Lancing
Lancing is a village and civil parish in the Adur district
of West Sussex, England, on the western edge of the
Adur Valley. It lies on the coastal plain between Sompting
to the west, Shoreham-by-Sea to the east and the parish
of Coombes to the north. It is sometimes credited as
being the largest village in England, covering an area
of 3.9 miles² (892.4ha). It is a mix of coastal urban
dwelling and rural chalk downland landscape. The oldest
non-religious buildings date to around 1500 CE. The
2002 population was around 19,000. The village was a
popular seaside resort in the mid-19th century, gaining
favour from the gentry of the time for its secluded
atmosphere. Lancing today no longer has a notable tourist
trade although there are a number of small guest houses,
most of them on the A259 coast road. College Chapel
College Chapel There is a shingle beach with good stretches
of clean sand at low water. South of the coast road
is Widewater, an internationally rare brackish lagoon.
Immediately north of the developed area is Lancing Ring,
a Nature Reserve, part of the designated Sussex Downs
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and the proposed
South Downs National Park. To the north of that is farmed
agricultural downland connected to Lancing College Farm.
On its eastern side is Shoreham Airport, the world's
oldest continually-operational airport which also served
as an RAF base during World War II. Much of the land
now covered with housing was formerly taken by a number
of family-run market gardening businesses growing fruit
or flowers for the Brighton Market or Covent Garden
in London. Sparks Nursery was growing fruit such as
tomatoes and Young's produced carnations. Chrysanthemums
were grown by Frank Lisher on his land south of The
Finches, the house he built. The Nash family were fruit
growers, producing grapes under huge glass cloches that
could be rolled into place on a rail track. 'Mr Marshall's
Nursery' was also notable.
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