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Hurst Green
(The Youngest Highwayman on record)

General Details
Hurst Green lies about 2 miles north of Robertsbridge
on the A21, the busy main road from London to Hastings.
It is possible that the area known as Burgh Hill, on the
south side of the village was the site of a fort built by
King Alfred the Great . The fort was Eorpeburner , this
is mentioned in the Burghal Hidage , a record of the forts
from Alfreds reign. Currently no one has found the site of
this fort, but we suspect that Hurst Green may be the site
for the following reasons. In 892 the Vikings stormed and
destroyed the fort which was found on the river Limen.
Burgh Hill is on a very steep hill overlooking the Rother valley
on one side, and the river Lymden(Limen) on the other. During
the 800's the sea level was higher in the area, and the Viking
longboats could have sailed up the Rother valley from their base
at Appledore which they created in 892(a co-incidence?).
In 1264 King Henry III( see also Flimwell ) passed
through Hurst Green with his army on the way to Lewes.
In 1744 the village green covered a triangular area
from the courthouse to the village hall, including
land on which some houses in Station Road stand.
"The Cottage" and "Yew Tree" are shown on a map dated
1650, and so must have stood on the edge of the Village
Green.
The notorious Hawkhurst Gang of smugglers used to
terrorise the area. In 1740, at Silver Hill between
Hurst Green and Robertsbridge a Revenue Officer
Thomas Carswell was shot and killed while trying
to apprehend some of the smugglers. One of the guilty
smugglers George Chapman was gibbetted in his home
village Hurst Green on the village green, no doubt
watched by many of the locals as in its time it was
a popular spectator sport!
A few years later in 1796, Richard Russel, possibly
the youngest highwayman on record at 13 years of age,
was charged at the assizes for robbing the Hurst Green
mail. He stole a draft to the value of £32 14s 0d,
the property of a Mountfield man James Bourne. In
consideration of his age he was only jailed for 6 months.
The village had its hey-day in the 19th and early 20th
centuries, when it had many shops and local businesses,
but declined during the post World War II period, with
the advent of the motor car and large super stores.
At the end of Station Road stands the Court House,
built in 1892 on the site of the old Toll Gate Cottage.
The Toll Gate stood at the junction of the roads from
London, Hastings and Etchingham . The Toll Cottage had
a large lantern which was maintained by public
subscription, the forerunner of local street lighting.
The Court House has a clock tower, which was erected in
memory of Mr Gregory of Boarzell. The clock has 3 faces,
each measuring 4ft in diameter, and it used to strike
the hours on a bell weighing two hundred weight. In no
longer does this, as at night the chiming was an
annoyance to the local people. The building ceased to
be a court house about 1973.
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Services

Hurst Green has a few shops and Public Houses which
provide the usual village services.
The main Hawkhurst to Battle , and Hurst Green
to Heathfield bus services go through the village
centre.
The nearest train service is from Etchingham with
a 20 minute service to London in the rush hour, and
hourly in between.
The small town of Battle is about 6 miles South, and
has a wide variety of shops. The main towns of Hastings
about 14 miles South, and Tunbridge Wells approx 15
miles North provide supermarket access.
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Views

From the A21 road heading south of Hurst Green towards
Hastings, to your right just after passing the school
the Rother Valley in all its splendour winds westward
upstream towards Mayfield .
Travelling south towards Etchingham via the Burgh Hill
road, the full beauty of the Rother valley is before
you.
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