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Hayling Island is vital to
the Borough as a tourist resort.
This charming peaceful island with its
European Blue Flag beaches and a country
village atmosphere is largely responsible for
more than £50 million in tourism income to the
Borough over the course of a good summer.
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Hayling Beach - Photo:
Ray Stanton
CCL |
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Chichester Harbour - Photo:
Steve Rigg
CCL |
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The island covers only ten
square miles and is accessible from the
mainland by a road bridge.
Halfway along its four-mile length it is
almost cut in two at the point where Mill
Rythe, a narrow inlet, comes in on the east
side from Chichester Harbour.
At this point the island is only half a mile
across.
Almost all the population of the island live
south of this narrow 'waist'.
North of this line the villages of Stoke and
Northney are the only settlements of any size. |
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Stoke is a small village on
the main road with a small group of shops at
the point where the road from Northney joins
the main route.
With its many thatched cottages and meandering
country lanes, Northney is a place of
considerable charm.
The southern part of Hayling is the part of
the island best known by holidaymakers, and is
a combination of town and country with the
settlements of West Town, Gable Head and
Eastoke spreading to meet each other but with
fields, farms, woods and the sea all within
easy reach. |
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Eastoke Beach - Photo:
Ray Stanton
CCL |
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Beach Fishing - Photo:
Colin Smith
CCL |
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Its main attraction for
visitors is of course its wonderful coastline,
over four miles of it.
Part of the beach, at West
Beachlands, now boasts two European Blue
Flags, the Tidy Britain Group's Premier Resort
Seaside Award and the Solent Water Quality
Award in recognition of its high standards of
beach and foreshore management and good water
quality.
Beachlands itself is over 100
acres of land between Sea Front [road] and the
shore.
Its grassy dunes, gorse, wild
flowers and bird life provide delightful
picnic spots, and its unspoilt nature is what
sets it aside from many other, larger,
resorts.
Sailing and boardsailing are
two activities for which the island is
internationally renowned, conditions being
perfect for both sports. |
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In 1996 the historic oyster
beds on the north west coast of Hayling Island
were restored by the Borough Council, creating
a wildlife haven which has become an important
seabird breeding site.
The Design Council awarded this project
'Millennium Product' status for the
renovation.
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Hayling Oysterbeds -
Photo:
Hugh Venables
CCL |
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East Hayling Light Railway -
Photo:
Ray Stanton
CCL |
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A
recent addition
to the
attractions on
Hayling sea
front is the
East Hayling
Light Railway, a
narrow gauge
train opened in
the summer of
2003 running
from Beachlands
funfair to
Eastoke Corner
which in its
first season of
operation had
attracted over
20,000
passengers.
An
intermediate
station is
provided at
Seagrove Avenue
called 'Hornby
Halt'. |
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Hayling's
essentially
modern
appearance hides
a more complex
history reaching
back beyond
Saxon and Roman
times.
The name
is Saxon in
origin, meaning
the Island of
Hegel's People,
but when the
Saxons first
occupied the
area there was
already a Roman
building in
North Hayling.
By the time of
the Domesday
survey in 1086,
most of the
island had been
settled.
There
were four manors
and a population
as large as that
found in the
three mainland
parishes of
Bedhampton,
Havant and Warblington
put together. |
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West Town - Hayling Island -
Photo:
Ray Stanton
CCL |
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St. Peter's Church - Photo:
Anthony Brunning
CCL |
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The
largest manor
was in South
Hayling and had
been given by
William the
Conqueror to the
monks of the
Abbey of Jumieges
in Normandy.
In the 15th century the lands of the Priory,
which had been farmed by the King for some
time, were given to the Charterhouse by Henry
V.
They later came into the possession of the
Dukes of Norfolk.
In North Hayling, St Peter's Church, built in
1140, is the loveliest building on the island.
It is a fine example of a typical English
village church of the Norman period.
Its foundations are said to be large 'erratic'
stones left as the ice receded in the
post-glacial period.
The peal of three bells is said to be the
oldest in England, the tenor bell having been
dated by the Whitechapel Foundry as from about
1350.
One of the trees surrounding the church is a
yew tree, which is at least 800 years old. |
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However the yew
tree in the
grounds of St
Mary's Church in
the parish
church of South
Hayling exceeds
this.
It is said
to be almost
1000 years old
and has a girth
of nine metres.
Hayling is a
holiday,
windsurfing and
sailing centre.
Windsurfing was
invented on the
island.
Originally it
was thought to
be an American
invention, but
after a court
battle the title
was given to
Hayling Island.
The island
features several
churches, the
most notable of
which is St
Mary's Church in
Gable Head.
The
church is a
standard design
of the churches
of its era, but
upon close
examination the
walls have been
constructed from
a mortar of
local shells and
beach pebbles.
The churchyard
features a yew
tree that is
believed to be
over 800 years
old.
The grave
of Scotsman
George Sandeman,
the founder of
Sandeman Port is
prominently featured in the north-east part of
the graveyard. |
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St. Mary's Church -
Photo:
Anthony Brunning
CCL |
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Further information:
Hayling Island Hotels, Guesthouses and B&B Accommodation
Hayling Island Cottages, Apartments and Self Catering
Accommodation
Hayling Island Camping and Caravan Sites
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