Jesus College, Cambridge parted with Horne Court Manor in 1891 to allow a parsonage house to be built instead.
[2] A temporary airfield was established to support the Normandy landings in early 1944 on farmland straddling Bones Lane.
[3] The following units were here at some point:[4] The heavily restored church in the heart of the village, dedicated to St Mary the Virgin, has 14th- and 15th-century windows.
The oldest feature now remaining is the south doorway, which dates from the middle of the 13th century, although this may have been inserted in the walls of a 12th-century nave.
A slight inclination of the chancel to the north shows rebuilding of the east end of the church, but the absence of any original detail earlier than a 15th-century rood stair in the west end of the south wall makes the dating of this rebuilding, if it took place, a matter of conjecture.
The centre, developed on the site of a former dairy farm, opened in 1997, and participates in captive breeding programmes.
[6][7][8] The parish except for its far north, yielding sedimentary ironstone, is on the Wealden Clay[2] and was until the 16th century forested, rather than interspersed with six woodlands as it is today.
The 2011 census considered the parish which is within the ward Burstow, Horne and Outwood, containing three of the four villages of the south-west of Tandridge.
Horne is served by bus services 315 to Redhill and East Surrey Hospital and 236 to Crawley via Gatwick Airport.