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We build the website you need for the budget you set

Web design in Caterham

We have an office in Woldingham as a result we would be able provide a full and convenient service to the surounding area including Warlingham, Caterham, Oxted, Westerham, Biggin Hill and Whyteleafe. You would be welcome to visit our office or call and we can arrange to visit you. After discussing your needs we can give you a fixed price for the project and any other ancillary services such as hosting, maintenance and support.

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some interesting bits about woldingham

The town lies within the Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Tandridge hundred.

Woldingham is home to one of the smallest churches in the country - St. Agatha's (it only seats 40 but it served as Parish Church of Woldingham until 1934 and is still in regular use). It was first mentioned in 1270, and it is the county’s smallest church with dimensions of 30 ft 3 in by 20 ft 2 in (9.2 by 6.1 m), and at 797 ft (243 m) above sea level is the third highest old parish church in Surrey. The Croydon and East Grinstead line was opened in 1884 and a long tunnel was built to take it under the village. There is a small parade of shops (known as “The Crescent”) in the centre of the village next to St Paul's Church, which was constructed in 1933 and there is an impressive view over Oxted and The Weald from the edge of the chalk pits. There is a train station, tennis courts as well as two golf clubs (Woldingham and North Downs). Woldingham Girls School is located in the town, providing education for girls between the ages of 11 and 18.

From the nearby areas of high ground impressive views can be enjoyed - and from some places one can see as far as the Chilterns. The Marden Estate once owned much of the area and Marden Park (now Woldingham School) still stands in extensive grounds in the valley alongside the railway line.

The Garden Village is a former Army Camp. The bungalow called "Funny Neuk" was home to the Czechoslovak military intelligence radio station from 1940 to 1942, and was used for the communications for the assassination of Reinhard Heydrich. In 1942 the radio station later moved to Hockliffe, near Dunstable in Bedfordshire.

On Friday 25th May 1951, Donald Duart Maclean, Soviet spy and then resident of nearby Tatsfield, is said to have left from Woldingham station on the night of his escape to the coast and defection to Russia.

Thanks to wikipedia.com for the above information

 

 

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