Cranleigh Common and the Jubilee Fountain

Welcome to Cranleigh

What's On
11 February 2012 10am - 12pm
Sayers Croft Trust - It's a Small World
15 February 2012
Sayers Croft Trust - Half Term Activities
19 February 2012 10am - 4pm
Sayers Croft Trust - Flowerpot Teepees
25 February 2012 8pm - 11pm
Kindred Spirit - Folk Rock Band
10 March 2012 9.30am - 12.30pm
Guildford & District RSPB Local Group - Bird Walk at Frensham Great Pond
This website is aimed at the residents of Cranleigh and anyone thinking of visiting or moving to the area. It provides a comprehensive directory of businesses in the area, information on the numerous clubs, societies and organisations Cranleigh has, plus a what's on guide covering a range of activities in and around the village.

There is also local news and links to travel and weather, plus specific information on the facilities within Cranleigh.

The navigation panel to the left allows you to find this information; click on the main subject you wish to view and choose from the list of releated subjects that will appear below. As you dig deeper into the website, you can use the "You are here:" links towards the top of the page to find your way back.

If you find the text too small you can adjust the size of it using the buttons towards the top right of the page. Instructions on how to do this are available in the Usability Statement.

A Brief History of Cranleigh

Cranleigh, the name derived from the cranes thought to have been prevalent at one time in the area, lies near the A281 between Guildford and Horsham. Despite having been deprived of a rail link in 1965, Cranleigh has prospered both as a satellite of Guildford, and as a service and light engineering centre in its own right. It is also a retail centre for the surrounding smaller villages.

The Anglican parish church of St Nicolas dates the first building on its site from around 1170, and the building was in its present form by the mid 14th century. The parish is in the Diocese of Guildford.

The village goes without a mention in the Domesday Book of 1085, although a population must have existed a century later large enough to warrant the building of the church. In common with other parts of the Weald, the forests supplied the timber which fuelled the ironworks which, apart from peasant agriculture, was the only place of employment.

Cranleigh is twinned with Vallendar, Germany and Semur-en-Auxois, France.

Every year the Cranleigh & South Eastern Agricultural Society hold the Cranleigh Show, which is a traditional agricultural show.
Map image produced from the Ordnance Survey Get-a-map service. Image reproduced with kind permission of Ordnance Survey and Ordnance Survey of Northern Ireland