Around Petworth
"Enjoy both a fine historic town in the lee of a major country house and a rich pastoral landscape."
Walk directions
Leave the car park via the Old Bakery Shopping Arcade and its thriving independent bookshop. Continue up towards the distant church tower. Pass the Town Hall and continue up Lombard Street. At the top bear right towards Sir Charles Barry’s 1851 Gothic lamp standard and cross East Street into Bartons Lane (seen to the left). Follow this downhill, as it becomes a footpath.
Go through a kissing gate where there is a splendid view across the valley and a rolling pastoral landscape, unbelievably, once threatened with a bypass. Go through a second kissing gate and, ignoring paths to the left and right, descend to a stone bridge, then over it, continuing ahead to a hedge corner. Reaching this, continue ahead alongside the hedge. Through a kissing gate with the Serpent Trail waymarker, carry on up, then at the crest go forward just to the right of the nearest clump of pines.
Descend to a kissing gate by an oak tree and, once through this, ascend between hedges. At a junction at the top bear half right and continue on the track along the edge of and then within woodland. Continue ahead over two cross tracks, and where the path meets a metalled track bear sharp right along it towards a pair of large stone Petworth Estate gate piers beside the Goanah Lodges.
Just before the gate piers turn left onto a track passing a covered reservoir, and follow this out of the woods. Descend past farm buildings and where the track bends right go forward on a path that is fenced either side, cross a large field over a stile, walk past the nearest tree and maintain the same direction to the next stile.
Emerge by a narrow gap in the hedge onto the road, turn right along it and immediately left over a stile. Over this follow a fence to the bottom far corner of the field and drop to a gate and stile, followed quickly by another gate. Through this turn right on the lane through Byworth village.
Go left at a telephone box by a house with a Hovis sign, onto a tarmac lane, then through a gate ahead. Follow a path that bears right to a footbridge, a pond to your left, and cross a stile. Now in a paddock, go left alongside a fence and at the end climb a stile and bear left down to a footbridge over a stream.
Over the footbridge bear right and climb, continuing through a gap where there was a kissing gate. After a few paces bear left at an unwaymarked path fork and climb a field towards houses. At the crest keep ahead on a path between fences, garden fences and hedges to your right. Reaching the road bear right and follow it. The road eventually curves left and becomes the High Street on its way into the town centre. Go past the Petworth Cottage Museum and at the T-junction bear left back to the car park.
Additional information
Terrain
- Field paths and tracks, pavements in Petworth, several stiles
Landscape
- Rolling, pastoral countryside, woodland and a historic townscape
Dog friendliness
- On a lead through the horse and cattle pasture on the northern section of the walk and on lead in town
Parking
- Car park in the centre of Petworth
Toilets en route
- In the car park
About the walk
Petworth town is precariously hemmed in between the walls of Petworth House’s grounds and the deep-cut valley that lies to the east of the town. Its streets are narrow with sharp corners, and it has always been a traffic bottleneck. In the 1970s Petworth was threatened with a north–south bypass.... The problem was its route. If it went west it would destroy much of Petworth House’s superb great park, designed by ‘Capability’ Brown and painted by William Turner. If it went east the road would destroy the delightful countryside through which this walk passes. Either route would be potentially disastrous to the surroundings of this historic town. A vigorous campaign succeeded in stopping the bypass, but of course the traffic has not gone away. Lombard Street is the prettiest in the town, and traffic free, while East Street has the grandest town houses. The area around the market square has many timber-framed buildings, and the town is full of antique shops. In the centre is the 1793 town hall, a two-storey stone building with arched windows. An unexpected pleasure of Petworth are the numerous estate workers’ buildings, all painted in the same shade of maroon, tucked around back streets. In the High Street at the end of the walk, you pass the tiny Petworth Cottage Museum (open Tues-Sat afternoons, April to October), in the former home of Mrs Mary Cummings, employed as a seamstress. It is evocatively furnished as it might have looked when she lived there around 1910. Petworth church tower is a curious structure. Stone in the lower stages, the upper part is brick, added in 1827. It was originally rendered, and above it was a spire more suited to a suburban church. Apparently Sir Charles Barry employed a design he was preparing for a church in Brighton. The spire was removed in 1947, and the present parapet and shallow tiled pyramidal roof built in 1953. The walk passes through Byworth, a small village poised above the east bank of the deep-cut stream. Apart from an old pub, The Black Horse, there are two very attractive and much photographed and painted cottages where the route turns left off the main street. Both have whitewashed infill panels to their timber framing and are jettied, the upper storey projecting on curved brackets beyond the ground floor.
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Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
About the area
Divided from East Sussex back in 1888, West Sussex has a variety of landscapes and coastal scenery, but it is the spacious and open South Downs with which the county is most closely associated. There are plenty of walking routes in the South Downs National Park, cycling routes by the sea or visitors can explore the pretty town of Arundel with its historic castle and buildings.
Nearby places to stay
View all (8)
Inn
The Welldiggers Arms
★★★★
"A very smart and friendly country pub in the South Downs National Park...."
- Rooms 14
Inn
The Swan Inn
★★★★★
"Historic charm, modern comfort and good dining in idyllic Fittleworth...."
- Rooms 12
Inn
The White Horse Inn
★★★★
"18th century inn, recently re-launched under new ownership...."
- Rooms 8
Nearby places to stay
The Welldiggers Arms
Situated just outside the historic town of Petworth, The Welldiggers Arms benefits from outstanding views of the South Downs and a quiet location. All bedrooms are stylishly decorated w...
★★★★ Rating
The Swan Inn
The Swan Inn in Fittleworth is a beautifully restored country inn where heritage meets modern comfort. Inside, you’ll find inviting spaces full of character, stylish bedrooms with thoug...
★★★★★ Rating
The White Horse Inn
The White Horse Inn is a beautifully restored 18th-century building is the heart of the village and South Down's National Park. The beds are handmade in Dartmoor and have deep, lavender...
★★★★ Rating
Long Meadow Cottage
The light and airy interior at Long Meadow perfectly complements the wide views over the Sussex countryside. There’s a sunny terrace and outside seating to make the most of these views ...
★★★★ Rating
Long Meadow
The light and airy interior at Long Meadow perfectly complement the wide views over the Sussex countryside. There’s a sunny terrace and outside seating to make the most of these views o...
★★★★ Rating
Amberley Castle
Amberley Castle is idyllically set in the Sussex countryside, and boasts 900 years of history. The battlements – complete with mighty portcullis; one of the few in Europe that still wor...
★★★★ Rating
THE PIG-in the South Downs
Located in a rural area within easy reach of the town centre, THE PIG in the South Downs is a Palladian-style Georgian house that's been sympathetically renovated and extended. The cont...
★★★ Rating
Hamilton Arms
The Hamilton Arms Suites is a large characterful country pub, with Niva Thai, a popular Thai restaurant, and modern spacious rooms, in the picturesque village of Stedham. The bedrooms a...
★★★★ Rating
Places to eat nearby View all





