Cocking Causeway is a hamlet in the civil parish of Cocking, between Cocking and Midhurst in the Chichester district of West Sussex, England.

Description

Cocking Causeway is a linear development of houses and smallholdings alongside the A286 road.

History

The ill-defined area of Cocking Causeway between Midhurst and Cocking has been marked on maps since the early 19th century. In 1865 a large funeral procession assembled at Cocking Causeway for Richard Cobden, who had lived nearby at Dunford. He was buried at West Lavington church, whose parish at that time included the eastern part of the Causeway, whilst the western part fell into Cocking parish.

Amenities

Ecclesiastically, Cocking Causeway falls within Cocking with West Lavington Anglican parish.

The Greyhound is a freehouse pub with bars, dining areas and gardens.

Cocking Causeway is on the Serpent Trail, a 64-mile (103 km) footpath from Haslemere in Surrey to Petersfield in Hampshire.

Rail

The London Brighton and South Coast Railway line between Chichester and Midhurst ran along an embankment parallel to the Causeway. The line had opened in 1881, was closed to passengers in 1935 and was closed completely in 1953. The track bed remains. On 19 November 1951 a freight train hauled by LB&SCR C2X class locomotive no. 32522 was derailed between Cocking and Midhurst after part of the embankment was washed out as a result of a blocked culvert.

References

External links

Media related to Cocking Causeway at Wikimedia Commons


Causeway Coast Wanderung zur Giant’s Causeway Ochsenreiter on Tour

Die Causeway Coastal Route in Nordirland Küstenabenteuer pur!

Old Maps of Cocking Causeway, Sussex Francis Frith

Der Giant’s Causeway befindet sich an der nördlichen Küste des Countys

Causeway Coast Wanderung zur Giant’s Causeway Ochsenreiter on Tour