I was thrilled to see Boris Johnson pedal his way over the Surrey Hills during the summer. There's nothing like a bit of panting, groaning and chafing to prove that there's more to a place than "handsome semi-detached houses, and stockbroker Tudor, and Joan Hunter Dunn and the pine-y smell of Betjemanesque suburbia", to quote from his Telegraph column.
Surrey has a hard time shedding its reputation as a showy stomping ground for tasteless technocrats, footballers and City boys. And North Londoners — Johnson is an Islingtonite — are the most likely to share such a skewed vision of the place.
When I was 17, my family decided to uproot from London and settle in the Surrey Hills. Even then I remember picturing a hedge-filled — and hedge fund-filled — backwater. Worse, my London friends told me I'd be neighbours with Chelsea Football Club, which had recently decamped to a new training ground near Cobham. And now Cobham High Street's shop fronts are aflutter with casting calls for Surrey Hills, a forthcoming reality-TV show in the mould of Made in Chelsea.
But just as Chelsea isn't representative of London as a whole, so the flashy estates rumoured to be at the centre of the new series — Fairmile in Cobham, St George's Hill in Weybridge, and pockets of Esher and Oxshott with their Legoland mansions — do not constitute Surrey.
You are more likely to stumble across a Norman church or National Trust property than a footballer. The real Surrey is little changed from the place Samuel Pepys called his "old place of delight", and John Evelyn "the Country of my Birth and my delight".
Post your comment
- Leaving Out Leavis
- Berlin Magic
- Running Scared
- One And Only Ronnie
- Outside The Box
- Envoy Sans Pareil
- Jacks High
- War On Waugh
- South Bank Oberon
- Blitz Spirit
- Ironies Of Ideology
- The Soul Will Out
- Hogg Roasted
- Trump Chic
- Cherchez La Femme
- Writers Welcome
- Feigned Intimacy
- Reality Check For Opec
- Golden Gogol
- Mounting Outrage

















