Lewes, a very pretty town nestling in a gap in the South Downs, is an almost perfect walking destination. More interesting than Arundel, its more staid west Sussex cousin, Lewis has a defiant radical history. The famous revolutionary Tom Paine wrote his first pamphlet in Lewis and 19 Protestant martyrs, refusing to accept Mary's Catholic restoration, were burnt there at the stake. The spirit of non-conformism (and burning) is sustained with a unique annual
firework display, claimed as the largest of its kind in the world, when the Guy Fawkes effigy is updated with more modern villains. Perhaps more importantly, if you've just finished a long walk, is the excellent selection of pubs and restaurants, including those serving 'bitter' from the oldest independent brewery in Sussex, Harveys, located right in the
centre of the town. With a direct train route from London and Brighton and buses back to Brighton every 10 mins, it's also very accessible.