Fulking sits along the
spring line at the Downs foot where the fertile band of
Upper Greensand and
Grey Chalk attracted early farmers to build a string of hamlets and villages including Fulking itself, Tottington, Truleigh, Edburton, Perching, Poynings and Newtimber. As a consequence of its
history, Fulking has no
parish church of its own. Ecclesiastically, it remains part of the parish of Edburton, and uses
St Andrew's church, Edburton, as its parish church. The church is part of the Downland
Benefice, together with the churches in
Poynings,
Newtimber and
Pyecombe. Fulking's old houses () are a plum pudding of different types: one or two are made of local greensand, some are timber framed (like the Shepherd and Dog pub, under its
stucco), some flint, some brick, one or two thatched, even one with a corrugated iron extension. The house are mainly expensive, but not exclusively and it has some council-built homes. Since the Norman conquest one thousand years ago, the Crown Estate owned the Poynings Estate which covered around 4000 acres including many farms in the Weald and on the Downs at Fulking,
Poynings and
Pyecombe. It was all sold between 1980 and 1984 to tenant farmers, but some have noted that in public ownership, the estate could have been at the heart of the new
South Downs National Park driving forward sustainable farming and landscape restoration.
Listed buildings Fulking civil parish contains 22
listed buildings. Of these, one is Grade II* and the remaining 21 are Grade II. The Grade II* listed building is: • Perching Manor Farmhouse (List Entry Number 1354845), an L-shaped 18th century house.
Scheduled monuments The parish contains four
scheduled monuments. •
Motte-and-bailey castle on Edburton Hill (List Entry Number 1012171), the earthworks and interior area of a castle believed to date from the immediate post-
Conquest period, soon after October 1066. •
Bowl barrow on Scabes Castle (List Entry Number 1014950), lying on the parish boundary between Fulking and
Poynings, an originally circular funerary monument, now a roughly oval mound, having been levelled by modern ploughing on its eastern side. •
Bowl barrow on Fulking Hill (List Entry Number 1014951), a circular mound which shows signs of part-excavation in the past. • Deserted
medieval settlement and associated cultivation terraces on Perching Hill (List Entry Number 1015125). Downland was rarely inhabited during the medieval period; the establishment of the settlement is probably due to the presence of an underground water course in the coombe, indicated by a well about 60 m to the west of the monument.
1886 Water supply system A distinctive feature of Fulking is the remains of a late Nineteenth Century water supply system. A
hydraulic ram, housed in small building near the Shepherd and Dog public house, pumped water from Fulking Hill to a reservoir at the western end of the village street, where a drinking fountain and water trough were provided. The water was then fed by gravity to two further reservoirs, supplying two hand pumps along the street. The building housing is a Grade II listed building (List Entry Number 1354830) and the hydraulic ram bears the inscription,‘He sendeth springs into the valleys which run among the hills | Oh that men would praise the Lord for his goodness’ (Psalm 104, verse 10 and Psalm 107, verse 8). The drinking fountain is also listed (List Entry Number 1334374), and bears the inscription,‘To the glory of God | And in honour of John Ruskin | Psalm LXXVIII | That they might set their hope in God, and not forget the works of God | But keep his commandments | Who brought streams also out of the rock’ (Psalm 58, verses 7 and 16)The system was installed in 1886.
Henry Willett, a wealthy brewer from Brighton, and
John Ruskin are usually credited with devising and instigating the water supply scheme. Ruskin himself, in a letter to Willet dated Brantwood, 16 June 1887, said ‘I was grieved by your inscription on the fountain, for it made my name far too conspicuous, nor did I feel that the slightest honour was owing to me in the matter’. There are also two associated hand pumps in the village (List Entry Number 1096867 and List Entry Number 1285792).
Fulking Stream Fulking Stream is a 'chalk stream' and runs into the
River Adur. There is a good cluster of
white and
crack willow veteran trees around the confluence of the Edburton Stream and the Fulking Stream. A huge three span girth pollard crack willow on the waterside () is now in a state of collapse. Perching had a watermill in 1086 when the Domesday Book was compiled. This was used to grind the grain grown by the lord of the manor and his tenants.
Perching Sands So called because the area sits the fertile bands of
Upper and
Lower Greensand and
Grey Chalk, this is a special area. Just east of Perching Sands Farm the Fulking Stream meets the Poynings Stream at Fullingmill Bridge () and cuts north through the Lower Greensand ridge to form a short rocky
gill (). The word 'gill' is found only in the Weald and the English northwest, and refers to the deep clefts (mini ravines) carved there by aeons of busy tumbling streams. Although most Sussex gills are in the High Weald, there are some in the Low Weald too such as this one. The public footpath crosses the gill at the Fullingmill Bridge above the rocky waterfall which crashes to a shady pool below. It is a regular spot for
grey wagtail. There is a grand veteran
oak perched on the steep bank above the east side of the pool, as well as a little
willow carr wood nearby. Beyond the gill to the north, the Stream slows, and there are
black tailed skimmers and
demoiselles (). The woodland is too wet for many fungi, but
scarlet elf cup,
elastic saddle and
willow shield have been found here. At the base of the bostal is the grassed over remains of a chalk pit with its Victorian lime kiln beautifully restored. There's another one south of Edburton church, too.
Scarp and Downland The Perching bostal climbs up the bank to the Perching Hill. To the east, Fulking bostals are less well trod and rise to Fulking Hill. The escarpment forms part of the
Beeding Hill to Newtimber Hill Site of Special Scientitic Interest (
SSSI).
Perching Hill Perching Hill () is at the top of the scarp slope. There is a rare Downland
medieval hamlet, whose strip-cultivated open field survived until Victorian times. This is probably a result of the medieval expansion of the Perching Manor in Fulking and probably due to the presence of an underground water course in the coombe, indicated by a well about sixty metres to the west of the monument. Perching Hill's west slope () is a remote place: just sheep, pylons, a rusting barn, big modern pastures, and a slim fragment of the old Down pastures where the steepness of the slopes halted the plough. The site has many old Down pasture species, including
spring sedge, orchids and
devil's-bit. The area used to have
heath snail, too. Just north of the bridge over the Poynings Stream and to the east of the Lane is a fine little marsh in a gully () with
great tussock sedge, some
carnation and
black sedge,
ragged robin,
water figwort, which support a good number of butterfly including
common blue and
green-veined whites. ==Governance==