place

Rowan Halt railway station

Disused railway stations in Brighton and HoveFormer Southern Railway (UK) stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1939Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1933
Use British English from August 2017
Rowan Halt by Rowan Avenue Elm Drive Aldrington
Rowan Halt by Rowan Avenue Elm Drive Aldrington

Rowan Halt railway station, was a railway station in Hove, in East Sussex, England which opened in 1933 and closed on 1 January 1939; the layout and curvature of Rowan Avenue indicates where the branch ran.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Rowan Halt railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Rowan Halt railway station
Rowan Avenue,

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Wikipedia: Rowan Halt railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 50.8399 ° E -0.1947 °
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Address

Rowan Halt

Rowan Avenue
BN3 7JG , Hangleton
England, United Kingdom
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linkWikiData (Q7371794)
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Rowan Halt by Rowan Avenue Elm Drive Aldrington
Rowan Halt by Rowan Avenue Elm Drive Aldrington
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Nearby Places

Hangleton
Hangleton

Hangleton is a residential suburb of Hove, part of the English city and coastal resort of Brighton and Hove. The area was developed in the 1930s after it was incorporated into the borough of Hove, but has ancient origins: its parish church was founded in the 11th century and retains 12th-century fabric, and the medieval manor house is Hove's oldest secular building. The village became depopulated in the medieval era and the church fell into ruins, and the population in the isolated hilltop parish only reached 100 in the early 20th century; but rapid 20th-century development resulted in more than 6,000 people living in Hangleton in 1951 and over 9,000 in 1961. By 2013 the population exceeded 14,000. The church and manor house (now a pub) are now surrounded by modern development. Following the parish's incorporation into the Borough of Hove in 1928, a mixture of council housing and lower-density private houses were built between the 1930s and the 1950s, along with facilities such as shopping parades, schools and more churches and pubs. Regular bus links were developed to other parts of Hove and Brighton, but a short-lived railway ran through the area had closed by the time residential development got underway. Local Governance. Hangleton currently has three local councillors. Dawn Barnett (Con) Nick Lewry (Con) and Tony Janio (Indp) On the 9th November 2021 former Withdean candidate Tim Hodges was selected by Brighton & Hove Conservatives as a candidate for the 2023 local elections.