Rudgwick

Rudgwick  is a village and civil parish in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England. The village is 6 mi west of Horsham on the north side of the A281 road. The parish's northern boundary forms part of the county boundary between Surrey and West Sussex.

The parish covers 6394 acre. The 2001 Census recorded 2,791 people living in 1,013 households, of whom 1,425 were economically active.

History
Historically Ridgewick was an alternative form of the toponym.

The Church of England parish church of the Holy Trinity has a 12th century Norman font of Sussex Marble. The belltower is early 13th century. The church was largely rebuilt in the 14th century, when the north aisle was added and probably the present chancel was built.

The parish has two 17th century farmhouses. Garlands, 1.5 mi south of the village, is early 17th century and Redhouse Farm 1 mi north of the village is late 17th century. Naldrett House, 1 mi south of the village, is an 18th century Georgian farmhouse of three bays and two storeys, built of brick with stone quoins.

Rudgwick had a Dissenters' chapel by 1848.

Rudgwick railway station on the Cranleigh Line was opened in 1865 and closed in 1965.