|
Surrey
To view Bed and Breakfast, Hotels, Guest House, Self Catering and campsites in Surrey please click here.

A county in southern England, one of the Home Counties. Surrey has a population
of approximately one million and an area of 648 square miles (1,679 sq km). . The
traditional county town is Kingston upon Thames, which was lost to the county following
the continued expansion of London. The present county town is Guildford although
the County Council is still based in Kingston-Upon-Thames. In the famous Harry Potter
series of novels, his residence is in Surrey.
Geography
Surrey is a low-lying area traversed from W to E by the chalk hills of the North
Downs. Much of Surrey is rolling downland, the North Downs Way being a scenic long-distance
path. There are many notable beauty spots including Box Hill, Frensham Ponds and
Puttenham Common. The highest point in Surrey is Leith Hill near Dorking at 968
ft (295 m) above sea level.
Industry
The county's proximity to London has influenced its growth as a residential and
light industrial region. Agriculture is still important, however, and includes dairying,
market gardening, and the cultivation of wheat and oats. Much of Surrey is in the
Green Belt and, since the soil is very sandy and agriculture not intensive, there
are a large number of footpaths, bridleways and commons or Access lands. Therefore
Surrey provides much in the way of rural leisure activities, the horse population
being very large.
History
The name comes from the Old English suther-ge meaning southern district, and is
first recorded in A.D.722 as Suthrige. Surrey is known to have had at least one
sub-king, Frithuwald, who died around the year 686. It is not known if he was from
a native dynasty or was an appointee of East Saxons or Mercian overlords. Surrey
was anciently divided into the 14 hundreds of Blackheath, Brixton, Copthorne, Effingham,
Elmbridge, Farnham, Godalming, Godley, Kingston, Reigate, Tandridge, Wallington,
Woking and Wotton. Until 1889 Surrey contained the present-day London boroughs of
Lambeth, Southwark and Wandsworth. In 1965 the boroughs of Croydon, Kingston, Merton,
Richmond and Sutton were made part of Greater London, and Spelthorne acquired from
Middlesex. The 1974 local government reforms caused Gatwick Airport and some surrounding
land to be transferred to West Sussex. In the Local Government Act 1972 Horley and
Charlwood were also to be transferred, but fierce local protests led to a reversal
of this decision.
|