Sometimes known as Hydon Ball or Cup Hill, the area is under the management of the National Trust. At its highest point is a large stone seat dedicated in 1915 to Octavia Hill, one of the Trust's founders.
It is believed that the term ball refers to a signalling station which once stood at the top of the hill.[n 2]
Its shape is similar to other hills named as ‘ball’; there are more than six on Dartmoor e.g. Cuckoo Ball, grid reference SX 717902.
There is a short poem associated with Hydon's Ball, which may explain its other alternative name:
Hydon's Ball is a meeting spot for local Morris Dancers who gather on the hilltop to welcome the first day of spring.[1]
The Grade II listed Robertson War Memorial lies slightly below the summit of Hydon's Ball. The eight-foot obelisk Commemorating the first world and features a plaque designed by Laurence Arthur Turner.[2]
Hydon's Ball is one of the top ten highest points in Surrey. An underground drinking water reservoir is beneath the summit.[1]
Transport
Hydon's Ball is centred Шаблон:Convert south of Godalming, which sits by the A3, in central southern England. The nearest village is to the south, Hambledon, which has a large public house (The Merry Harriers) and a village shop.
Lying on the Greensand Way, the hill can be reached on it from the direction of Godalming/Dorking/Sevenoaks Wealds/Hamstreet and from that of the nearby western end of the ridge, Hindhead.