SearchCurrently displaying: 12 results. Clear the search. You can also search our Questions and Answers.You've searched for:Categories: "Tours" xArea: "Patcham" x Search term Filter by Categories Places (10)Churches & places of worship (1)All Saints Church, Patcham (1)Farms (2)Long Barn, Patcham (1)Patcham Court Farm (1)Streets (7)Church Hill, Patcham (3)Ladies Mile Estate (2)Mackie Estate (1)Old London Road (1) Sort by: RelevanceTitleOldestNewest 1930s development These historic photographs were taken in 1930 when the development of modern Patcham was starting. This photograph shows the old ... Looking west from the public library Ladies’ Mile Road connects Old Patcham with its newer estates. The first photograph was taken looking west from the Public Library ... View of the estate and the downs Prominent in the middle distance of the first photograph, is the playing fields of Warmdene School, with the Mackie Estate beyond it ... Tillings bus at the fountain A flashback fifty years to the time of the First World War, and the Tilling’s bus waiting at Patcham Fountain ... View across the main A23 The view across the main A23 London Road towards Patcham Fountain, and looking up the hill towards the church, the ... Once again a village street The Old London Road is now once again a village street. The road sign at the right of the photograph ... Examples of early flint work Over elaborate Victorian restoration All Saints Parish Church was originally Norman but suffered from over-elaborate restoration at the hands of the Victorians. The exterior ... One of the longest in Sussex The Long Barn, which lies to the north of the churchyard, is one of the longest in Sussex. Although no ... Beef and dairy herds Patcham Court Farm had a substantial herd of beef cattle, some of which are seen here grazing on a downland pasture. Part ... 1930s house prices Built around the old village The nucleus of modern Patcham is the village of yesteryear; centred around Church Hill and Old ... The Princess and Patcham In 1901, the photographs shown here were published in a posh magazine called The Lady’s Realm, a British women’s magazine ...