Whyteleafe

Village in Surrey, England


title: "Whyteleafe" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["villages-in-surrey", "tandridge", "civil-parishes-in-surrey"] description: "Village in Surrey, England" topic_path: "general/villages-in-surrey" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whyteleafe" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Village in Surrey, England ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox UK place"]

FieldValue
countryEngland
coordinates
official_nameWhyteleafe
map_typeSurrey
population4,620
population_ref(Civil Parish 2021)
area_total_km22.167
civil_parishWhyteleafe
os_grid_referenceTQ336583
shire_districtTandridge
shire_countyGreater London
shire_county1Surrey
static_image_nameHouses above the A22, Whyteleafe (geograph 2309246).jpg
static_image_captionTypical landscape of Whyteleafe along the
dry valley from the A22
static_image_2_nameBus Stop by the Curry House (geograph 3396754).jpg
static_image_2_captionPart of the shopping area on Godstone Road near to Whyteleafe and Upper Warlingham railway stations
regionLondon
constituency_westminsterCroydon South
post_townWHYTELEAFE
postcode_districtCR3
postcode_areaCR
dial_code020
dial_code101883
london_boroughCroydon
constituency_westminster1East Surrey
::

| country = England | coordinates = | official_name = Whyteleafe | map_type = Surrey | population = 4,620 | population_ref = (Civil Parish 2021) | area_total_km2 = 2.167 | civil_parish = Whyteleafe | os_grid_reference = TQ336583 | shire_district = Tandridge | shire_district1 = | shire_county = Greater London | shire_county1 = Surrey | static_image_name = Houses above the A22, Whyteleafe (geograph 2309246).jpg | static_image_caption = Typical landscape of Whyteleafe along the dry valley from the A22 | static_image_2_name = Bus Stop by the Curry House (geograph 3396754).jpg | static_image_2_caption = Part of the shopping area on Godstone Road near to Whyteleafe and Upper Warlingham railway stations | region = London | constituency_westminster = Croydon South | post_town = WHYTELEAFE | postcode_district = CR3 | postcode_area = CR | dial_code = 020 | dial_code1 = 01883 | london_borough = Croydon | constituency_westminster1 = East Surrey Whyteleafe is a village in the district of Tandridge, Surrey, England, with a few streets falling inside the London Borough of Croydon. The village, in a dry valley of the North Downs, has three railway stations (on two parallel lines). Neighbouring villages and towns include Woldingham, Caterham, Coulsdon, Warlingham, and Kenley. To the west are Kenley Aerodrome, Kenley Common (owned by the Corporation), Coxes Wood, and Blize Wood. To the east are Riddlesdown, the Dobbin and Marden Park.

The churchyard contains graves of airmen who died during WWII, stationed at RAF Kenley nearby. The village forms part of the Greater London Built-up Area.

History

The village name comes from the distinctive white underside of the whitebeam trees growing in the area. In 1855 Nathaniel Glover purchased White Leaf field and George Henry Drew later completed the building that was called "White Leafe House". By 1881 the surrounding area had become known as "Whiteleafe". As with Kenley the history of its land before that was that of other parishes, in this case Caterham and to a lesser extent Warlingham and Coulsdon.

Its first primary school was built in 1892, enlarged in 1900 and again in 1907.

In 1911 the population of Whyteleafe was "now larger than that of Warlingham village...A county council secondary school for girls has been set up in this year (1911)."

Amenities

Whyteleafe has various shops and amenities. To the south of Whyteleafe are the headquarters of Gold Group International, the largest employer in the parish boundaries.

Whyteleafe School, is a primary school which is part of the multi academy trust GLF and is situated at the bottom of Whyteleafe Hill. It makes use of the site of the former Whyteleafe Girls' Grammar School, vacated in the late 1970s. Warlingham School (secondary) is at the top of Tithe Pit Shaw Lane, on the edge of Whyteleafe in the east.

The C of E church of St Luke was built in 1866, founded as a new parish in the Diocese of Southwark.

Transport

There are three railway stations: Whyteleafe South, Whyteleafe and Upper Warlingham. All three stations are served by Southern services. The Godstone road (A22) cuts through north to south. Bus routes 407, 434 and 439 serve the area and run from Coulsdon, Croydon, Sutton, Waddon Marsh and Caterham. Whyteleafe village grew after the railway came on its way to Caterham in 1856. A second line, the Oxted Line, following a slightly higher contour, opened in 1884. It serves different destinations to the south but also runs to London Bridge or Victoria.

Sport and leisure

AFC Whyteleafe is the main football club following the closure of Whyteleafe F.C. in 2021. AFC Whyteleafe, like its predecessor, plays in grounds on Church Road where the former club moved in 1959, when it moved from the field off New Barn Lane, now utilised by the adjacent Kenley School. Separate from its ground in the west of town is the large recreation ground below wooded hills in the east of town which has informal sports fields and a playground.

Caterham and Whyteleafe Tennis Club is located in Manor Park near Whyteleafe South Station. The Surrey National Golf Club is located in nearby Chaldon.

Local government

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f0/Tandridge_Civil_Parishes.png" caption="Civil Parishes in Tandridge District"] ::

Surrey County Council, headquartered in Reigate, elected every four years, has one councillor representing Caterham Valley, which incorporates the civil parishes of Caterham Valley and Whyteleafe. ::data[format=table]

ElectionMember{{cite web
title=Surrey's County Councillorspublisher=Surrey County Council
Liberal Democrats (UK)}}"
::

Whyteleafe has 2 representatives on Tandridge District Council, headquartered in Oxted: ::data[format=table]

ElectionMember
Liberal Democrats (UK)}}"
Liberal Democrats (UK)}}"
::

Whyteleafe is one of 21 civil parish councils in Tandridge District electing seven parish councillors every four years. The parish council clerk is Simon Bold.

Demography and housing

::data[format=table title="2021 Census Ethnicity{{Cite web |title=Whyteleafe: Ethnic group |url=https://censusdata.uk/e05007407-whyteleafe/ts021-ethnic-group |access-date=2024-04-26 |website=censusdata.uk |language=en}}"]

Ethnic GroupPercentageTotal
White77.3%3569
Asian7.3%335
Mixed7.3%335
Black6.9%318
Other1.4%66
::

::data[format=table title="2021 Census Religion{{Cite web |title=Whyteleafe: Religion |url=https://censusdata.uk/e05007407-whyteleafe/ts030-religion |access-date=2024-04-26 |website=censusdata.uk |language=en}}"]

ReligionPercentageTotal
No Religion44%2033
Christianity42.3%1956
No Response6.9%320
Islam3.1%141
Hinduism1.9%87
Other Religion0.8%37
Buddhism0.7%34
Judaism0.2%9
Sikhism0.1%6
::

::data[format=table title="2021 Census Accommodation Type{{Cite web |title=Whyteleafe: Accommodation type |url=https://censusdata.uk/e05007407-whyteleafe/ts044-accommodation-type |access-date=2024-04-26 |website=censusdata.uk |language=en}}"]

Accommodation TypePercentageTotal
In a purpose-built block of flats or tenement50.8%1083
Detached16.1%343
Semi-detached14.4%306
Terraced12.3%261
Part of a converted or shared house, including bedsits4%86
Part of another converted building, for example, former school, church or warehouse1.3%27
In a commercial building, for example, in an office building, hotel or over a shop1.1%23
A caravan or other mobile or temporary structure0.05%1
::

::data[format=table title="2021 Census Tenure{{Cite web |title=Whyteleafe: Tenure |url=https://censusdata.uk/e05007407-whyteleafe/ts054-tenure |access-date=2024-04-26 |website=censusdata.uk |language=en}}"]

Tenure TypePercentageTotal
Owned with a mortgage or loan37.7%804
Private rented from private landlord or letting agency21.1%450
Owned outright20.9%447
Shared ownership7.7%165
Other social rented6.2%133
Social rented from council or other local authority4.5%96
Other private rented1.8%39
Lives rent free0%0
::

References

References

  1. "2011 Census – Built-up areas". [[Office for National Statistics.
  2. (2006). "A History of Whyteleafe". The Bourne Society.
  3. (2006). "A History of Whyteleafe". The Bourne Society.
  4. (1912). "Parishes: Caterham". Institute of Historical Research.
  5. "Principal Employers in Tandridge". Surrey County Council.
  6. [https://www.google.co.uk/maps?q=Whyteleafe&hl=en&ll=51.310449,-0.076314&spn=0.005929,0.010235&sll=52.8382,-2.327815&sspn=11.693777,20.961914&oq=whyt&hnear=Whyteleafe,+Surrey,+United+Kingdom&t=m&z=17 Google map of recreation ground] Retrieved 2014-01-01
  7. "Caterham and Whyteleafe Tennis Club | Surrey".
  8. (2021-01-01). "The Most Played & Most Reviewed Golf Courses in 2020".
  9. "Whyteleafe Councillors". Tandridge District Council.
  10. "Who we are". Whyteleafe Village Council.
  11. "Whyteleafe: Ethnic group".
  12. "Whyteleafe: Religion".
  13. "Whyteleafe: Accommodation type".
  14. "Whyteleafe: Tenure".

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

villages-in-surreytandridgecivil-parishes-in-surrey