The 'Hog's Back' is the name given to that part of the
North Downs in
Surrey between
Farnham, Surrey in the west and
Guildford in the east. Compared with the main part of the Downs to the east of it, it is a narrow elongated ridge, hence its name.
Jane Austen, in a letter to her sister Cassandra written on Monday 24th May 1813, writes from her brothers house in Sloane Street, " I never saw the Country from the Hogsback so advantageously." This suggests it was known as The Hogsback well before Jane Austen's time.The medieval name for the ridge was ''Guildown'' (recorded first in
1035 where it was the site of the abduction of
Prince Alfred of
Wessex by
Earl Godwin and then in the
Pipe Rolls for
1190 and onwards) but this name is no longer in use. However, the name Guildown is evoked by Guildown Road, a residential road which climbs the southern side of the ridge on the southwestern fringes of Guildford.
The Guild- element of Guildown is the same as that found in Guildford, meaning "gold". Various explanations have been suggested for the relationship between the names of Guildown and Guildford. Guildown may be an abbreviation of Guildford Down ("the Down by Guildford"). Guildford is the point where the
River Wey cuts through the Hog's Back. Alternatively, both Guildown and Guildford may derive independently from a gold-coloured feature; either the yellow flowers of the marsh marigold or the gold-coloured (sandy) soil of the hillside, Guildford translates literally as gold ford after the river golden coloured sandy soil at the Ford in the River Wey.
[1] [2].
The Hog's Back is raised quite dramatically over the surrounding countryside, reaching a height of 154 metres (505 feet) above sea level, and therefore offers exceptional views, although they are difficult to see from the busy road which runs along the Hog's Back (the
A31). The view to the north includes many towns and villages, including Ash and
Aldershot, but on a clear day the north facing views extend to London, as far as Canary Wharf, The Natwest Tower, The Gherkin, Wembley Arch and Heathrow Airport. The view to the south is unspoilt and has been designated an
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty as well as a
Site of Special Scientific Interest. These views extend to Hindhead and the
Devil's Punchbowl.
The road along the Hog's Back is ancient, since its raised position offered travellers a vantage point and also kept them above the thick ancient woodland of the valleys on either side. It was part of the ancient ridgeway which runs from Wiltshire down to the east coast of Kent. It was also part of the road from
London to
Winchester (as it still is). When the idea of the
Pilgrims' Way to
Canterbury was popularised in the nineteenth century, the old road on the southern slopes of the Hog's back, parallel with the ridgeway and running through Seale and Puttenham, was incorporated in its course. In order to avoid the A31, however, the Pilgrims' Way does not run along the top of the Hog's Back.
The Hog's Back stretch of the A31 is now a dual carriageway, but the two directions of the road are separated by a central area of trees, some of them very old. The original road ran along the stretch now occupied by the lanes running from
Guildford to
Farnham, i.e. from east to west. The other two lanes, running from west to east, which are a little below the high point occupied by the original carriageways, were added in the early 1970s.
On the north side of the Hog's Back near the turn off to the village of Seale formerly stood a mansion known as Poyle Hill Lodge. This was once one of the Admiralty semaphore stations because of its high vantage point. It was later converted into a hotel called the Hog's Back Hotel and now officially known as the
Ramada Farnham.
On the south side of the Hog's Back, a little to the east of Poyle Hill, another large mansion was built in
1873 called Great Down, attributed to
Robert Kerr. This was demolished in about 1950, but the parkland and other associated buildings, such as a lodge and stables, remain.
The
Hogs Back Brewery is an independent real ale brewery based in
Tongham, which is a village just below the Hog's Back.
Trivia
The Hog's Back is prominently mentioned in
★
Richard Thompson's song ''MGB-GT''
★ the
Freeman Wills Crofts detective novel ''The Hog's Back Mystery'' (1933)
[3]
★ ''
Brave New World'' by
Aldous Huxley
References
1. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names, E. Ekwall, , , , ,
2. A Dictionary of English Place Names, A. D. Mills, , , , ,
3. The Hog's Back Mystery, Freeman Wills Crofts, , , , ,