened in North Street.
  • 1939 - Unitarian Library closed.
  • 1940 - Worst bombing raid in Horsham. Seven people died.
  • 1945 - Unitarian Library books give to town library.
  • 1957 - New Library building by the Black Jug.
  • 1958 - Heaviest hailstone recorded in the UK falls
  • 1963 - Stockland House tower block is opened and Pearl Insurance move in.
  • 1970 - Work begins to clear away an old gas works between Springfield Road and London Road, along with a row of Victorian houses for the construction of Albion Way bypass.
  • 1973 - The Swan Pub in West Street is demolished to make way for an entrance for Swan Walk Shopping Centre.
  • 1974 - Construction begins on the new lower school for Tanbridge House School on Worthing Road.
  • 1974 - Work begins on the construction of Swan Walk Shopping Centre and Multistory Car park.
  • 1976 - Swan Walk Shopping opened.
  • 1983 - Odeon Cinema with a rocket sculpture sign outside is demolished to make way for Sun Alliance offices called Stains Court that eventually opens in 1987.
  • 1983 - The original Capital Cinema that was surrounded by Swan Walk Shopping Centre is demolished in February 1983 to make way for the new M&S store, the proceeds from the sale of the land goes towards the purchase of the ABC Cinema in North Street that was to be transformed into Horsham Arts Centre in 1984.
  • 1986 - The new Tesco's building in Broadbridge Heath is opened along with the new sports centre beside it.
  • 1987 - Tesco on Worthing Road closes the building is then converted into McDonald's, Argos and Fads, the old Tesco Carpark behind the building is then used as a council carpark.
  • 1987 - The Construction of Broadbridge Heath flyover on the A24 is begun, this replaced the previous ground level roundabout.
  • 1988 - St Marks Church is demolished in North Street to make way for the new Sun Alliance building that is built over Albion Way.
  • 1988 - The building of a new St Marks Church on North Heath lane is started on fields north of horsham that is to be surrounded by new housing.
  • 1988 - The construction of the A264 North Horsham bypass is begun and is completed in 1989.
  • 1989 - Current library building opened.
  • 1989 - Swan Walk Shopping Centre refurbished and enclosed under a glass roof along with an extension called Springfield Court.
  • 1990- St Mark's Church Opened by Bishop of Chichester
  • 1991 - The new Sun Alliance building is opened.
  • 1991 - The old Pearl Insurance tower block, Stockland House in North Street that was built in 1963 is demolished to make way for the new Sun Alliance building (now WSCC HQ).
  • 1992 - Horsham Carfax is partially closed to traffic and the bandstand is relocated along with the installation of new paving and gas fired street lamps.
  • 1993 - The construction of the new Tanbridge House School is commenced on land beside the A24 next to the Broadbridge heath flyover.
  • 1994 - The old Tanbridge House School is closed and the building is converted into flats and the playing fields become Tanbridge Park housing estate.
  • 1994 - The old Tanbridge House School lower school (school years 7–9) that was built in 1975 is demolished and a new Sainsburys is built in its place.
  • 1994 - The new Tanbridge House School is opened two weeks behind schedule in late Sept.
  • 1994 - New Sun Alliance building is opened in the place of the demolished Stockland House.
  • 1996 - Rising universe sculpture created (locally known as Shelley's Fountain).
  • 1999 - Brewing industry ended in Horsham including the closure of the national chain of brewers, King and Barnes and their factory in Horsham.
  • 2003 - Pavilions in the Park opened in Horsham.
  • 2003 - The Forum opened by Queen Elizabeth II.
  • 2003 - The Capitol Theatre and Arts Centre was opened by Queen Elizabeth II.
  • 2005 - Chesworth School is closed and Kingslea Primary school opens in its place.
  • 2008 - Population of 55,657 recorded.
  • 2009 - Finance ministers and central bankers of the G-20 met at South Lodge in Horsham on 14 March, for a meeting to prepare for the London summit of 2 April.
  • 2022 Mowbray Village begins to be built.

Major housing developments to the South-West and North-East of the town have been progressing in recent years.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ More likely a reference to Horsens in Jutland, the origin of its Jutish settlers. The hors- prefix is fairly common in England.[2]
  2. ^ This is an example of non-historical founding myths.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Horsham: General history of the town". British History Online. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  2. ^ The Angles, Saxons and Jutes (The Ancient World. Odijk, Pamela. (Egmont: 1989).
  3. ^ Brewer's Britain & Ireland: The History, Culture, Folklore and Etymology of 7500 Places in These Islands. Ayto, John; Crofton, Ian. Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2006
  4. ^ Albery, W. (1947) A Millennium of Facts in the History of Horsham and Sussex. 947-1947., Horsham, Horsham Museum Society
  5. ^ Lower, Mark Antony (1870). A Compendious History of Sussex: Topographical, Archæological & Anecdotical. Containing an Index to the First Twenty Volumes of the "Sussex Archæological Collections". G.P. Bacon. p. 245. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  6. ^ King, R. J. (1858). A handbook for travellers in Kent and Sussex ... London: John Murray. p. 333. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  7. ^ "Eversfield family of Denne Park, Horsham, Manorial Records and Deeds, 1430-1903, Hastings Museum and Art Gallery, National Register of Archives". The National Archives. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  8. ^ Historic England. "Motte and Bailey Castle North of Chennells Brook Farm (1014389)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 11 June 2017.
  9. ^ "Chennells Brook Castle | Motte & Baily castle ruins in north…". Flickr. Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  10. ^ Interview with Miss M. Page, Horsham resident 1933–2006, for many years Auctioneer's Clerk at the weekly livestock market: Horsham Museum Society Archive
  11. ^ "Horsham's last execution - West Sussex County Times". wscountytimes.co.uk. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  12. ^ a b "Full particulars of the trials and execution of Richard Sheppard and John Sparshott, who were executed at Horsham, on Saturday, Aug. 22nd, 1835 - English Crime and Execution Broadsides - CURIOSity Digital Collections". curiosity.lib.harvard.edu. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  13. ^ "A History of Horsham". localhistories.org. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  14. ^ "The tragedy of an insane marriage". Sussex Express. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  15. ^ "Executions". The Times. London, England (15877): 7. 25 August 1835. Retrieved 3 March 2019. (Gale Document Number: GALE|CS117728537)
  16. ^ "Horsham's Last Hanging". The Times. London, England (54121): 10. 10 April 1958. Retrieved 3 March 2019. (Gale Document Number: GALE|CS170089098)

history, horsham, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of Horsham news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The History of Horsham a market town on the upper reaches of the River Arun on the fringe of the Weald in West Sussex England can be traced back to 947 AD and there is evidence of earlier settlement 1 Contents 1 Middle Ages 2 Modern era 3 Legal history 4 Timeline 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesMiddle Ages edit nbsp de Braose monument in St Mary s Church Horsham Samuel Hieronymus Grimm 1781 The first mention of Horsham was in King Eadred s land charter of AD 947 The town had connections to the sale of horses and recent ideas suggest the name might be derived from Horse Ham a settlement where horses were kept a None of this older descriptions that cover the Genealogy of the Shelley Middleton and Michell families mention this derivation about horses Just stating that it is likely linked to the mythical Saxon Horsa An alternative explanation is that Horsham is a contraction of Horsa s Ham named after the Anglo Saxon warrior who was said to have been given lands in the area b Despite having been in existence for some 140 years at the time of the survey Horsham is not mentioned in the Domesday Book 4 either because it was never visited by inspectors or was simply left out of the final version It lies within the ancient Norman administrative division of the Rape of Bramber and the Hundred of Singlecross In ancient times Horsham was controlled by the powerful de Braose family 5 Later the Eversfield family which had risen from Surrey County obscurity into a powerhouse of ironmasters and landowners built Denne Park House their seat 6 The family later represented Horsham in Parliament and controlled the Eversfield Estate in St Leonards on Sea where the seaside promenade is named for the family 7 Horsham Castle built by William de Braose in the late eleventh century was abandoned around 1154 The castle earthworks can be found near Chennells Brook 8 9 Horsham had two weekly markets in the Middle Ages 10 and was noted locally for its annual fairs Modern era editDespite a local iron industry which stayed until the 17th century and a prosperous brewing industry Horsham remained primarily a market town serving the many farms in the area until the early 20th century when other industry and residential developments began to proliferate One of these was the manufacture of bricks from the Wealden clay on which Horsham sits Warnham and Wealden Brickworks still operate two miles north of Horsham and there are disused workings throughout the area notably at Southwater which is now developed as an education centre and leisure park nbsp Register of birth from St Mary s in Horsham This records refers to Samuel Carpenter born 1649 who emigrated to Philadelphia Pennsylvania and was a prominent citizen and leader Horsham prospered during the Victorian era and early 20th century The town along with others has been well documented photographically by Francis Frith The pictures record many of the landmarks that are still in place today although some such the war memorial Jubilee Fountain and Carfax Bandstand have been moved Horsham remained a prominent brewery town until 2000 when the King and Barnes Brewery was closed on merger with Hall amp Woodhouse brewers of Dorset King amp Barnes was formed in 1906 from the merger of King amp Sons maltsters existing from 1850 and G H Barnes amp Co brewers whose origins date back to 1800 The brewery remained in the King family hands until the merger in 2000 when production ceased permanently Their most famous brews included Sussex Ale Wealden Ale Broadwood Festive and the seasonal Old and Christmas Ales The last member of the King family involved in the company brewed in Horsham at W J King amp Co Brewers and now brews at Firebird Brewery in Rudgwick There are four other small brewers currently operating in Horsham Hepworth s is run by a former head brewer at King amp Barnes and Welton s a company who were formed in Capel Surrey and have been in Horsham since 2004 Kissingate Brewery and Brolly Brewing formed in 2017 The town has grown steadily over recent years to a population of 55 657 This has been facilitated by the completion of both inner and outer town bypasses The location of any new growth is the subject of debate Plans by the District Council include a large neighbourhood directly adjacent to Crawley Legal history editThe last man to die by pressing in the whole of England was John Weekes of Horsham 11 He was charged with robbery and murder of a woman along with three accomplices one of whom was a small boy used to sneak inside the woman s house and open access for the other three When police found stolen property in the possession of the men they easily persuaded the boy into turning King s evidence Two of the other accomplices were convicted but when John Weekes had his turn to plead he refused to say anything Once the judges brought in eight witnesses who swore Weekes could talk and was not dumb they gave him time in the cells When he refused further to say a single word the judges were forced to find him not guilty of murder Instead he was convicted of standing mute through malice Weekes was placed under three hundredweight boards and the sixteen stone gaoler jumped on top of him Local folklore continues the story extending it to include the death of his executioner days later sometimes in the same spot where the execution was carried out Some think that he was a mute Public executions generally took place at a place called North Heath now a suburb of Horsham The road to the execution site was known for many years as Gibbet s Road but was later renamed Giblet s Road with an extension now called Giblet s Way The last man to be put to death for homosexuality in England was in Horsham in 1835 12 Timeline editc 950 small Anglo Saxon village 1200 Horsham first described as a borough 1278 Edward I visits Horsham for the first time 1299 Edward I visits Horsham for the second time 1324 Edward II dates deeds at Chesworth House 1 mile south of Horsham 1488 Henry VII visits Horsham 1519 Henry VIII visits Horsham 1525 Five brewers in Horsham 1532 First Horsham Grammar School founded 13 1560 Suffered Plague 1574 Suffered Plague 1588 Master of the grammar school James Alleyn Raises a troop of soldiers at his own expense to defend Horsham against the threatened Spanish invasion 1608 to 1609 Suffered Plague 1648 Horsham was the scene of a rising of 500 or 600 royalists supported by the borough bailiffs and constable in protest against the policies of the parliamentary county committee the magazine of arms kept in what was presumably the town hall was seized but the rising was quelled by parliamentary troops under Sir Michael Livesey at least three townsmen and one soldier being killed 1659 Around 5 000 Fifth Monarchists met at Horsham 1659 Suffered Smallpox 1673 Horsham described as being ruled by two bailiffs and two MP s 1735 John Weeks becomes the last ever man to be pressed to death which happened in Horsham after he murdered Elizabeth Symonds 1755 Horsham connected to London by road 1776 Ann Cruttenden was the last person to be burned at the stake in Horsham for murdering her husband petty treason 14 1791 First bank in Horsham founded 1796 Barracks built to house 1 500 men 1801 Population of 1 539 1804 Travelling library at Collyers School 1804 Ammunition depot built 1811 Library Society founded and opened 1812 Town hall built by Duke of Norfolk 1815 Barracks shut and soldiers left It was soon demolished 1829 Horsham Mechanics Institution opened 1830 Book and Tract Society at the Unitarian Church 1835 John Sparshott becomes the second to last man to be put to death for homosexuality in England dying at the age of 19 in Horsham 12 15 From 1836 Horsham was lit by gas 1839 A police force was founded in Horsham 1840 A fire brigade was founded in Horsham 1844 John Lawrence becomes the last man to be executed via hanging in Horsham and the last man to be executed in Horsham after he bludgeoned Chief Constable Henry Solomon over the head with a poker causing him a head injury from which he later died 16 1844 Horsham Library Society closed 1844 Last time ever in Britain a wife was sold They were sold for 33 shillings in the town centre citation needed 1847 Literary and Scientific Institution established 1848 Horsham was connected by rail to Brighton 1851 Population of 6 000 1852 A cemetery was founded in Horsham for the first time 1860 Horsham Mechanics Institution closed 1866 Corn exchange and water company formed in Horsham 1875 Local government board formed 1892 Horsham hospital opened 1900 Population of 10 000 1902 Christ s Hospital school moved to Horsham 1902 Electric street lighting placed in Horsham 1910 Horsham cinema opened 1920 War memorial built 1925 Town Hall library opened 1928 Carfax branch opened 1929 Horsham Museum opened 1934 St Mark s Church Hall 1935 Horsham swimming pool opened 1936 ABC cinema now the Capital is opened in North Street 1939 Unitarian Library closed 1940 Worst bombing raid in Horsham Seven people died 1945 Unitarian Library books give to town library 1957 New Library building by the Black Jug 1958 Heaviest hailstone recorded in the UK falls 1963 Stockland House tower block is opened and Pearl Insurance move in 1970 Work begins to clear away an old gas works between Springfield Road and London Road along with a row of Victorian houses for the construction of Albion Way bypass 1973 The Swan Pub in West Street is demolished to make way for an entrance for Swan Walk Shopping Centre 1974 Construction begins on the new lower school for Tanbridge House School on Worthing Road 1974 Work begins on the construction of Swan Walk Shopping Centre and Multistory Car park 1976 Swan Walk Shopping opened 1983 Odeon Cinema with a rocket sculpture sign outside is demolished to make way for Sun Alliance offices called Stains Court that eventually opens in 1987 1983 The original Capital Cinema that was surrounded by Swan Walk Shopping Centre is demolished in February 1983 to make way for the new M amp S store the proceeds from the sale of the land goes towards the purchase of the ABC Cinema in North Street that was to be transformed into Horsham Arts Centre in 1984 1986 The new Tesco s building in Broadbridge Heath is opened along with the new sports centre beside it 1987 Tesco on Worthing Road closes the building is then converted into McDonald s Argos and Fads the old Tesco Carpark behind the building is then used as a council carpark 1987 The Construction of Broadbridge Heath flyover on the A24 is begun this replaced the previous ground level roundabout 1988 St Marks Church is demolished in North Street to make way for the new Sun Alliance building that is built over Albion Way 1988 The building of a new St Marks Church on North Heath lane is started on fields north of horsham that is to be surrounded by new housing 1988 The construction of the A264 North Horsham bypass is begun and is completed in 1989 1989 Current library building opened 1989 Swan Walk Shopping Centre refurbished and enclosed under a glass roof along with an extension called Springfield Court 1990 St Mark s Church Opened by Bishop of Chichester 1991 The new Sun Alliance building is opened 1991 The old Pearl Insurance tower block Stockland House in North Street that was built in 1963 is demolished to make way for the new Sun Alliance building now WSCC HQ 1992 Horsham Carfax is partially closed to traffic and the bandstand is relocated along with the installation of new paving and gas fired street lamps 1993 The construction of the new Tanbridge House School is commenced on land beside the A24 next to the Broadbridge heath flyover 1994 The old Tanbridge House School is closed and the building is converted into flats and the playing fields become Tanbridge Park housing estate 1994 The old Tanbridge House School lower school school years 7 9 that was built in 1975 is demolished and a new Sainsburys is built in its place 1994 The new Tanbridge House School is opened two weeks behind schedule in late Sept 1994 New Sun Alliance building is opened in the place of the demolished Stockland House 1996 Rising universe sculpture created locally known as Shelley s Fountain 1999 Brewing industry ended in Horsham including the closure of the national chain of brewers King and Barnes and their factory in Horsham 2003 Pavilions in the Park opened in Horsham 2003 The Forum opened by Queen Elizabeth II 2003 The Capitol Theatre and Arts Centre was opened by Queen Elizabeth II 2005 Chesworth School is closed and Kingslea Primary school opens in its place 2008 Population of 55 657 recorded 2009 Finance ministers and central bankers of the G 20 met at South Lodge in Horsham on 14 March for a meeting to prepare for the London summit of 2 April 2022 Mowbray Village begins to be built Major housing developments to the South West and North East of the town have been progressing in recent years See also editHistory of SussexNotes edit More likely a reference to Horsens in Jutland the origin of its Jutish settlers The hors prefix is fairly common in England 2 This is an example of non historical founding myths 3 References edit Horsham General history of the town British History Online Retrieved 3 March 2019 The Angles Saxons and Jutes The Ancient World Odijk Pamela Egmont 1989 Brewer s Britain amp Ireland The History Culture Folklore and Etymology of 7500 Places in These Islands Ayto John Crofton Ian Publisher Weidenfeld amp Nicolson 2006 Albery W 1947 A Millennium of Facts in the History of Horsham and Sussex 947 1947 Horsham Horsham Museum Society Lower Mark Antony 1870 A Compendious History of Sussex Topographical Archaeological amp Anecdotical Containing an Index to the First Twenty Volumes of the Sussex Archaeological Collections G P Bacon p 245 Retrieved 3 March 2019 King R J 1858 A handbook for travellers in Kent and Sussex London John Murray p 333 Retrieved 3 March 2019 Eversfield family of Denne Park Horsham Manorial Records and Deeds 1430 1903 Hastings Museum and Art Gallery National Register of Archives The National Archives Retrieved 3 March 2019 Historic England Motte and Bailey Castle North of Chennells Brook Farm 1014389 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 11 June 2017 Chennells Brook Castle Motte amp Baily castle ruins in north Flickr Retrieved 17 March 2019 Interview with Miss M Page Horsham resident 1933 2006 for many years Auctioneer s Clerk at the weekly livestock market Horsham Museum Society Archive Horsham s last execution West Sussex County Times wscountytimes co uk Retrieved 3 March 2019 a b Full particulars of the trials and execution of Richard Sheppard and John Sparshott who were executed at Horsham on Saturday Aug 22nd 1835 English Crime and Execution Broadsides CURIOSity Digital Collections curiosity lib harvard edu Retrieved 3 March 2019 A History of Horsham localhistories org Retrieved 3 March 2019 The tragedy of an insane marriage Sussex Express Retrieved 3 March 2019 Executions The Times London England 15877 7 25 August 1835 Retrieved 3 March 2019 Gale Document Number GALE CS117728537 Horsham s Last Hanging The Times London England 54121 10 10 April 1958 Retrieved 3 March 2019 Gale Document Number GALE CS170089098 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Horsham amp oldid 1208416374, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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