Parking
The route starts in the Railway car park, on the opposite side of the tracks
from the station and follows the track bed of the old railway. The surface
is reasonably solid and flat but can be muddy in wet weather with some patches
of clay.
About half way between East Grinstead and Crawley Down you can glimpse Gulledge Farm House to the North, this is a 17th Century building, more details here
When Crawley Down is reached after about 2 1/2 miles the old railway track
has been built on and you have to follow the sign posted route through a
housing estate. Once past a parade of shops, you regain the railway again
and pass under the B2028. The track then continues for almost 2 miles, until
just before
Old Rowfant Station
Rowfant station and goods yard, where once again, you have to divert off the track bed, due to an industrial development in the old railway yard. At the site of the old railway crossing, the old station building and an old crossing keeper's house remain as a reminder of the architecture once common along railways. Some old photos came be found here. The area to the South of the track here was until recently a place of Mystery with a high 'military style' fence. The local Paper, The East Grinstead Courier, published an article in June 2004 giving details of the land within the fence:-
It was Air Force Depot 227 and was requisitioned at the outbreak of the 2nd World War as a site for a fuel storage depot with huge tanks being sunk into the ground. During the course of the war fuel was distributed from it to a number of airfields including Dunsfold,Biggin Hill, Kenley, Gatwick. It has recently been sold and is now used by a construction company who have renovated some of the buildings and put them back into use.
The track now runs straight for about a mile, until the Turners Hill to Worth road is reached at Compasses Crossing another old level crossing, here the Worth Way leaves the line of the railway. You have to turn left along the road for about 150m and then right along a bridle way. Eventually you pass a farm and come to a bridge over the M23 and into Worth by a small Saxon church.
By the lane to Worth Church
Here the Worth way becomes entwined with the urban sprawl of Crawley.
Sustrans have developed this route as part of their millennium project
Further details of the Worth Way can be obtained from the West Sussex County
Council publication 'Worth Way Route Guide' available from local libraries
or from the West Sussex County Council Web site
Hunter Davies, in his book `A Walk Along the Tracks' published by Dent has
chapter on this route. He walked from Crawley to East Grinstead. He quotes
this rhyme:
When Dr Beeching took his axe
And gave BR those mighty wacks
A wondrous gift came free of tax
For all those who love to walk the tracks,
Home | Updated ... 12/09/2007 |