Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The island is the home of the Hayling Charity Cycle Ride which organises an annual charity cycle ride most often from Hayling Island to Paris and back. [38] This event, run entirely by local unpaid volunteers, was started in 1986 by local cyclist Peter McQuade [ 39 ] [ 40 ] and has been run every year since.
West Town is a village on Hayling Island in the borough of Havant in the county of Hampshire, England. It is on the south coast of the island, between Sinah to the west and Eastoke to the east. The wide area between the seafront road and the sea is known as Beachlands .
Mill Rythe Holiday Village is a holiday camp in Hayling Island, Hampshire, England.Originally called Sunshine Holiday Camp, it opened its doors to the public in the early 1940s and had also been used by the Royal Marines during the war and for holidays with their families after World War II.
Sinah Common is a 243-hectare (600-acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest on Hayling Island in Hampshire, England. [1] [2]This coastal site has maritime shingle grassland, some of which is rich in lichens, sand dunes, heath and saltmarsh.
Hayling Billy is a 42-hectare (100-acre) Local Nature Reserve on Hayling Island in Hampshire. It is owned by Hampshire County Council and managed by Hampshire Countryside Service. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is part of Chichester and Langstone Harbours Ramsar site [ 3 ] and Special Protection Area , [ 4 ] Solent Maritime Special Area of Conservation [ 5 ...
Tourner Bury is an area on Hayling Island, Hampshire, England, lying east of Mengham. As well as woodland, the area is the site of an Iron Age hill fort, which was the scene of small-scale rampart excavations in 1959 and 1971. [1] A golf course lies to the north of Tournerbury Wood. To the south is Mengham Rythe and to the east Chichester Harbour.
Mengham is the largest settlement on Hayling Island in Hampshire, England. It is the largest shopping area on the island, and has three schools and a library. There is a church, St Mary's, in the north of the settlement. There is said to be an entrance to a tunnel in St Mary's churchyard, disguised as a grave.
St Mary's Church became the central church on Hayling after flooding claimed the priory church, along with much of the southern edge of the Island in the 13th or 14th century. Interior West Window of St. Mary's dedicated to Lord Robert Thomas Brudenell-Bruce