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Sinah, Hayling Island

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Human settlement in England
Sinah
Sinah Common golf course
Sinah is located in HampshireSinahSinahLocation within Hampshire
OS grid referenceSZ6948099411
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townHAYLING ISLAND
Postcode districtPO11
Dialling code023
PoliceHampshire and Isle of Wight
FireHampshire and Isle of Wight
AmbulanceSouth Central
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Hampshire
50°47′24″N 1°00′56″W / 50.790117°N 1.015652°W / 50.790117; -1.015652

Sinah is the area at the southwestern end of Hayling Island. It incorporates the Ferrypoint, Sinah Beach, The Kench, Sinah Warren, and Sinah Common. It is bounded to the east by West Town. Langstone Harbour and its entrance form the north and west borders, and to the south is Hayling Bay.

History

Monks had settled in the Sinah Warren by the 15th century. Fishermen's huts were present in the shelter of the Kench by the 19th century. The Norkfolk Inn, precursor to the Ferry Boat Inn, was created to serve the needs of the fishermen. Around 1900 Sandeman set out to extend a road out to the ferrypoint for the Hayling Island Steamboat enterprise. While that enterprise failed the road did assist subsequent development of the Hayland Island Ferry, golf course, health farm and the war effort for the Second World War. In recent years land use of Sinah has stabilised with various areas being designated nature reserves.

The Ferry Point

The Ferry Point is at the westernmost tip of Hayling Island in Hampshire, England, overlooking the fast tides of Langstone Harbour entrance. It was previously known as Sinah Point.

The current at the Ferry Point is extremely treacherous and has claimed many lives over the years.

There is a small cluster of houses and a pub, the "Ferry Boat Inn" (originally the Duke of Norfolk). Continuing directly past the put leads to a slipway directly into the water. A fork to the left leads past the base of the Langstone Harbour Master to the jetty for the passenger ferry to Eastney in Portsmouth.

The Hayling Island golf course backs on to the point and the Kench (a small bay) lies just eastward. A single lane leads east toward the rest of the island. There are good views north to Portsdown Hill and Butser Hill.

Sinah Beach

Beach at Sinah

Sinah Beach extends from the Ferry Boat Inn at the western end of Hayling Island.

Sinah Warren

Sinah Warren is the area to north of Ferry Road where the Holiday Camp is located. Monks initially had a settlement here by the 15th century, and it is jokingly put this was the first health farm on the site. The 16th century saw the monks displaced and the rights sold to the Duke of Norfolk. It may have been sold to William Padwick, Esq. in 1825. Sold to August Arbuthnot in the 1930s he built the Sinah Warren Residence and planted various species of plants and trees from his worldwide travels and established one of the first Factory Farms, initially with Angora Rabbits then with Poultry to help alleviate the food shortage in the Second World War. The Royal Navy then took over Sinah Warren until the 1950s when it was sold and developed into the current holiday camp.

Sinah Common

World War II pillbox

Sinah Common is the area to the south of Ferry Road incorporating the Golf course. The area is now a Site of Special Scientific Interest. The area of water in front of the clubhouse is seemingly nowadays referred to as Sinah Lake although an area within Langstone Harbour that forms a lake at low tide is also known as Sinah Lake. Elements of World War 2 gun batteries and pill boxes are well preserved in this area.

The Kench

The Kench is a small natural inlet to the north of Ferry Road. Proposals to change this into a commercial port or marina foundered or were thwarted, and the area is now a designated nature reserve with a handful of houseboats permitted.

Landmarks and places of interest

Ferry Boat Inn

The inn was known previously by various titles: as the "Norfolk Inn", "Norfolk Lodge (Inn)", "Hayling Ferry Tavern", and the "Duke of Norfolk". The original Norfolk Inn was present before 1776, built to the east of The Kench on the north side of the ferry point. The replacement building at the ferry point, south of Ferry Road, was built from the wreck of HMS Impregnable which sunk in 1799. The current building to the north of ferry was originally where the boathouse stood. Members of the Spraggs family were licensees and owners from at least 1900 until after the mid-twentieth century and were responsible for the "Ferry" rebranding. The Spraggs were also responsible for operation of Hayling Ferry and there was an undoubtedly synergy between the two enterprises. The establishment is no longer a freehouse, having been sold to Stonegate Pub Company, and is variously branded "Ferryboat" both with and without a space.

Other places of interest

Transport

This section needs to be updated. The reason given is: the bus service or lack thereof. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (January 2019)

The Hayling Ferry links to Portsmouth from the Ferry Point, and has been running for more than 200 years. In March 2015, the service shut down when the Hayling Island Ferry company went into administration after safety problems and repeated fines for carrying too many passengers at once. Service resumed in August 2016 after a fundraising effort which included a £5,000 donation from Richard Branson.

Bus services to the ferry ceased in 2004. Efforts to re-instate the service have taken place at various times.

Back in 2018 Havant Borough Council realised a long-held ambition for a connecting bus, coming up with £20,000 to fund a six-month trial of a Monday to Friday peak hour bus (numbered 149 – for nostalgic reasons – operated by Portsmouth City Coaches) to perform a circuit of Hayling Island before connecting to the ferry, while on the other side First Solent extended their route 15 from its Eastney terminus in Fort Cumberland Road about half a mile on to the turning circle close to the ferry's landing stage.

References

  1. ^ Walker, Karen (1 April 2012). "A history of Hayling Island holiday camps". University of the 3rd age. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  2. ^ Pullen, Dorothy (2007). "A brief history of The Kench". University of the 3rd age. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  3. "Langstone Harbour Management Plan" (PDF). Langstone Harbour Board. 1997. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  4. "HAYLING ISLAND Life and Times 1914-1919" (PDF). University of the 3rd Age. 2014. p. 5. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  5. Brown, Ron (1984). When It Was Just Fields - The Story of Hayling Island. milestone. p. 37. ISBN 0903852179.
  6. "Contact Langstone Harbour". Langstone Harbour Board. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  7. "Flora & Fauna". Hayling Golf Club. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  8. "Sinah Common HAA Site". Pillbox Study Group. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  9. "The Kench". The Hayling Site. Retrieved 10 April 2017.
  10. Rogers, Peter (2000). "The Norfolk Inn"". The Book of Hayling Island and Langstone. Halgrove. ISBN 1841140783.
  11. "Havant Brewster Sessions". Portsmouth Evening News. 31 August 1901. p. 6.
  12. "Harbour fees cut to aid Hayling Ferry service". 8 September 2018. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
  13. "Hayling Island's only ferry stops crossings". 31 March 2015. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
  14. "Hayling Island ferry revived after fundraising effort". 3 August 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
  15. ^ "Buses are back to the Hayling Ferry". BusAndTrainUser. 31 August 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2024.
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