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The Port of Newhaven is a port and associated docks complex located within Newhaven, East Sussex, England, situated at the mouth of the River Ouse. International ferries run to the French port of Dieppe, Seine-Maritime , a distance of 75.5 miles (122 km). [ 1 ]
Castle Hill, Newhaven is a 16.4-hectare (41-acre) Local Nature Reserve in Newhaven in East Sussex. It is owned and managed by Lewes District Council. [1] [2] It is part of Brighton to Newhaven Cliffs Site of Special Scientific Interest [3] and Geological Conservation Review site. [4]
Newhaven is a port town in the Lewes district of East Sussex, England, lying at the mouth of the River Ouse.. The town developed during the Middle Ages as the nearby port of Seaford began drying up, forcing a new port to be established.
Class 377 "Electrostars" are used on the line to transport passengers to Lewes and Brighton. The normal off peak train service on the line is two trains per hour between Brighton and Seaford calling at London Road, Moulsecoomb, Falmer, Lewes, Southease (1tph only), Newhaven Town, Newhaven Harbour (1 tph only), Bishopstone and Seaford. [5]
313213 at Newhaven Town with a Southern service bound for Brighton. Newhaven Town railway station is the main station serving Newhaven, East Sussex, England, the other being Newhaven Harbour. A third station, Newhaven Marine, formally closed in October 2020, [1] but had not had a train service since 2006.
Brighton to Newhaven Cliffs is a 165.4-hectare (409-acre) biological and geological Site of Special Scientific Interest and Geological Conservation Review site, [2] which stretches along the coast between Brighton and Newhaven in East Sussex. [1] [3] An area of 16.4 hectares (41 acres) is the Castle Hill, Newhaven Local Nature Reserve [4]
Brighton (/ ˈ b r aɪ t ən / BRY-tən) is a seaside resort in the city of Brighton and Hove, East Sussex, England, 47 miles (76 km) south of London. [1] Archaeological evidence of settlement in the area dates back to the Bronze Age, Roman and Anglo-Saxon periods.
The Ouse (/ uː z / OOZ) is a 35 miles (56 kilometres) long river [1] in the English counties of West and East Sussex. It rises near Lower Beeding in West Sussex, and flows eastwards and then southwards to reach the sea at Newhaven. It skirts Haywards Heath and passes through Lewes.