Welcome to Visit Merstham Places
The Walkfo guide to things to do & explore in Merstham


Visit Merstham PlacesVisit Merstham places using Walkfo for free guided tours of the best Merstham places to visit. A unique way to experience Merstham’s places, Walkfo allows you to explore Merstham as you would a museum or art gallery with audio guides.

Visiting Merstham Walkfo Preview
Merstham is a town in the borough of Reigate and Banstead in Surrey. It is north of Redhill and is contiguous with it. Part of the North Downs Way runs along the northern boundary of the town. When you visit Merstham, Walkfo brings Merstham places to life as you travel by foot, bike, bus or car with a mobile phone & headphones.

  

Merstham Places Overview: History, Culture & Facts about Merstham


Visit Merstham – Walkfo’s stats for the places to visit

With 27 audio plaques & Merstham places for you to explore in the Merstham area, Walkfo is the world’s largest heritage & history digital plaque provider. The AI continually learns & refines facts about the best Merstham places to visit from travel & tourism authorities (like Wikipedia), converting history into an interactive audio experience.

Merstham history


Merstham History photo

The area has been settled since pre-Roman times. The village lay within the Reigate hundred, an Anglo-Saxon administrative division. Its name was recorded in 947 as Mearsætham, which seems to be Anglo-Saxon Mearþ-sǣt-hām = “Homestead near a trap set for martens or weasels”. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle for 851 states that a Viking army ‘went south over the Thames into Surrey; and King Aethelwulf and his son Aethelbald with the West Saxon army fought against them at Aclea, and there made the greatest slaughter of a heathen raiding-army that we have heard tell of up to the present day, and there took the victory.’ According to Stenton, the name Aclea nearly always appears in modern times as ‘Oakley’. There is an Oakley in Merstham close to ‘Old Way’ prehistoric trackway. There is also a Battlebridge Lane in Merstham. The identification of the battle of Aclea with the site at Oakley in Merstham rather than Ockley in Surrey was in an article published in the Surrey Archaeological Collection for 1912. Merstham appears in Domesday Book of 1086 as Merstan. It was held by Archbishop Lanfranc of Canterbury. Its domesday assets were: 5 hides; 1 church, 1 mill worth 2s 6d, 10 ploughs, 8 acres (3.2 ha) of meadow, woodland and herbage worth 41 hogs. It rendered £12. The area has long been known for its quarries, with the first mines at Merstham recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086, and ‘Reigate stone’ quarried there used to build parts of Westminster Abbey, Windsor Castle and Henry VIII’s Nonsuch Palace. It was to serve the quarries that the village became the terminus of the Croydon, Merstham and Godstone Railway, an extension of the horse-drawn Surrey Iron Railway of 1803, the world’s first public railway, albeit only for goods. A small section of the railway is on display at the entrance to Quality Street, Old Merstham. Unfortunately, this section has now been taken. The use of dynamite was first publicly demonstrated by Alfred Nobel in Price’s Grey-lime Stone chalk quarry in July 1868. The site is now partly covered by the route of the M23 motorway just east of where it passes under the Shepherd’s Hill bridge. The original parish church, St Katharine’s, dates from around 1220; it replaced an earlier church built c. 1100, although it is believed there has been a church of some form on the site since c. 675 AD. Merstham’s conservation area is centred on its High Street which winds in the village centre to the northwest, forms part of the A23 road and includes many listed buildings; the street with the greatest number, Quality Street, arcs off at a tangent from this curve of the High Street. This was named after J.M. Barrie’s play of the same name, in honour of two of the actors in the play, Ellaline Terriss and Seymour Hicks, who for a time lived in the Old Forge at the end of the street. 1 High Street partly dates to the 17th century. The earlier of the two Merstham railway tunnels was the scene of a murder on 24 September 1905. The mutilated body of Mary Sophia Money was found in the tunnel and was first thought to be a case of suicide. On inspection, however, a scarf was found in the victim’s throat, and marks on the tunnel wall showed that she had been thrown from a moving train. The crime was never solved, but suspicion rested on her brother, Robert Money. In 1943 a petroleum pipeline was constructed from the Thames through to Dungeness (designated the T/D pipeline) to supply fuel to the PLUTO cross-channel pipelines that were to run from Dungeness to Boulogne, code named DUMBO. A section of the T/D pipeline ran through Merstham and the T/D was part of the then secret government pipeline network later known as the Government Pipeline and Storage System (GPSS). After World War II, the Merstham Estate was gradually built over a period spanning to the early 1970s. The old village thus became generally known as Old Merstham, and is occasionally known as Top Merstham. Rockshaw Road, on the hilltop above the conservation area of Old Merstham, was developed at the very end of the 19th century, and between the World Wars was home to many nationally notable people, among them senior Army and Navy figures, financiers and politicians. At the junction of Battlebridge Lane and Nutfield Road is All Saints’ church, the original building of which was destroyed in World War II. Volunteers from the Canadian Army worked to build a temporary church for the village, which became known as Canada Hall and is used as a village hall and weekly meeting hall for some Merstham branches of the Girl Guides.

Historic estates

Merstham Parish contains various historic estates including Withyshaw, Withysaw and Withyyshaw. The parish was the seat of a junior branch of the Passmore family, which originated before the 15th century at Passmore Hayes near Tiverton.

Why visit Merstham with Walkfo Travel Guide App?


Visit Merstham PlacesYou can visit Merstham places with Walkfo Merstham to hear history at Merstham’s places whilst walking around using the free digital tour app. Walkfo Merstham has 27 places to visit in our interactive Merstham map, with amazing history, culture & travel facts you can explore the same way you would at a museum or art gallery with information audio headset. With Walkfo, you can travel by foot, bike or bus throughout Merstham, being in the moment, without digital distraction or limits to a specific walking route. Our historic audio walks, National Trust interactive audio experiences, digital tour guides for English Heritage locations are available at Merstham places, with a AI tour guide to help you get the best from a visit to Merstham & the surrounding areas.

“Curated content for millions of locations across the UK, with 27 audio facts unique to Merstham places in an interactive Merstham map you can explore.”

Walkfo: Visit Merstham Places Map
27 tourist, history, culture & geography spots


 

  Merstham historic spots

  Merstham tourist destinations

  Merstham plaques

  Merstham geographic features

Walkfo Merstham tourism map key: places to see & visit like National Trust sites, Blue Plaques, English Heritage locations & top tourist destinations in Merstham

  

Best Merstham places to visit


Merstham has places to explore by foot, bike or bus. Below are a selection of the varied Merstham’s destinations you can visit with additional content available at the Walkfo Merstham’s information audio spots:

Merstham photo SES Water
SES Water is the UK water supply company to its designated area of east Surrey, West Sussex, west Kent and south London. An area of 322 square miles (830 km) extends from Morden and South Croydon in the north to Gatwick Airport in the south, and from Cobham and Dorking in the west to Edenbridge and Bough Beech in the east.
Merstham photo Wray Common Mill, Reigate
Wray Common Mill is a grade II* listed tower mill at Reigate, Surrey, England. It has been converted to residential use.
Merstham photo London Defence Positions
The London Defence Positions were a late 19th century scheme of earthwork fortifications in the south-east of England. Designed to protect London from foreign invasion landing on the south coast. The positions were a carefully surveyed contingency plan for a line of entrenchments.
Merstham photo Church of St Peter and St Paul, Chaldon
The building was begun before 1086 and is Grade I listed. It is notable for containing a large mural depicting images of the Last Judgement and purgatory.

Visit Merstham plaques


Merstham Plaques 1
plaques
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Merstham has 1 physical plaques in tourist plaque schemes for you to explore via Walkfo Merstham plaques audio map when visiting. Plaques like National Heritage’s “Blue Plaques” provide visual geo-markers to highlight points-of-interest at the places where they happened – and Walkfo’s AI has researched additional, deeper content when you visit Merstham using the app. Experience the history of a location when Walkfo local tourist guide app triggers audio close to each Merstham plaque. Explore Plaques & History has a complete list of Hartlepool’s plaques & Hartlepool history plaque map.