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Westhumble

Westhumble
Above Westhumble - geograph.org.uk - 971512.jpg
Cattle resting on the grassy field above the ruined Westhumble Chapel
Chapel Hill in the North Downs behind<
Chapel Lane, Westhumble - geograph.org.uk - 971624.jpg
Chapel Lane
The main road through the village centre
Westhumble is located in Surrey
Westhumble
Westhumble
Westhumble shown within Surrey
Area 2.86 km2 (1.10 sq mi)
Population 649 (2011 census)
• Density 227/km2 (590/sq mi)
OS grid reference TQ1652
Civil parish
  • n/a
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Dorking
Postcode district RH5
Dialling code 01306
Police Surrey
Fire Surrey
Ambulance South East Coast
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Surrey
51°15′14″N 0°19′59″W / 51.254°N 0.333°W / 51.254; -0.333Coordinates: 51°15′14″N 0°19′59″W / 51.254°N 0.333°W / 51.254; -0.333

Westhumble /wɛstˈhʌmbəl/ is a clustered village centred 2 km (1.2 mi) north of Dorking in Surrey, England, in the parish of Mickleham but without a civil parish.

The area is served by Box Hill & Westhumble railway station.

At the start of a wide belt of country fields, meadows and National Trust landmarks, such as Box Hill and Polesden Lacey by its borders, Westhumble is a focus for ramblers, it was never a historic parish in its own right and remains a chapelry (and in old-fashioned language, a hamlet) of Mickleham, which is across the river, north-east. The Mole Gap Trail runs through the village, the North Downs Way runs perpendicular, crossing the Mole Gap Trail, less than 0.40 km (0.25 mi) to the south and the railway station is the southerly end point for the Thames Down Link from the river at Kingston upon Thames. Immediately starting from its western border on the River Mole are the main paths up the slopes of Box Hill.

The earliest archaeological evidence for human activity in the village is a large axe, typical of a "rough-out" axe produced during the Neolithic period, which was discovered in 1952 during building work in Burney Road. The discovery of a Flint Mine at East Horsley and flakes of flint found at Fetcham and Headley Heath of the same period, suggest that this part of the North Downs had been settled by the late Stone Age (10 000–3000 BC).


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