Waverley BC Borough Council sign outside municipal offices, in Godalming town centre, The Burys, Surrey, England, UK , GU7 1HP

Waverley BC Borough Council sign outside municipal offices, in Godalming town centre, The Burys, Surrey, England, UK , GU7 1HP Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Tony Smith / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

2PG60W3

File size:

47.8 MB (2.3 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

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Dimensions:

5232 x 3192 px | 44.3 x 27 cm | 17.4 x 10.6 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

14 March 2023

Location:

The Burys, Godalming, Surrey, England, UK , GU7 1HP

More information:

The Borough of Waverley is a local government district with borough status in Surrey, England. The borough's headquarters are in the town of Godalming; other notable settlements are the towns of Farnham and Haslemere and the large village of Cranleigh. At the 2021 Census, the population of the borough was 128, 200. Waverley borders the borough of Guildford to the north, the Mole Valley district to the east, the Horsham and Chichester districts of West Sussex to the south, and the East Hampshire and Hart districts and the borough of Rushmoor in Hampshire to the west and northwest. The borough is named after Waverley Abbey, near Farnham, the earliest Cistercian monastery in Britain. Blackheath Common, in the north of the borough, is a Site of Special Scientific Interest. Waverley is a Wealden borough, bounded to the north by the Hog's Back section of the North Downs and by the Greensand Ridge. It has the most green space in absolute terms in Surrey at 293.1 km2 (113 sq. mi.) according to the central government-compiled Generalised Land Use database of January 2005, approximately half of which is woodland. Much of the west of the borough echoes former ownership by the abbey, such as Waverley Cricket Club and the Waverley Arms pubs in Farnham and elsewhere. Equally echoed are the tens of square miles held under Farnham holding of the Bishop of Winchester which took in the western parishes of Frensham and Churt as well as much of Farnham parish since the early 12th century when one such Bishop, Henry of Winchester and of Blois established Farnham Castle as the See's episcopal home but which is today the borough's main surviving castle and a museum to the period.