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Round Hill

Impressive middle-class housing developed c1860s
Reproduced with permission from the Encyclopaedia of Brighton by Tim Carder, 1990
Photo:Demolition of Tower Mill, 1913: Tower Mill "minus the top" on March 28 1913. Known variously as Tower Mill, Round Hill Mill and Rose Hill Mill, it stood at the northern end of Belton Road and was built of brick by John Ingledew and John Lashmar in 1838. In 1880 it was purchased by Charles Cutress, founder of Forfars bakery, who installed a steam engine to drive the grindstone with the sails fastened. The mill still features on the Forfars bakery logo.
Photo:Roundhill Crescent
Photo:19 Roundhill Crescent
Photo:69-71 Roundhill Crescent
Photo:101 Roundhill Crescent
Photo:Belton Road
Photo:Tower Mill showing the shop of Charles Cuttress, founder of Forfars Bakery: date unknown but pre-1914
Photo:Cobbled front house at Lewes Road
Photo:Richmond Road
Photo:The Roundhill area
Photo:Roundhill Crescent
Photo:Roundhill Street

Please note that this text is an extract from a reference work written in 1990.  As a result, some of the content may not reflect recent research, changes and events.

Reaching a height of about 223 feet above sea-level, Round Hill overlooks the Level from the north and was ploughed up in the eighteenth century to form a large, arable open field. Some Regency-style houses were built in the 1820s at Rose Hill, but the next development did not occur until the 1850s when the villas of Round Hill Park (now nos.68-82 on the eastern side of Ditchling Road ) were erected. The rest of the area was principally developed from the 1860s with impressive middle-class housing at Richmond Road and Round Hill Crescent , with smaller dwellings in nearby streets. The Round Hill estate, between Upper Lewes and Lewes Roads , was developed from the 1860s to the 1880s, many of the houses being erected at the expense of Revd Arthur Wagner.
The curving terraces present an impressive townscape when viewed from across the Lewes Road valley, and the Round Hill area is now a conservation area which also includes the small terraces of Round Hill Road and Belton Road together with the villas of Round Hill Park. Round Hill Crescent itself has several impressive terraces on the north-western side, and nos.1-37, 69-71 and 101-113 are three-storey, listed houses with ironwork balconies, dating from the 1860s; no.101 was the Lewes Road Hospital for Women and Children in 1905-10 before moving to Ditchling Road as the Lady Chichester Hospital.
The northernmost end of Belton Road was the site of a windmill until 1913. Known as the Tower Mill, Round Hill Mill or Rose Hill Mill, it was a brick structure built by John Ingledew and John Lashmar in around 1838. In about 1880 it was purchased by Charles Cuttress, founder of Forfars bakery, and a steam-engine was installed to drive the wheels with the sails fastened.

Any numerical cross-references in the text above refer to resources in the Sources and Bibliography section of the Encyclopaedia of Brighton by Tim Carder.

This page was added on 02/02/2008.

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