The village is in the Surrey Hills AONB and most of its land is outside the settlement boundary within the Metropolitan Green Belt. The village occupies both sides of the Tillingbourne between those areas of the Greensand Ridge to the south, such as Tangley Hill, and the steep knoll called St Martha's Hill, with St Martha's Church on the summit, to the north. The North Downs are immediately north, east and west of that knoll. Footpaths, including the North Downs Way, lead through fields and long-established hillside woodlands along the ranges of hills. Chilworth is split between two civil parishes, Shalford to the west and the largely uninhabited St Martha's to the east, and is in the south-east of the borough of Guildford in the mid-west of Surrey.
Environment
Unlike most Surrey districts the borough has no Air Quality Management Areas. Flooding from the Tillingbourne is a rare occurrence with small parts of the north and west having been identified by the Borough Council as being at risk.
History
Chilworth, as a landholding, appears in Domesday Book as Celeorde. It was held by Odo of Bayeux the Bishop of Bayeux. Its Domesday assets were: 1 mill worth 7s, 3 ploughs. It rendered £3 10s 0d. The settlement has a rich industrial past. At various times in history it has been the location of a wire mill, paper mill and gunpowder factory. The wireworks were built in 1603 by Thomas Steere and others, who seduced workmen from the Tintern wireworks of the Company of Mineral and Battery Works. This infringed the latter company's patent and enabled it to have the wireworks suppressed in 1606. The Chilworth gunpowder works were established in 1625 by the East India Company and finally closed in 1920. It was worked by a number of private companies, and became an important supplier of gunpowder to the Government. A significant number of buildings belonging to the gunpowder factory can still be found. The buildings and area are now partially looked after by Guildford Borough Council and English Heritage. The gunpowder works are listed as a scheduled monument. Before the railway was built, Chilworth was a hamlet of a few cottages around the bridge over the Tillingbourne on the direct lane to Guildford via Tyting, where the main entrance to the gunpowder works was located. The second nucleus of settlement was the railway station, with its pub. A third nucleus was around a post office on the A248 in Shalford CP, which was known as "Shalford Hamlet" until around the Second World War. Since 2011 Benedictine monks have inhabited a hilltop monastery in the southern extreme of the parish of St Martha's, straddling northern Wonersh. Saint Augustine's Abbey, designed by Frederick Walters, was founded as a Franciscan friary in 1892.
Chilworth Manor
is a large house between the 'village' and St Martha's Hill to the north. It was part of the patrimony granted to Newark Priory when this monastery was founded in the late 12th century, and was administered as a monastic manor until the abbey was dissolved by Henry VIII. By 1580 the property was owned by one William Morgan. William's son, John, was knighted at Cadiz in 1596. In 1725 the widowed Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough, became the owner. She added the Marlborough Wing and developed a tiered garden excavated in the sloping hillside and still known as the "Duchess's Garden". Chilworth Manor is a grade II listed building and has recently been extensively restored and refurbished by new owners, following the death of its previous occupant, Lady Heald.
Amenities
Chilworth has three churches, St Thomas' CoE, Chilworth Free Church and St Martha's; two schools, Chilworth Infant School and Tillingbourne Junior School; and a gastro-pub, The Percy Arms. For sports, the village has a recreation ground with a sports pavilion, used for football.
Transport
is on the North Downs Line, and is served every two hours by trains to Redhill and Reading. Trains are operated by the Great Western Railway. The main road through the village is the A248 from Shere to Peasmarsh. Bus route number 32 connects Chilworth to Guildford, and Redhill via Dorking and is a basic hourly service, with a reduced service on Sundays. It is now operated by Compass Travel, after the route was given up by Arriva in 2014. Infrequent buses also run to Godalming and Cranleigh. The nearest airport is Farnborough, approximately to the north-west.
Telecommunications
Chilworth is covered by ADSL and Mobile Broadband based high speed internet services. A Vodafone phone mast is at the playing fields, just to the south of one of the railway crossings. BT have extended their Fibre to the Cabinet expansion plan to cover Guildford borough — extensive work took place in April and May 2011 resulting in installation of new FTTC cabinets in at least 3 locations in the village. These works allow for 12Mbit/s+ services and service at the eastern end of the village and up to 70Mbit/s to the west. There is 1 phone box operated by BT.