|
|
|
TOWNS & VILLAGES -
Kent |
|
|
 |
 |
|
|
|
This pedestrian-friendly
commuter town provides a mixture of modern and
historic buildings set against a backdrop of
floral displays, street entertainment and
continental-style pavement cafes. Formerly an
important centre for the manufacture of
locomotives, it now has an international Eurostar
rail station. In some of its old, narrow streets
are overhanging, half- timbered houses while its
parish church was mentioned in the Domesday Book.
Nearby are picture postcard villages full of
history, notably Biddenden, Chilham, Smarden and
Pluckley – the county’s ‘most haunted’ village.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
To the west of Dartford, the
original village was remote, supremely rural and
important only for agriculture. The coming of the
railways changed all that and Bexley quickly
expanded. Nevertheless it has a long history
dating back to 814 when the King of the Mercians
granted land here to Wulfrud, Archbishop of
Canterbury. Tools and other artefacts from the new
Stone Ages, the Bronze and Iron Ages and Roman
times have been found. Bexley has some magnificent
houses – including Red House, designed by artist
William Morris. The foundations of 12th
century Lesness Abbey are also on view.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
What is now a residential area was simply farmland
at the start of the 20th
century, part of the manor of Aperfield which was
given to Bishop Odo of Bayeux by his half-brother,
William the Conqueror. Today Biggin Hill is a
household name thanks to its association with war.
Its airfield was used in the First World War and
then in the Second when Hurricanes of 32 Squadron
and the Spitfires of 72, 94 and 610 Squadrons took
part in the Battle of Britain, shooting down some
400 enemy planes. Biggin Hill was also one of the
first locations where ground-to-air communications
was achieved in 1917.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Boasting fine shops,
Birchington is the largest village on the Isle of
Thanet. All Saints Church has a stained glass
window commemorating the life of the artist and
poet Dante Gabriel Rossetti, who was buried here
in 1882.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Charles Dickens lived here in
a castellated, clifftop holiday home which he
renamed Bleak House, and it was here that he wrote
‘David Copperfield’.
While the Anglo Saxons noted
that Broadstairs was a ‘broad place’ the town
probably derives its name from a set of steps cut
into the cliffs in the 15th century.
These may have inspired John Buchan’s famous book
‘The Thirty Nine Steps’. |

Broadstairs Beach - Kent
Tourism Alliance
|
The town’s popularity as a resort began during
the Regency period and it has never lost its
English seaside charm. As well as exhilarating
clifftop walks it possesses no less than seven
sandy bays.Broadstairs
is also close to Botany Bay Beach.
This is a
beautiful sandy beach which is cleaned daily and
has life guard cover from mid June to September.
Find out more at:
www.thebeachkioskatbotanybaykent.co.uk
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|

Canterbury Cathedral - Kent
Tourism Alliance |
The ‘stronghold of the people
of Kent", this cathedral city on the River Stour
was once the regional centre of the Romans (Durovernum).
It was also the county’s capital in the days of
the Anglo-Saxons. In the year 602 St Augustine
founded Christ Church and an abbey.
The present
cathedral was started in 1070 by Archbishop Lanfranc and it was here that Archbishop Thomas
Becket was murdered by Henry II’s knights in 1170.
Although Becket’s shrine was destroyed during
the reign of Henry VIII, the cathedral still
contains the tombs of the Black Prince and
Henry IV.
St Martin’s Church, which possibly pre-dated
St Augustine, is believed to be the oldest
church in England still in use. A World Heritage Site, the
city has combined its past with its present
cosmopolitan sensibility and has two theatres and
a prestigious shopping centre. |
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Lying at the mouth of the
River Medway just 31 miles from London, Chatham
was at one time an important naval base after
Henry VIII turned a sleepy fishing village into a
major dockyard, much of which is now open to the
public. Many hundreds of Royal Navy ships,
including Nelson’s HMS Victory, were built here.
Visitors can travel through 400 years of maritime
history at the Museum of the Royal Dockyard and
journey to Fort Amherst and its complex of tunnels
showing how soldiers of the Napoleonic era lived
and fought. The Royal Engineers Museum is one of
Britain’s foremost military museums, with 6,000
items, including Wellington’s map of Waterloo.
Charles Dickens lived in Chatham as a boy from
1817 to 1821 when his father worked in the naval
pay office.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Once a Roman settlement, the
market town of Dartford has a number of beautiful,
ancient parishes and many notable buildings. It
has a rich industrial heritage and paper making
and cement production were important for
centuries. Dartford Tunnel takes M25 travellers
beneath the River Thames. The Queen Elizabeth II
Bridge once held the record as the longest
cable-stayed bridge in Europe. Railway pioneer
Richard Trevithick died in poverty in 1833 at the
Bull Hotel, one of the few surviving galleried
inns in Kent.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
One of the Cinque Ports, Deal is today a seaside
resort with a natural harbour, shingle beach,
promenade and myriad tales of smuggling and
shipwrecks on the nearby Goodwin Sands. Its rich
history is typified by the town’s low, squat
castle which survives as a remarkable example of
the defensive system built along the south coast
by Henry VIII in the 16th
century. Shaped like a Tudor Rose, it was created
in response to the Pope’s enthusiasm for a crusade
against England and had no less than 145 openings
for guns. Julius Caesar is also supposed to have
landed here on a reconnaissance mission prior to
the Roman invasion.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
There may not be bluebirds
over the White Cliffs of Dover but these towering
chalk monoliths remain an evocative reminder of
past heroics. From here on a clear day you can see
France, 21 miles away, and feel history on the
breeze. It was at or near Dover in 55BC that
Julius Caesar landed with 6,000 men in 80 boats to
mount his invasion of Britain. Later the Angles,
Jutes and Saxons settled here, while William the
Conqueror’s half brother, Bishop Odo of Bayeux,
arrived with prefabricated parts for a castle. |

Whitecliffs Walk - Kent
Tourism Alliance |
The
town once supplied most of the fish for London’s
markets and its clifftop Norman castle overlooks
and protects the harbour as one of the earliest
castles containing concentrically-arranged
fortifications. Nearby is possibly the earliest
Roman lighthouse in Britain while Dover Museum has
a re-created Bronze Age boat – the ‘first cross
channel ferry’, older than the pyramids. Having
long been a gateway to Europe, Dover was the
destination for Louis Bleriot when he made his
first cross-channel flight in 1909.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Bleak but enigmatic, the
shingle-strewn headland of Dungeness is served by
its own airport as well as being a terminus for
the miniature Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch steam
railway. Dominating the view are two nuclear power
stations built in the 1960's, looking like alien
structures. Commercial fishing still takes place
here and the beach is a haven for sea anglers. A
lighthouse is open to the public while nearby is
an important RSPB nature reserve.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|

Hever Castle - Kent Tourism
Alliance |
Since Roman times there has been a bridge here
over the River Eden, a tributary of the Medway,
and the village still has strategic importance for
visitors planning to explore the surrounding
countryside.
The 14th
century Crown Inn was a haunt for a ruthless gang
of smugglers.
Edenbridge is home to the Eden Valley Museum,
and just a stones throw away from the lovely
Hever Castle - the childhood home of Anne
Boleyn. |
|
Edenbridge is also home to
Penshurst Place - ancestral home of the
Sidney family for 400 years and surrounded by
10 acres of Tudor gardens, Penshurst Vineyard
and Chiddingstone Castle. |

Penhurst Place - Kent
Tourism Alliance |
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
The home of Britain’s ‘oldest brewer’, the
Shepherd Neame Brewery (established 1698),
Faversham is a hop-growing area with a fascinating
past. This market town was a flourishing port
until silt halted the largest ships. At one time
it was also the country’s most important producer
of gunpowder. It now has a gunpowder mill restored
to its near-working condition. The town has no
fewer than 400 listed buildings, including the
16th century Guildhall. Its heritage centre is
housed in a 15th
century former inn. Close by is the Brogdale
Horticultural Trust – home to the largest
collection of fruit trees and plants in the world.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Elegant and colourful, Folkestone was granted a
licence as a port in the 17th century and became one of the
Cinque Ports. Although it has a vast cross-channel
passenger terminal, it has a dual role as a
typical holiday resort with grassy promenades and
public gardens atop white cliffs that rise to a
height of 200 feet. At one time Folkestone
provided a safe haven for smugglers but finally
came into its own when it was bought in 1842 by
the railways for £18,000. Home of science fiction
writer H. G. Wells, it was also the birthplace of
Hollywood actress Audrey Hepburn and the great
anatomist William Harvey, who discovered the
circulation of the blood. The most important
collection of Battle of Britain artefacts in the
country can be found at the Kent Battle of Britain
Museum at Hawkinge, near Folkestone.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Originally ‘Gylla’s people’s
homestead’, Gillingham sits on the Medway estuary
and is an industrial town containing large
sections of the Royal Chatham Dockyard which
closed in 1984. Navigator William Adams
(1564-1620) was the first Englishman to visit
Japan, becoming a samurai warrior. The novel
Shogun is based on his exploits. Firm favourites
with visiting families are the Capstone Farm
Country Park, which has 280 acres of woods,
orchards and meadows in the North Downs, and the
Strand Leisure Park.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Neighbour to a power station
and the UK’s second largest deepwater container
port, this ancient coastal village lies on The
Isle of Grain, which is no longer an island due to
silting up of a local creek. Roman tiling is built
into the fabric of St James' Church which has a
tongue-sticker (a grotesque pagan fertility
symbol) over one of its doors. Queen Victoria used
Grain as a departure point for trips to Germany
and ‘Port Victoria’ was built as a rail station at
the end of a line from Windsor. Later Grain became
synonymous with oil refining. In 1944 petrol was
pumped to Allied invasion forces in France via a
seabed pipeline
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
A Customs and pilot station
for the Port of London, Gravesend is a busy
industrial town with one of Europe’s biggest
shopping centres. It holds the distinction of
being the landing place of the first German flying
bomb to strike Britain in World War II. The town’s
pier is the oldest cast-iron pier in the world and
is linked to the local heritage centre by a pretty
Thames-side walk. The Church of St George is the
last resting place of the Native American princess
Pocahontas (1595-1617), whose statue stands in the
grounds. She came to Britain with her husband, the
Virginian colonist John Rolfe.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Lying on the Thames estuary,
the former fishing village of Herne Bay is proud
of its award-winning beaches stretching along a
seven-mile seafront. In common with many other
coastal towns it was turned into a holiday resort
by the ever-enterprising Victorians. While
landlubbers can enjoy an annual Punch and Judy
festival each summer, lovers of the sea can
seal-watch, join the angling fraternity or take
part in numerous water sports in the bay. Blean
Woods is one of the most important ancient
woodlands in England.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
A former Cinque Port, Hythe is located in a
sweeping bay and is popular with devotees of water
sports. Although its harbour has disappeared,
boats still land their catch on the beach, as they
have for centuries. In the early 19th
century, the Royal Military Canal and Martello
Towers were built as defensive structures while
The Roughs are the site of early experiments into
aircraft early warning systems using concrete
bowls to pick up sounds from aircraft approaching
the coast. The Church of St Leonard, standing on
the site of an earlier Norman building, is one of
the finest parish churches in the county, dating
from around 1080 AD. Saltwood Castle is notorious
as the place where the knights who murdered Thomas
Becket in Canterbury Cathedral met on the previous
night to plan their shocking crime. St. Leonard’s
Church has an unusual crypt and a macabre
collection of bones and skulls. Despite its
seaside heritage, Hythe is also the home of
Mackeson milk stout!
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
The 2,000-acre ‘island of
sheep’ lies on the south bank of the River Thames
at the mouth of the River Medway. Separated from
the mainland by the River Swale, it is about 10
miles long and eight miles wide and is joined by a
bridge. Sheep still graze here on reclaimed
pastures. Its northern edge is lined with beaches
(including a naturist beach). Most of Britain’s
imported cars reach us via Sheerness docks at the
island’s north western tip. Sheppey is a haven for
birds and has an RSPB site at Elmley Marshes, as
well as the Swale National Nature Reserve.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
At the southern edge of Romney Marsh, it was once
a coastal town but is now three miles away from
the sea. The 132-ft tower of the 14th century Church of All Saints is
called the Cathedral of Romney Marsh and dominates
the flat landscape. A former rector was Thomas
(Cardinal) Wolsey. The explosive lyddite was
developed here.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|

River Medway at Maidstone -
Kent Tourism Alliance |
Sitting at the foot of the
Downs and surrounded by some of Kent’s most
beautiful countryside is this go-ahead county town
which has been an influential centre since the
days of the Anglo Saxons. Ranked in the top five
shopping centres in the south of England, it has
more than one million square feet of retail floor
space.
Enjoying a comparatively warm climate, it
is a collection point for some of the county’s
agricultural products, including hops, and has
notable museums, the medieval Archbishop’s Palace
and the country’s best collection of carriages –
not to mention England’s widest nave at All Saints
Church.
|
|
Leeds Castle – ‘the most beautiful castle
in the world’ – rises majestically from the middle
of a lake. Dating from 857 it was rebuilt in 1179
by a Norman knight and later became a favourite
haunt of Edward 1 and Eleanor of Castile.
Its
gatehouse contains a remarkable collection of
antique dog collars spanning four centuries.
Beyond the great stone walls is magnificent
parkland laid out by ‘Capability’ Brown. |

Leeds Castle - Kent Tourism
Alliance |
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
A Cinque Port and playground for thousands of
Londoners, the resort of Margate has a fascinating
heritage brought to life via displays at a number
of museums. It was the pioneer of seaside holidays
and became the first resort to have donkey rides
(1790) and deck chairs (1898). The covered bathing
machine was also invented here in the 18th century. With
a sandy beach stretching nine-miles, and a grotto
containing four million shells, Margate is the
real seaside deal!
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
A small, pretty village, Minster’s beach is a
powerful lure for surfers. Above it is a hilltop
church and a museum housed in the surviving
gatehouse of a 12th
century Benedictine abbey. The highest point on
the Isle of Sheppey, it also offers visitors
breathtaking views.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|

Kent & East Sussex Railway
- Kent Tourism Alliance |
Unofficial capital of Romney
Marsh, it was one of the original Cinque ports.
During the Middle Ages it prospered until the
Great Storm of 1287 moved the mouth of the River
Rother, on which it stood, many miles to the west.
New Romney’s harbour was devastated and shingles
and mud flooded the town. It is a stop on the
Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch steam railway. Built
in the 1920s as a tourist attraction, the
railway’s 14 miles of track leads to the coast on
a 15-inch-gauge line. The town is the gateway to
Romney Marsh, an area of open skies, marshes,
twisting lanes, medieval churches and picturesque
villages. |
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Home to Britain’s only Royal
Harbour, Ramsgate became a holiday resort in the
19th century and offers a rare mixture
of seaside traditions and maritime heritage. It
has golden sands, a modern marina, stunning bays
and cliff tops that cry out to be explored. It was
granted royal status for its harbour in 1821
following a visit by George IV. Ramsgate Maritime
Museum depicts many aspects of East Kent’s
sea-going history. St Augustine’s cross marks the
landing place of the saint. The Gatehouse Museum
contains a model of Queenborough Castle which was
destroyed on the orders of Parliament.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Lying at the mouth of the River Medway,
Rochester is a mixture of fascination and history.
Evidence of Roman domination comes in the shape of
Watling Street which crosses the river at this
point.
The city’s defences were later strengthened by the
Saxons while the Normans felt it was so important
they built Rochester Castle (only the keep remains
today). The original cathedral was founded by
Ethelbert, King of Kent, in 604 and consecrated by
St Augustine. The present, impressive building was
rebuilt by Gundulf, Bishop of Rochester, in the
11th
century.
In later life writer Charles
Dickens moved into a house at Gad’s Hill. Devotees
of his work should head for the city’s Charles
Dickens centre to learn more. The city features in
his last novel, ‘Mystery of Edwin Drood’, and was
Pip’s home in ‘Great Expectations’. Henry VIII
founded the public school King’s School and the
location of Britain’s first borstal is south west
of the town. |

Rochester Castle - Kent
Tourism Alliance |
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Once a cross-Channel port,
red-roofed Rye is now marooned thanks to centuries
of silt. It has picturesque buildings and cobbled
streets. Most famous resident was author Henry
James who lived in Lamb House from 1898 until his
death in 1916. Another resident, writer E. F. Benson,
made Rye the backdrop to his ‘Mapp and Lucia’
stories and became its mayor in the 1930's.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Once England’s most important seaport (the town is
now two miles inland), Sandwich is one of the UK’s
best-preserved medieval towns. It was from here
that Thomas Becket fled to France and Richard I
landed on his return from the Crusades. The town
was constantly raided by the French who partly
burned it down in the 15th century. That gastronomic
delight ‘the sandwich’ owes its title to the Earl
of Sandwich, John Montagu, who liked cold roast
beef between two slices of toast at the gambling
tables. Royal St George’s Golf Course, where the
Open Championship has been held, lies between the
town and Sandwich Bay. One of its members was Ian
Fleming, creator of James Bond, who used it as a
setting in ‘Goldfinger’. English Heritage manages
Richborough Roman Fort which marks the point where
the Romans launched their successful invasion of
our shores in 43AD.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Located on the High Weald, the
commuter town of Sevenoaks has some of the south
east’s most beautiful countryside, vineyards, old
market towns and historic gardens, not forgetting
numerous castles and important great houses. Knole
House has no less than 52 staircases and 365 rooms
while Chartwell is the former home of Sir Winston
Churchill. There is a Roman villa and castle in
the village of Eynsford while the Eden Valley
Museum resides at Edenhurst. Hever Castle was the
childhood home of Anne Boleyn but was confiscated
by Henry VIII and handed over to Anne of Cleves. |

Chartwell - Kent
Tourism Alliance |
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
The Sheerness Heritage Centre
is a must-see for anyone wishing to investigate
the history of the ‘capital’ of the Isle of
Sheppey, a naval dockyard from the time it was put
on the map by Charles II in the mid-17th
century until its closure in the 1960s. It is now
a huge container port and the disembarkation point
for most of Britain’s imported cars.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
A former coaching town well
used to catering for travellers – it was a
stop-over for Canterbury pilgrims – it is now the
administrative seat of the Swale district and
gateway to the Isle of Sheppey, Henry V rested
here on his way from his victory at Agincourt. In
modern times the town became famous for the
manufacture of brick and paper as well as sailing
barges. Its industrial past is brought to life at
The Court Hall Museum and the Sittingbourne
Heritage Museum. Nestling nearby in
picture-postcard settings are thatched-cottage
hamlets and centuries-old churches.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
A one-time Cinque Port,
Tenterden today lies 10 miles from the sea but has
retained its Kentish charm and is still dominated
by the distinctive tower of the 12th century St.
Mildred’s Church. Arguably one of the county’s
most picturesque towns, it was originally nothing
more than a forest clearing. It eventually rose to
fame as a centre for the wool trade and profited
from Edward III’s decision in the 14th
century to ban the export of raw wool and use
foreign craftsmen to teach Englishmen the skill of
producing finished cloth. Despite its relative
affluence a number of local people joined Wat
Tyler’s Peasant’s Revolt.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
Tilbury has been a port since
ancient times and is now the main container port
for London. It was here in 1588 that Queen
Elizabeth I famously pointed out that although she
had the body of a weak and feeble woman she also
possessed the heart and stomach of a king. Her
comments were made in a speech to troops setting
out to defeat the Spanish Armada. Earlier the huge
Tilbury Fort had been built to prevent invasions
from Holland and France.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|
The town’s origin probably
dates from Roman times and later the Anglo-Saxons
established a settlement here. A market town for
centuries it lies between the North Downs and the
Weald on the River Medway. English Heritage
manages a ruined Norman castle which houses the
tourist information centre. Tonbridge offers the
visitor numerous walks and is a stop on several
major walks, including the 80-mile Wealdway Walk.
|
|
[back
to top] |
|
|
|
|
|

Pantiles - Kent Tourism
Alliance |
A beautiful spa town
officially known as Royal Tunbridge Wells, this
charming town owes its fame to the medicinal
chalybeate spring discovered by a nobleman in
1606. Over the years it became increasingly
popular with the aristocracy and came to rival
both Brighton and Bath. Its oldest surviving
street is the arcaded Pantiles, with its pretty
shops, restaurants and inns, which dates from
1700. King Edward VII recognised the value of the
town in 1909 by granting it ‘royal’ status.
|
|
|
[back
to top] |
| | |