Routes EnglandEpsom
Nonsuch Park Circular Route

Epsom, England

Nonsuch Park Circular Route

Length6.8 mi
Elev. Gain344.4 ft
Est. Steps16000

Park

Created by Gary
Introduction
Nonsuch Park Circular Route is a 6.8 mile (16,000-step) route located near Epsom, England. This route has an elevation gain of about 344.4 ft and is rated as medium. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.

Nonsuch Park

Park
Nonsuch Park is a public park between Stoneleigh, North Cheam, Cheam, and Ewell on the boundaries of the borough of Epsom and Ewell in Surrey, England and the London Borough of Sutton. It is the last surviving part of the Little Park of Nonsuch, a deer hunting park established by Henry VIII of England surrounding the former Nonsuch Palace.

Nonsuch Palace

Historical
Nonsuch Palace was a Tudor royal palace, built by Henry VIII in Surrey, England; it stood from 1538 to 1682–83. Its site lies in what is now Nonsuch Park on the boundaries of the borough of Epsom and Ewell in Surrey and the London Borough of Sutton.

Ewell

Place
Ewell ( (listen) YOO-əl, inf. YOOL) is a suburban area in the borough of Epsom and Ewell in Surrey with a largely commercial village centre. Apart from this it has named neighbourhoods: West Ewell, Ewell Court, East Ewell, Ewell Grove, and Ewell Downs. One rural locality on the slopes of the North Downs is also a neighbourhood, North Looe.

Cuddington, Surrey

Place
Cuddington was a village in Surrey which was demolished to make way for Henry VIII's Nonsuch Palace near Cheam. Cuddington lay within the Copthorne hundred, an administrative division devised by the Saxons. Within the current Nonsuch Park, a little to the south of where the palace once stood, there remains a small rise of land to mark the northern side of the old Cuddington Parish church.

A232 road

Place
The A232 is a road running east–west in two modern counties: across far south London and 3 miles into Surrey. It connects the A24 in Ewell with the A224 Orpington bypass (in other directions).Between Croydon and Ewell the road runs close to a northern part of the Sutton & Mole Valley Lines, impliedly from London (in this case connecting to two London terminals).

Bugby Chapel

Place
Bugby Chapel is an 18th-century former chapel in the centre of Epsom, a suburban town in Surrey, England. Known by this name (or Bugby's Chapel) in reference to its Calvinistic founder William Bugby, it was also known as East Street Chapel and later, as it passed into the ownership of different religious groups, as Salem Unitarian Chapel, Salem Baptist Chapel and the Epsom and District Synagogue.

Cheam Cricket Club Ground

Place
Cheam Cricket Club Ground is a cricket ground in Cheam, London (formerly Surrey). The first recorded match on the ground was in 1940, when Cheam played London Counties.More recently, the ground has held Surrey Second XI matches in the Second XI Championship and the Second XI Trophy.In 1968, the ground held a game for John Edrich against the International Cavaliers.

Nonsuch Mansion

Place
Nonsuch Mansion is an historic house located within Nonsuch Park on the border of Greater London and north Surrey, England. It is on the boundaries of the borough of Epsom and Ewell and the London Borough of Sutton. It has been listed Grade II* on the National Heritage List for England since April 1954.

St Mary's Church, Ewell

Place
The Anglican Church of St Mary the Virgin, Ewell is the civic church of the borough of Epsom and Ewell in the county of Surrey in South East England.

Ewell Castle School

Place
Ewell Castle School is a 3–18 mixed, independent day school and sixth form in Ewell, Epsom, Surrey, England. It was founded in 1926 by Herbert Budgell as a boarding school and became fully mixed in September 2015.. It consists of the Main House, Glyn House and Chessington Lodge.The school was last inspected in 2015.
Route Details

Length

6.8 mi

Elev. Gain

344.4 ft

Est. Steps

16000
Created by
Gary
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