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Uckfield FM is a community radio station that supported Uckfield for its four-week festival in June and at Christmas each year. In July 2009 the station was granted a licence by Ofcom to become a full-time community radio station, broadcasting live to Uckfield and the surrounding areas from 1 July 2010. [54]
Picturehouse may refer to: . Movie theater; Picturehouse (company), a film distribution company in New York, active 2005–2008, which was relaunched in 2013 Picturehouse (band), an Irish pop band, active 1996–2004, which was reformed in 2013
The village was once served by a railway – Isfield station, on the Wealden Line, was open from 1858 to 1969, and linked the village with Brighton, Lewes, Uckfield, Eridge and Tunbridge Wells (and on to London). Only the Brighton–Lewes and Uckfield–Eridge sections remain open today; there have been several campaigns to reopen the line ...
Wisconsin Big Boy is open at on Main St in Sussex. Its hours are Tuesday through Saturday 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
In 2008–2009, he was commissioned to create a bronze statue of Jesus Christ to mark the 50th anniversary of the Our Lady Immaculate and St Philip Neri Catholic Church in Uckfield, East Sussex. The statue, which was installed on the front of the church in May 2009, depicts a very contemporary figure, wearing a shirt and loose trousers.
The County Ground, home of Sussex County Cricket Club; Duke of York's Picture House, the oldest continuously operating cinema in Britain; Embassy Court, a starkly modernist 1930s design adjacent to Regency Brunswick Terrace; was a prototype for a proposed redevelopment of the entire seafront. Was refurbished in the mid-2000s.
Nutley is a village in the Wealden District of East Sussex, England. It lies about 5 mi (8.0 km) north-west of Uckfield, the main road being the A22. Nutley, Fairwarp and Maresfield together form the Maresfield civil parish. The village is on the southern edge of Ashdown Forest which was a deer hunting reserve from the time of King Edward II.
The school was closed in July 1930, as a result of a new county school for boys being about to open at Lewes in September of the same year, and some boys transferred to the new school. [3] The last headmaster was C. R. McGregor Williams (1889–1954), who in 1931 became the first head of the new Chislehurst and Sidcup Grammar School .