Cranleigh
Cranleigh is a big town and civil parish, self-proclaimed the biggest in England, concerning 8 miles (13 km) southeast of Guildford in Surrey. It lies east of the A281, which links Guildford with Horsham, on an alternative route that is not an A-road. It remains in the north-west edge of the Weald, a large remnant forest, the main regional remnant being Winterfold Woodland straight north-west on the northern Greensand Ridge. Till the mid-1860s, the area was typically led to Cranley. The Post Office persuaded the vestry to utilize -leigh to stay clear of misdirections to nearby Crawley in West Sussex. The older punctuation is publicly visible in the Cranley Hotel. The beginning of the name is recorded in the Pipe Rolls as Cranlea in 1166 and Cranelega in 1167. A little later in the Feet of Fines of 1198 the name is composed as Cranele. Etymologists take into consideration all these variations to be the fusion of the Old English words "Cran", meaning "crane", and also "Leoh" that with each other suggest 'a woodland clearing seen by cranes'. The name is famously thought to come from imputed huge crane-breeding premises at the Anglo-French named Vachery Fish pond, usually in your area known as Vachery. The figure of a crane decorates the old drinking water fountain of 1874 in 'Fountain Square' in the middle of the village. A set of cranes decorate the crest of the 21st century provided coat of arms of Cranleigh Parish Council.