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510:. The acid sandstone of Blackdown limits the range of plants. Until the beginning of the 20th century, Blackdown was a grazed common where trees were kept down by sheep, and heather dominated. After the end of regular grazing Scots Pine became the dominant species. The National Trust now carries out a programme of tree-felling and controlled burning to maintain and regenerate areas of open heath. The reserve has been fenced so that
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Iberia
Airlines Flight 062 was a twin-engined Sud Aviation Caravelle registered EC-BDD operating a scheduled flight from Málaga Airport, Spain, to London Heathrow Airport. While on approach to Heathrow on 4 November 1967, the Caravelle descended far below the flight level assigned to it and flew into
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When
Richard Yaldwyn died in 1807 the Blackdown Estate consisted of 1300 acres and included Blackdown, Brockhurst, Vale Wool, High Diddlesford, Cotchett, Reeth, Sheetland, Cooks Bridge Farms and Blackdown Cottage Barfold-under-Beacon. Many members of the Yaldwyn family are buried at St. Laurence's at
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The ownership
Blackdown Estate can be traced back to the fourteenth century to William Yaldwyn of Blackdown (1298-1375) who received the Patent of Esquire in 1330. The Yaldwyn family tree shows Blackdown Estate as having been inherited by eight successive generations. William de Blackdown and Sutton
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Although the
Yaldwyn's had owned extensive farmlands in Sussex since at least the year 1300, it was William Yaldwyn the elder who succeeded to the property in 1600 and had the extraordinary drive to make full commercial use of the estate and surrounding lands. In 1627 he secured the sole right to
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donated
Blackdown to the National Trust as a memorial to his wife. The Hunters are remembered by an inscribed stone seat at the Temple of the Winds. Today, Blackdown is managed by the National Trust, with guidance and financial assistance from the Blackdown Committee of the National Trust.
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Trees meet overhead, copsewood surrounds it, and later, it is hedged by high sandy banks thickly overgrown with plant and scrub; squirrels and rabbits, and all other small woodland creatures, disport themselves over it. It twists and turns, and to the stranger appears to lead nowhere in
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was said to have stayed at
Blackdown House. Although the exact date of his visit is unknown it was probably during 1644–45 when Cromwell went to assist the Earl of Essex and Sir William Waller during the
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campaigns in the west of
England. The room where the Cromwell slept at Blackdown is still known as the Oliver Cromwell bedroom. The four poster bed remained in the house until Blackdown was sold by
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and have many paths and organised walks supported by volunteers, the local authorities, charities and guidebooks. The north of the long hilltop is pitted with very small old sand and gravel pits.
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and built with local sandstone. It stands on a ridge overlooking the Weald, with magnificent far-reaching views. Lord
Tennyson used it as his summer home, taking long walks over Blackdown.
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purchase iron ore mined on the extensive
Petworth Estate. This made him an extremely wealthy man and by 1640 he completed the build of the central portion of the present Blackdown House.
633:(which together formed the estate of Alfred, Lord Tennyson) walkers can enjoy a range of architecture, especially in Victorian and turn-of-the-20th-century, rustic styles (such as
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Lurgashall. (References
Yaldwyn of the Golden Spurs by J.O.Randell published by the Melbourne Mast Gully Press 1980. Church records at Lurgashall of the Yaldwyn Family).
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that runs from Haslemere, past Aldworth House (today a couple of dwellings) to near the summit. The lane keeps to Arthur Paterson's description in 1905:
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the southern slope of Blackdown Hill in West Sussex, killing all 37 on board. Lost were the all-Spanish crew of six, 25 Britons (including the actress
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Public transport: pavement and footpath along Tennyson's Lane, Haslemere; 3 car parks at Tennysons Lane (to north), 1 at Ferndens Lane (to south)
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and south-west Surrey. There is no village or hamlet on Blackdown although it lies approximately equidistant from the railway town of
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Tennyson's Lane c. 1900. The gate marks the Surrey/Sussex border, and was a favourite destination for Lord Tennyson's walks.
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The crash also killed a flock of sheep, damaged parts of the roof of Upper Black Down House and destroyed a garage.
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Book on the many writers (including Tennyson) who settled around Haslemere after the coming of the railway in 1859.
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A geological relief model of Blackdown, and much information on its natural history, can be found in the
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Aside from its elevation and beauty, Blackdown is best known as the site of the poet Tennyson's houses,
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with cattle can be used as a management tool. Blackdown is an important habitat for insects and birds.
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There are three National Trust car parks on Tennyson's Lane, which runs up Haste Hill from
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language of the ancient Britons that lived in the area – rather like the well-known
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Flint artefacts show there has been settlement on Blackdown since at least the
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Tennyson's Lane is named in memory of the poet who lived here. The lane is a
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vividly capture the landscape. He died in the house on 6 October 1892.
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which is surrounded by daffodils in the spring; and to the east
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Ordnance Survey - Sussex XI.SW, Revised: 1895, Published: 1898
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Because of its elevation, from 1796 to 1816 Blackdown hosted a
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Hill summit in the South Downs National Park in Sussex, England
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View south from Blackdown Hill over West Sussex and Hampshire
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was a frequent visitor then, and her illustrations to
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The pine- and heather-covered slopes are owned by the
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station which linked the Admiralty in London to the
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Pine trees cleared and thinned to restore heathland
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62:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
744:View map at National Libraries of Scotland website
555:, around 6000 BC. The name of an ancient track,
797:(Second ed.). Grayshott: John Owen Smith.
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766:Paterson, Arthur and Helen Allingham (1905).
434:Blackdown is located in the far northwest of
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577:(1342–1418) is said to have fought at the
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122:Learn how and when to remove this message
1416:National Trust properties in West Sussex
406:. Blackdown is protected as part of the
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871:Iberia crash record at airdisaster.com
506:Geologically Blackdown is part of the
857:Fernhurst Society Blackdown Air Crash
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672:Aldworth, painted by Helen Allingham
430:View from two miles (3 km) away
60:adding citations to reliable sources
954:Alfred Tennyson, 1st Baron Tennyson
1441:Highest points of English counties
148:View of Blackdown, watercolour by
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829:"Walk #609: Haslemere to Liphook"
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793:Trotter, Wilfred Robert (2003).
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1074:The Charge of the Light Brigade
637:). These include, to the west,
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612:In 1944 the then current owner
547:Old Manor Farm, Tennyson's Lane
47:needs additional citations for
1436:Nature reserves in West Sussex
461:. Blackdown is crossed by the
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1431:Napoleonic beacons in England
1144:Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal
852:Haslemere Educational Museum
777:Blackdown Committee (n.d.).
635:Arts and Crafts architecture
533:Haslemere Educational Museum
1247:Flower in the Crannied Wall
779:Blackdown and Marley Common
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847:National Trust: Black Down
714:Iberia Airlines Flight 062
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621:Architecture and buildings
446:2 miles to the northwest;
167:279.7 m (918 ft)
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408:South Downs National Park
392:South Downs National Park
301:South Downs National Park
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1319:Chapel House, Twickenham
822:Map of Blackdown c. 1880
772:. London: A&C Black.
474:sunken, tree-tunnel lane
177:191 m (627 ft)
71:"Blackdown, West Sussex"
1382:Charles Tennyson Turner
1130:Lady Clara Vere de Vere
866:Aviation Safety Network
650:shutter telegraph chain
150:Helen Allingham, (1902)
1336:Blackdown, West Sussex
969:Poems, Chiefly Lyrical
910:Blackdown, West Sussex
897:Next station downwards
890:Shutter telegraph line
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692:house was designed by
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1088:A Dream of Fair Women
1026:The Miller's Daughter
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769:The homes of Tennyson
702:The Homes of Tennyson
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605:(1801–1866) in 1844.
603:William Henry Yaldwyn
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1421:Hills of West Sussex
1268:Ring Out, Wild Bells
1254:The Higher Pantheism
1040:The Ballad of Oriana
1019:Mariana in the South
883:Next station upwards
512:conservation grazing
56:improve this article
1426:Marilyns of England
1180:St. Simeon Stylites
1067:Break, Break, Break
991:The Lady of Shalott
862:Iberia crash record
795:The hilltop writers
708:Blackdown air crash
579:Battle of Agincourt
229: /
1388:Frederick Tennyson
1123:In Memoriam A.H.H.
1116:Idylls of the King
977:The Deserted House
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463:Sussex Border Path
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233:51.0587°N 0.6895°W
157:Highest point
18:Black Down, Sussex
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1324:Farringford House
1194:Tears, Idle Tears
1159:The Palace of Art
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781:. National Trust.
694:Sir James Knowles
686:Farringford House
599:English Civil War
590:English Civil War
553:mesolithic period
467:the Serpent Trail
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16:(Redirected from
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1226:Crossing the Bar
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1201:The Two Voices
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364:Easiest route
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67:Find sources:
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45:This article
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1303:(song cycle)
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1166:The Princess
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961:Early poetry
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836:. Retrieved
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614:W. E. Hunter
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396:Walbury Hill
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310:Parent range
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54:Please help
49:verification
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1285:Other works
1240:Enoch Arden
1218:Late poetry
1173:Sir Galahad
915:Beacon Hill
625:As well as
588:During the
566:pen-y-ghent
481:particular.
436:West Sussex
282:West Sussex
236: /
211:Coordinates
183:Parent peak
1410:Categories
1372:(grandson)
1366:(grandson)
1301:The Window
1109:Lady Clare
984:The Kraken
888:Admiralty
730:References
658:Portsmouth
654:Royal Navy
459:Lurgashall
404:Pilot Hill
400:Leith Hill
380:Black Down
346:Landranger
221:51°03′31″N
204:County Top
188:Leith Hill
173:Prominence
112:April 2023
82:newspapers
1390:(brother)
1384:(brother)
1233:The Eagle
1102:St. Agnes
838:7 January
571:Yorkshire
561:Brythonic
557:pen-y-bos
455:Haslemere
448:Fernhurst
444:Haslemere
376:Blackdown
303:, England
274:Blackdown
249:Geography
224:0°41′22″W
163:Elevation
137:Blackdown
1396:(friend)
1378:(sister)
1275:Tithonus
1033:Claribel
904:Hascombe
682:Foxholes
678:Aldworth
631:Foxholes
414:Location
390:and the
357:Climbing
350:Explorer
338:Topo map
330:SU919296
293:Location
1312:Related
1208:Ulysses
1005:Mariana
917:
906:
864:at the
539:History
324:OS grid
200:Marilyn
195:Listing
96:scholar
1354:(wife)
1345:People
1295:(play)
1154:(1842)
1095:Godiva
1059:Poetry
1012:Oenone
972:(1830)
801:
526:Surrey
388:Sussex
98:
91:
84:
77:
69:
1360:(son)
1151:Poems
440:Weald
378:, or
348:197,
103:JSTOR
89:books
1261:Maud
892:1795
840:2006
799:ISBN
680:and
465:and
402:and
352:OL33
75:news
656:in
569:in
386:of
58:by
1412::
831:.
750:^
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343:OS
299:,
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