Rowland Gorringe, Lewes
Established 1926
Independent Estate Agents
Prime location offices in Lewes, Seaford, Uckfield and Heathfield
Members of the National Association of Estate Agents
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For all your town & country property requirements from Maisonettes to Mansions
Heathfield is a small bustling market town surrounded by beautiful rolling Sussex countryside, some sixteen miles from the coastal town of Eastbourne and seventeen miles from the historic spa town of Royal Tunbridge Wells in Kent.
The twin parishes of Heathfield and Waldron have a total population of 11,000 people, scattered amongst several villages of Waldron, Cross In Hand and Punnetts Town The present village of Old Heathfield was the original location of the settlement. At nearby Cade Street is the Heathfield Beacon and the memorial to Jack Cade, who, in 1450, led an insurrection of the common people and was reputedly killed near where the memorial is sited by Sheriff Alexander Iden of Kent.
Heathfield gained its market charter in February 1316 during the reign of Edward II. Later industrial development of the area took place with the growth of the iron industry in the 16th and 17th centuries and many canon balls fired in war came from Heathfield. Newer development of the town only took place when the railway came in the 19th century.
Today no trains run to Heathfield, but the former railway line has not been allowed to become derelict. Instead, it has been turned into a traffic-free cycleway, bridleway and walkway. Running south from Heathfield, the Cuckoo Trail, as it is called, cuts through some of the prettiest countryside in Wealden and ends at Polegate. Long term, there are plans for a southern extension to reach the coast, so that, from the ferry terminal at Dieppe, it can be linked with the planned -avenue verte- through the French countryside to the Normandy town of Forges-les-Eaux, with which Heathfield is twinned.
Heathfield today is an ideal touring base and a busy, bustling market town with a good range of general and specialist shops, excellent primary and secondary schools and other services. It still retains links with the farming industry which has shaped the surrounding countryside over the centuries, for the Heathfield Show, held at the late May Bank Holiday, draws thousands to the town. More recent events which have also become more established as regular dates in the Heathfield calendar are the annual Tour de Heathfield cycle event (June/July) and Le Marche (the Anglo French street market held on August Bank Holiday Monday), and Farmers' Markets take place on the third Saturday of each month.
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