| 
      
        | 
        Michelham PrioryUpper Dicker, Sussex | 
        
         
        Quick GuideSee below grid for details
 |  An Augustinian Priory 
founded 1229 and dissolved 1536. The Church 
and some of the buildings were demolished and the 
remains incorporated into a mansion. It's now in ownership of Sussex 
Archaeological Society. It was used as a base for Canadian troops 
during the winter of 1941-42 while they prepared for the Dieppe Raid. Later it 
was the East Sussex headquarters of the Auxiliary Territorial Service. It was 
given to the archaeological society in 1959. 
 
 N Edmonston  Boasting England’s longest medieval 
water-filled moat, Michelham Priory’s "Island of History" reflects its nearly 
800 year existence. The house dates back to 1229 when the Priory was founded and 
was lived in by Augustinian canons until the Dissolution in 1537. After this 
time, the Church of the Holy Trinity was destroyed and the house underwent 
various transformations including the addition of an extensive Tudor wing.
 
      
        | A 
visit to the priory will give you:  Details on it's history 
with the use of exhibits to chart it's inhabitants Gardens which takes on 
a variety of styles such as the Cloister Garden with its medieval design, the 
Physic Garden with medicinal plants, Kitchen Garden, Bog Garden and others and 
includes an annual Garden Sculpture Trail featuring works of local artists. The Wilderness Walk and 
the Moat Walk feature native trees and wild flowers where you can get to also 
see wildlife, including their resident swans and the moated island. A working watermill. 
Earliest documented evidence shows milling taking place since 1434. During the 
open season milling takes place every afternoon from 2pm until closing and you 
can buy bags of flour. So you get to see it working and volunteers will take you 
around the three floors. A working Forge 
        that occasionally is worked by a blacksmith demonstrating his art.
         The Rope Museum 
        celebrating an important feature of the industrial history of nearby Hailsham.  The Elizabethan 
        Great Barn – an agricultural storage barn dating from 1597/1601. The Iron Age 
        Centre – a replica Iron Age roundhouse and other replica buildings built 
        by east Sussex Archaeology and Museums Project (ESAMP). | 
        
         
          Dave 
        Windsor    
        
         
        
         Chris 
        Downer    |  There is a Gift Shop and a self-service 
restaurant, as well as picnic areas and a play area near the Iron Age Centre for 
children. 
    
     
     Click on 
smaller images to see larger verions 
 
      
        | 
  
    | 
    Location: Michelham Priory, Upper Dicker, 
    East Sussex |  
    | Grid Reference: 
    TQ5509 | Ceremonial County: 
    Sussex  |  
    | 
    Map Link:
    
    StreetMap 
    
     | Aerial photo:
 Google 
    Aerial Photo  |  
    | 
    Getting there: In Upper Dicker off the A22. 2 
    miles west of Hailsham and 8 miles northwest of Eastbourne. Follow Brown 
    tourist signs from the A22 and A27. |  
    | Access: Disabled access good for most of the 
    site. Upstairs floors of main house only accessible on foot via stairs, the 
    moated island is accessible over a small bridge, which is not suitable for 
    wheelchairs. |  
    | Website:
    www.sussexpast.co.uk/property/site.php?site_id=15  |  
    | Other Useful Websites: 
    
    Wiki  |  
    | Email: 
    adminmich@sussexpast.co.uk |  
    | Address: 
    Michelham Priory & Gardens,
    Upper Dicker, nr Hailsham, East Sussex |  
    | Postcode: 
    BN27 3QS | Telephone: 
    01323 844224 |  
    | 
    Opening Times: Tues-Sun 1st Mar-31st Oct. 
    Opens at 10.30am Closes Mar & Oct 4.30pm; Apr-July & Sept at 5pm; 
    Closed Monday's except Bank Holidays. 
    August 10.30am-5.30pm 7 days a week. |  
    | 
    Charges: Adult £7; Child (5-15) £3.80; 
    Seniors & Students £6; Disabled/carer £3.80 each; Family (2+2) £18.40
 |  
    | Nearby Locations: |  
    | Other Location Pages:
    Abbey Section  |  
    | 
    Notes:  Disabled toilet in the catering 
    complex next to the great barn. 
      
      
      |  | 
 |  
 This page is a Quick Guide, the idea of Quick 
Guides is to allow very basic information and linking forward information to be 
added to the system rather than having to wait until a full location guide has 
been developed. It should therefore be considered a development stage rather 
than a finished objective. Once more information is known the objective is to 
create either a Location or Featured Location page which has two grids and far 
more information. Please let us know any other information that we 
can add to the Grid(s) or page and any errors that you discover.  Before making a long trip to any location it is always 
wise to double check the current information, websites like magazines may be 
correct at the time the information is written, but things change and it is of 
course impossible to double check all entries on a regular basis. If you have 
any good photographs that you feel would improve the illustration of this page 
then please let us have copies. In referring to this page it is helpful if you 
quote both the Page Ref and Topic or Section references from the  Grid below. To print the 
planning grid select it then right click and print the selected area. Please submit information on locations you discover so 
that this system continues to grow.   |