Findon, West Sussex

Findon is a village and civil parish in the Arun District of West Sussex, England, 4 miles (6.4 km) north of Worthing. The parish has an area of 6⅓ square miles and a population of 1,848 persons (2001 census).

Findon lies between two hills; Cissbury with its iron age hill fort to the east and Church Hill to the west. On both hills there are remains of stone age flint mines where shafts were sunk about 40 ft to reach the best seams of flint which were mined from radiating galleries. The village is now bypassed by the A24 as it crosses the South Downs: the bypass was constructed in 1938. A modern settlement to the south of the village, inside the boundary of the Borough of Worthing is called Findon Valley.

The parish church, dedicated to St John the Baptist, stands to the west of the village and the A24 road near the 18th century mansion Findon Place. The church is built of flint to an unusual design, the nave and north aisle having been given a single span roof with king-posts resting on the arcade, probably in the 15th century. The screen is a rare 13th century example, but heavily restored. There are five public houses, the Gun Inn, the Black Horse, the Village House, the Snooty Fox (part of the Findon Manor Hotel) and John Henry's four of which are located in High Street. The village has a small primary school, situated on School Hill, called Saint John the Baptist. It boasts many annual events, including a fireworks display and May Day celebrations.

The parish includes the hamlet of Nepcote on the east side of the village. Nepcote Green is the venue for the annual Findon sheep fair held in early September. Originally a charter fair dating from as early as 1261 many thousands of sheep were penned on the green for sale in earlier times. Wooden hurdles for pens were stored in the purpose built Wattle House on the green which also included living accommodation. Nowadays the fair is a sheep show and funfair.

The actress Nancy Price lived in a cottage called 'Arcana' in Heather Lane, on the Downs above Findon for many years.

The Monarch's Way long-distance footpath crosses the village, the only significant settlement on the route between Arundel and Bramber.

In May 2012, Transition Findon was established by two local residents of the village. Transition Findon aims to 'build community, creativity and can-do-ability in challenging times'. Transition is a non-political, grassroots approach to building community resilience, and is a response to the key 21st century challenges of resource depletion, climate change and economic crises.