Civil Parish: | Busbridge Hambledon |
Country: | England |
Official Name: | Hydestile |
Coordinates: | 51.1562°N -0.617°W |
Static Image Name: | File:Crossroads at Hydestile, Surrey - geograph.org.uk - 1255617.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | The crossroads in Hydestile |
Map Type: | Surrey |
Population: | 431 |
Population Ref: | - the population in 2011 was at most half of the two output areas drawn around portions of the two related areas.[1] |
Shire District: | Waverley |
Shire County: | Surrey |
Region: | South East England |
Constituency Westminster: | South West Surrey |
Post Town: | GODALMING |
Postcode District: | GU8 4 |
Postcode Area: | GU |
Dial Code: | 01483 |
Os Grid Reference: | SU96814056 |
Hydestile is a hamlet in Waverley, south-west Surrey. It is around south of Godalming between the villages of Busbridge and Hambledon, straddling their civil parish borders. One landmark of the hamlet is Hydon's Ball, a large woodland and promontory of the Greensand Ridge, about which a very old poem has been written; the site is within National Trust land and free to visitors.
Hydestile was the site for two hospitals built on land that formed part of the Busbridge Hall Estate: from 1921 King George V Hospital (formerly a TB sanatorium) and from 1941 St Thomas' Hospital (formed from the World War II evacuation of St Thomas' Hospital in Lambeth). The hospitals were demolished and redeveloped in the late 1990s following years of disuse and dereliction. The only visible remains are the Gatehouse, the former Superintendent's house, six staff cottages and a cluster of footings amongst the woods.
The hamlet is centred on the crossroads of Hambledon Road and Salt Lane. To the south-east is the steeper of two neighbouring outcrops of the Greensand Ridge. Elevations range from 74m (243feet) in the narrow wooded vale of the Shad Well spring, that issues near the central crossroads of the hamlet and flows to the north, to 117m (384feet) AOD less than a mile to the east.
To the west, the hamlets of Enton Green and Great Enton share one 2011 census output area (of between 50 and 150 homes), and their surrounding terrain is flatter; they are mentioned in the article on their civil parish, Hambledon.[2]
The settlement has a small population, split between two considerably larger United Kingdom Census 2011 output areas: E00157389 (north-east and beyond) and E00157740 (rest and beyond).[3]
+ 2011 Census Key Statistics | |||||
Output area | Population | Households | % Owned outright | % Owned with a loan | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
E00157389 | 528 | 171 | 50.3 | 36.3 | |
E00157740 | 338 | 116 | 42.2 | 26.7 |