Arundel Museum presents : Autumn Sussex Lecture Series with Chris Hare

Next: Wednesday, 8 October 2025

Runs until Wednesday, 29 October 2025 (See all dates)

Time
14:00 - 15:30
Venue
Arundel Museum, Arundel, BN18 9PA
Price
Tickets £8.50/£30 all four

A new afternoon lecture series on aspects of Sussex history from Wednesday 8th to 29th October

More Information (V2 Radio is not responsible for external websites)

The Wicked Trade: smugglers of Arundel and West Sussex, Wednesday 8th October

During the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, smuggling was endemic in Sussex; not just along the coast, but also further inland, where most of the contraband was stored. Arundel, being a port, and only a few miles from isolated beaches, popular with smugglers, such as Climping, was an ideal centre for the smuggling trade. Fights and skirmishes between smugglers and the authorities, be they Excisemen or Coastguards, were frequent and often bloody.

Stand and Deliver! A History of Highwaymen, including Jack Upperton, the Burpham Highwayman. Wednesday 15th October

Robbery on the King’s highway goes back to the earliest times, but the emergence of gangs of highway robbers or of the individual highwayman, on horse and well armed, dates back to the seventeenth century and the aftermath of the Civil War, when defeated royalist soldiers took to robbing wealthy puritans. This talk will include some Sussex highwaymen, including Burpham’s own Jack Upperton, whose criminal deeds are still remembered in local folklore today.

Charms, Cures, and Potions: keeping well in Old Sussex, Wednesday 22nd October.

In an era when most people could not afford to go the doctor, and when the skills of doctors and the potency of their medicines were very limited, most people relied on folk cures and remedies. Local cunning men and women could provide herbs, plants, and even animal cures for a range of maladies. There were rituals and charms for dealing with this threat too. Some of these ‘old wives tales’ probably did some good, others none at all, and some probably did more harm than good. Yet in times when death was eve-present to people of all ages, and few reached what we would today regard as old age, these folk practices and beliefs were central to people’s lives.

All change! How the coming on the railway transformed Sussex forever: seaside resorts, market gardening, tourism, and the dream of a rural idyll, Wednesday 29th October.

Hard as it is to believe today, before the coming of the railway to Sussex in the 1840s, this county was underpopulated and poor. Many emigrated, despairing that the good times would ever return and hoping for better things in a new land overseas. Yet, by the 1850s, the railway was transforming the fortunes of Sussex, employment opportunities were increasing, and with the new jobs came higher wages. Small, insignificant little villages like Worthing, Littlehampton, and Bognor, became bustling seaside resorts.
Tickets £8.50/£30 all four. Book via link at http://www.arundelmuseum.org

Venue

Arundel Museum
Mill Road
Arundel
BN18 9PA

More details for this venue

Dates

The event runs from 14:00 to 15:30 on the following dates.
Select a date to add this event to your calendar app.

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