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Whiteley Village


Whiteley Village, in Hersham, Surrey, England, is a retirement village, much designed architecturally by Arts and Crafts movement-influenced architect Reginald Blomfield. It is owned by the Whiteley Homes charitable trust and is on land which was once part of Walton Firs and Walton Heath, before the parish of Hersham was created in the 19th century.

Whiteley Village formed as the result of a bequest of £1,000,000 realised in 1907 upon the death of William Whiteley (equivalent to £95,404,290 in 2015). The village is owned and administered by the Whiteley Homes Trust, a charity registered in the UK, and provides almshouses for older people of limited financial means. The village also contains an extra-care facility (51 self-contained flats with domiciliary care) and a 100-bed nursing and residential care home. The land on which the community sits is at on the gravel-rich lower slopes of the much higher bank of the River Mole, Surrey, 10–15 metres above the level of the tributary. Its surrounding buffer land has remained the most wooded part of its two historic parishes, and until the 19th century was wholly part of Walton Firs and Walton Heath in Walton on Thames. Hersham is one of the most recently created chapelries and villages in Surrey, created in 1851 from the southern part of Walton-on Thames. It is, roughly, the part of the original parish south of the South Western Main Line. Its first Church of England place of worship, a chapel of ease was built of yellow brick in Anglo-Norman style in 1839.

In addition to the care and housing provided, a major feature of Whiteley Village is that it consists of more than one hundred listed buildings, which together form an important collection of Arts and Crafts movement as it applies to a style of architecture. Much of the design work here was by architect Reginald Blomfield. This movement was particularly a main style in and around the neighbouring area to the west which is partly in the parish of Weybridge, Saint George's Hill where W.G. Tarrant was a major designer-builder and saw its early evolution in many Surrey examples of Lutyens's work. It remains a style occasionally used where building costs allow it to be implemented without forsaking its original decorative and traditional core principles.


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