Rustington
Rustington | |
The church of St. Peter and St. Paul |
|
Rustington |
|
Area | 3.72 km2 (1.44 sq mi) |
---|---|
Population | 13,883 (Civil Parish.2011)[1] |
– density | 3,732/km2 (9,670/sq mi) |
OS grid reference | TQ054022 |
– London | 51 miles (82 km) NNE |
Civil parish | Rustington |
District | Arun |
Shire county | West Sussex |
Region | South East |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | LITTLEHAMPTON |
Postcode district | BN16 |
Dialling code | 01903 |
Police | Sussex |
Fire | West Sussex |
Ambulance | South East Coast |
EU Parliament | South East England |
UK Parliament | Worthing West |
Website | Rustington Parish Council |
|
Coordinates: 50°48′37″N 0°30′19″W / 50.81019°N 0.50521°W
Rustington is a village and civil parish near Littlehampton in the Arun District of West Sussex. Rustington is approximately at the midpoint of the West Sussex coast and midway between the county town of Chichester and Brighton. The A259 runs along the north of Rustington, westward to Littlehampton, Bognor Regis and Chichester, and east to Worthing and Brighton.
With a population of over 14,000 in 2014, it has the size and facilities of a small town, including a shopping area with a mix of independent and chain stores. The parish of Rustington includes the neighbourhood of West Preston.
History
Rustington was in World War I home to an American air base, at the east of the High Street.
Conservation area and information centre
Rustington contains a conservation area which extends from the south end of North Lane to The Lamb in The Street. Here, where trees are protected, are the largest number of pre-1850 listed buildings in the post town, with The Street and surrounding roads containing some of the finest 17th and 18th century Sussex flint cottages in West Sussex, some of which are thatched.
There is a village information centre at the Churchill Parade car park.[2] Rustington has its own museum, containing artworks and artefacts and a coffee shop, housed in an 18th-century thatched house recently converted for the purpose.[3]
Sports and leisure
The local amateur football team, Rustington F.C., went through 2006 without losing a single match, earning them a mention on Sky Sports News on New Year's Eve.
Annual events
Rustington competes annually in the South-East in Bloom competition. It holds an annual carnival and fête in August. Close to Christmas Eve, Rustington has a village carol concert which is free for local residents and features local school children accompanied by the Littlehampton Concert Band.
Geography
Rustington adjoins the English Channel, and ranges between 2 metres and 7 metres above Ordnance Datum. It has three main recreation grounds and neither woodland nor fields.[4]
In literature and the media
Rustington achieved national fame in 1956 with the launch of Flanders and Swann's show At the Drop of a Hat, in which the Gnu Song contains the lines:
- I had taken furnished lodgings down at Rustington-on-Sea
- Whence I travelled on to...(Ashton-under-Lyne it was actually)...
Shopping facilities
Rustington has independent shops such as butchers, greengrocers and bakers. It has some major banks and a post office serving a population of 40,000. Pedestrianised areas benefit the Churchill Court Shopping Courtyard. On display in the high street is a large Late Ice Age erratic boulder; this was brought to Rustington on ice during the last Ice Age. It was re-discovered in a local field named Stonefield having been used as a boundary marker for many years. Rustington also has a retail park on the A259 road.
Sport and leisure
Rustington has an amateur football club Rustington F.C. who play at the Recreation Ground.
Transport
Rustington shares Angmering railway station with Angmering and East Preston. Trains from this station go to Brighton and Portsmouth/Southampton, and some to London.
Bus services to Brighton and Portsmouth are provided by the 700 Coastliner.
Popular culture
In the Gnu Song, introduced in the 1950s by Michael Flanders and Donald Swann, a verse begins with the line, "I had taken furnished lodgings down at Rustington-on-Sea". This is the setting for an apparition of a gnu.
In the news
Hot cross bun
- Paul Pegrum, of Pegrum's bakery (now Forfar's), created the world's biggest hot cross bun to publicise Rustington at Easter 2002. After four hours of cooking, the bun surpassed two out of the three existing records. A weights and measures inspector from Brighton and Hove Council found the bun had smashed the current weight record of 38 kg (84 lbs), weighing in at 42.8 kg (94 lb 6oz).It is also the widest, with a diameter of 4 ft 4in (132 cm).[5]
Air speed records
Two world air speed records were set over Rustington sea front.
- Set on 7 September 1946, by Group Captain Teddy Donaldson, flying a Gloster Meteor Star. Donaldson also became the first man to exceed 1,000 km/h.[6]
- Set on 7 September 1953, by Squadron Leader Neville Duke, flying Hawker Hunter WB188, at a speed of 1170.9 km/h.
To celebrate, on 7 September 1996, Neville Duke returned to Rustington to unveil a plaque, marking the event, joined by a Gloster Meteor and a Hawker Hunter, which flew over the sea front.
Twin towns
Notable people
- Lindsay Anderson, Indian-born English feature film, theatre and documentary director, film critic, and leading light of the Free Cinema movement and the British New Wave. He wrote If.... while living in his mother's house on the village's Sea Estate.
- JM Barrie, Scottish author and dramatist; author of Peter Pan.
- Delirious?, English Christian rock and worship band members lived in the village.
- Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe, landscape architect, garden designer, architect and author, raised in Rustington.[7]
- Sir Hubert Parry, composer; hymn melodies some becoming templates including Rustington. He lived in Sea Lane (from 1880-d.1918).
- Andrew Pearson, cricketer who played for Bedfordshire.[8]
- Ed Petrie, British comedian, actor and television presenter. He was born and raised in the village.
- George Posford, English composer, most notably famed for "Good Night Vienna"
- Graham Sutherland OM, English artist
- Mitchell Symons, journalist and bestselling author. He has lived just outside the village since 1995.
- Brian White, Cartoonist. He spent much of his later life in the village.
- Leslie Arthur Wilcox R.I., R.S.M.A., marine artist. He lived in Cove Road from 1963-1982.
References
- ↑ Key Statistics; Quick Statistics: Population Density United Kingdom Census 2011 Office for National Statistics Retrieved 10 May 2014
- ↑ Littlehampton Gazette
- ↑ "Rustington Museum". Retrieved 8 September 2014.
- ↑ Outline civil parish map Neighbourhood Statistics. The Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 2014-05-12.
- ↑ The Argus 28 March 2002
- ↑ Thomas, Nick. RAF Top Gun: Teddy Donaldson CB, DSO, AFC and Bar Battle of Britain Ace and World Air Speed Record Holder, Pen & Sword, 2008. ISBN 1-84415-685-0
- ↑ 1996 Obituary for Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe who grew up in Rustington
- ↑ "Player profile: Andrew Pearson". CricketArchive. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
External links
Media related to Rustington at Wikimedia Commons