Local Burwash Removals
Use our local knowledge for Removals to or from Burwash, East Sussex
We offer a locally based professional and reliable removals service for customers moving to or from Burwash.
Our local Burwash knowledge will help your move day go as smoothly as possible with no needless mistakes due to our local knowledge.
As well as removals in Burwash, we also offers removals services for Burgess Hill, Heathfield, Haywards Heath, Lewes, Tunbridge Wells, Uckfield and surrounding areas in Kent and Sussex.
Postcode: TN19
Telephone area code: 01435
Population: 3,000
We also offer storage near Burwash.
Barkley’s offer…
- Free quotation
- Local and Nationwide
- Fine art and antique carriers
- Storage facilities
- Full or part packing service
- Packing materials supplied
- Fully trained, uniformed staff
- Fully insured
Moving to Burwash East Sussex?
Burwash, archaically known as Burghersh, is a rural village and civil parish in the Rother District of Sussex. Situated 15 miles inland from Hastings, it is located five miles south-west of Hurst Green, on the A265 road, and on the River Dudwell, a tributary of the River Rother. In an area steeped in history, some nine miles to the south-east lies Battle Abbey and eight miles (13 km) to the east is Bodiam Castle.
Its main claim to fame is that for half of his life Rudyard Kipling (1865–1936) lived in the village at Bateman’s. Kipling used the house’s setting and the wider local area as the setting for many of his stories in Puck of Pook’s Hill (1906) and the sequel Rewards and Fairies (1910), and there is a Kipling room at The Bear public house, one of two pubs located along Burwash High Street. Rudyard’s son John Kipling, known as Jack, died during World War I and is named on the village memorial at the end of Bell Alley Lane. He was named after Rudyard’s father, the artist John Lockwood Kipling, (1837–1911), who provided illustrations for the classic story collection The Jungle Book. A complete collection of Kipling’s works, including Just So Stories, Rewards and Fairies, The Man Who Would Be King and Kim, was published as the ‘Burwash Edition’ (1941).
Other local villages nearby include Etchingham, Burwash Common and Hurst Green which we serve too.