Edward Hasted the History and Topographical Survey of the County

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Edward Hasted the History and Topographical Survey of the County Edward Hasted The history and topographical survey of the county of Kent, second edition, volume 7 Canterbury 1798 <i> THE HISTORY AND TOPOGRAPHICAL SURVEY OF THE COUNTY OF KENT. CONTAINING THE ANTIENT AND PRESENT STATE OF IT, CIVIL AND ECCLESIASTICAL; COLLECTED FROM PUBLIC RECORDS, AND OTHER AUTHORITIES: ILLUSTRATED WITH MAPS, VIEWS, ANTIQUITIES, &c. THE SECOND EDITION, IMPROVED, CORRECTED, AND CONTINUED TO THE PRESENT TIME. By EDWARD HASTED, Esq F. R. S. and S. A. LATE OF CANTERBURY. Ex his omnibus, longe sunt humanissimi qui Cantium incolunt. Fortes creantur fortibus et bonis, Nec imbellem feroces progenerant. VOLUME VII. CANTERBURY PRINTED BY W. BRISTOW, ON THE PARADE. M.DCC.XCVIII. <ii> <blank> <iii> TO JOSEPH MUSGRAVE, Esq. OF KYPIER, IN THE BISHOPRIC OF DURHAM. SIR, BE pleased to accept this tribute of grateful respect for the friendship you have honored me with, a friendship begun in our early days, when we first imbibed the rudiments of our education at the same seminary of learning in the county of Kent, whilst we were under our respective paternal roofs in the iv same neighbourhood. Your property in the county, your encouragement of learning, and of this History in particular in the earliest publication of it, joined with your well-known liberality of sentiment, will, I am certain, induce you to continue your patronage to this Edition, and the Author of it, which will add to those savors you have already conferred on him, who is, with much respect, SIR, Your most faithful and obliged humble Servant, EDWARD HASTED. LONDON, Dec. 10, 1798. <v> INDEX. A. Abbeys degraded to prio= ries, 79. Abbot, the heirs of, possess part of Little Hengham, in Wood= church, 234. Abergavenny, Nevils, lords, 387. Abulcorum Præpositus Numeri, 164. Acrise, manor of, 161. Acton, Sir William, 63. ACTON, borough of, 431; MA= NOR, in Charing, 443. Adams, Thomas, possesses Great Swifts, in Cranbrooke, 107. Æstuary, large one, near Chart= ham, 301. Æthelferth, 569. Albermarle, earl of, 175; Kep= pel’s, earls of, barons of Ash= ford, 537. Alcock, Stephen, 434; John, 579. Alderseys, of Bredgar, 134. Aldon, Thomas de, 323, 372, 387, 396, 423, 492, 532. Aldon’s, of Wye, 352. ALDONS MANOR, in Wye, 347, 352. ALDRINDEN MANOR, in Sand= hurst, 161; Aldrinden’s, ibid. Alexander, Edward, 174. Alfred, king, 245. Alien priories, account of, 289. ALLARDS, in Biddenden, 134. Allards, Richard, 140; John, 161; of Biddenden, account of, 134. Allen, Jeffry, 76; William, present rector of Little Chart, 463. Allen’s, 61. Alston, Sir Thomas, —— devi= sees of, possess Molash par= sonage, 297. Amhurst, John, of Boxley ab= bey, 257. Amyas’s, 418. Amos, Thomas, 295. Ancos, Thomas, 228. Anderida, where situated, 164, 166. Andredwald, now the Weald, 164. Andredceaster, now Newenden, 164, 105. Andrew, John, 364. Andrews, John, present vicar of Marden, 64 Andrews, Mary, possesses De= langle-house, in Chartham, 298. Andrews’s, of Buckingham= shire, 502, 509, 586. Angel, John, 562, 565. ANGLYE MANOR, 97; FARM, in Cranbrooke, 98. APELDORE, parish of, 250; MANOR of, 226, 227, 245. Apperfields garden, in Eastwell park, 334. Appulderfield’s, of Challock, 279; account of, 334, 336, 338, 339. vi Apslie, Sir Allen, 434; Aps= lie’s, 540. Apulby, John de, 373, 375. Ardern, Thomas, 23. Argal, Richard, 33, 34; Tho= mas, 211; Argal’s, 305. Arnold, Robert, 443. Arsic, William de, 390. Ashbee, John, possesses Barling MANOR, in Egerton, 452. Ashbye, Richard, possesses a house at Newland green, 464. Ashenedene, MANOR OF, 371. Ashenden’s, 209. ASHERINDEN, EAST, MANOR, in Tenterden, 209. Asherinden, chantry, ibid. Ashe= rinden’s, ibid. ASHFORD, parish and town of, 526; MANOR OF, 136; vale, 264. Ashford, Keppel’s, barons of, 537. Aske’s hospital, in Hoxton, 503, 586. Asshetesford, William de, 528. At-Dean’s, 336. Atelsworth, in Challock, 569. At-Hale, family of, 227. Athol, Strabolgie’s, earls of, 271, 325, 560, 561; Isabel, countess of, 271. Atkinson, William, 416. Atwater, Robert, 436. Atweld, William, 54, 57. Aucher, Nicholas, 189; Henry, 198; Sir Anthony, 488, 529; Aucher’s, 210. Aucher’s, of Losenham, account of, 167, 169, 193, 444; Au= cher’s, of Westwell, 422; of Willesborough, 567. Aumere, estate of, 26. Aurelius, Marcus, emperor, 370. Austen, Thomas, 396; Mabel= la, 476; Edward, of God= mersham, 136; resides at Godmersham park, 325. Austen, Francis Motley, posses= ses Triggs, in Goudhurst, 68; Frame FARM, in Benenden, 174. Austen, Edward, possesses Wi= therling MANOR, 294; Eg= garton MANOR, in Godmer= sham, 327; Crundal and Hadloe MANORS, and Little Winchcombe, in Crundal, 373; Barton MANOR and Buckwell, in Boughton Aluph, 390, 392. Austen, Sir Robert, heirs of, possess a house in Tenterden, 205. Austen’s, of Tenterden, 92; account of, 205, 207, 215, 223, 256, 282, 283, 489, 562, 565. Austen’s, of Goudhurst, 76. Austen’s, alias Astyn’s, of Godmersham, 323. AYDHURST MANOR, in Sta= plehurst, 124. Ayerst, Rev. Robert G. 147. Aylesford, Finch’s, earls of, 167. B. Babb, H. S. possesses Read MA= NOR, in Marden, 60. Bachelors, in Egerton, 449. Back, Kennet, 564; Back’s, 353. Badlesmere’s, 44, 116, 272, 516, 585, 586. Bagnall’s, of Frittenden, 117, 118, 222. Bagnall, Anne and Elizabeth, possess the advowson of Frit= tenden rectory, 118. Baieux, Odo, bishop of, 43, 175, 269, 308, 310, 312, 374, 401, 409, 418, 420, 473, 503. Baker, John, lessee of Graveney parsonage, 36; possesses Hawk= hurst lodge, 148; lessee of Chartham MANOR, 304; vii Baker’s, of Hawkhurst, 147, 154. Baker, John, 125; Roger, 426. Baker’s, of Sissinghurst, 59; account of, 100, 102, 104, 110, 115, 116, 118, 121, 127, 128, 137, 144, 186, 187, 206, 208, 209, 423, 472, 587, 591. Baker’s, of Frinsted, 294; of Great Chart, 508. Baldock, William, 25, possesses part of the demesne lands of Shalmesford MANOR, 309; Giles, 420. Baldwin, William, possesses Love= lace MANOR, 490; Frid FARM, in Bethersden, 491. Ballard’s, of Horton, account of, 313. Baliol, Alexander, 271, 560. Bancroft, Dr. John, 138. Banks, Sir Joseph, 326. Baptists, meeting-houses for, 93, 120, 159, 204; dipping place for, 110. Bacons water, in Kennington, 546. Bargains, scandalous ones made by king Henry VIII. 322. Bargrave, dean, 304; Bargrave’s, 204, 440. Barham’s, of Teston, 441. Barker, Mary, 193; Thomas, possesses Streetend-house, in Willesborough, 572. BARKLEY, hundred of, 130. Barley’s, 277. BARLINGS MANOR, 452; Hole Farm, in Egerton, ibid. Barling’s, of Egerton, 449, 452, 454. Barnard, Christopher Vane, lord, 293. BARNEFIELD, WEST, alias LITTLE, hundred of, 73; GREAT, 142. Baron’s, 451. Barre, Henry de, 375. Barrell’s, of Rochester, 447. Barrey’s, of Charing, 442. Barrey’s, of Sevington, 573, account of, 578, 581, 582. Barrett, dame Sarah, 34, 232; Thomas possesses Brockton MANOR, in Charing, 440; Barrett’s, of Ickham, 152, 372, 440. Barrett, Stephen, present rector of Hothfield, 526, 539. Barrow, Susan, 554; Barrow’s, of Hinxhill, 563, 564, 565; of Boughton Aluph, 394. Barrows, or tumuli, 41. Bartelot, Hooker, possesses Chel= mington MANOR, 501; Bar= telot’s, account of, 501, 510. BARTON MANOR, in Boughton Aluph, 385, 389. Basing’s, account of, 246. Bate’s, of Chilham, 288. Bathurst, Rev Thomas, pos= sesses Brickwall house, 66; Bokingfold MANOR, 69; Rev. Richard possesses Finch= cock’s SEAT, 72; lessee of parsonage-house and glebe in Goudhurst, 87. Batteley, archdeacon, 267. Battel abbey, 97, 137, 143, 153, 334, 353, 364, 366, 587. Baylis, in Challock, 337, 338. Beacons in Kent, 145; antient one, description of, 215. Beaghan’s, of Sissinghurst, 101, 102. Beale, John, 69; Richard pos= sesses River hall, in Bidden= den, 136; a feoffee of Bid= denden school, 139. Beale’s, of Biddenden, 136, 140. Bealde, Thomas, 45. BEAMSTON MANOR, in West= well, 417. Beameston, John de, 418. Beardsworth, John, possesses Maplesden MANOR, 184; viii Halden, alias Lambyns court, 187; the Hole, 188, and Frensham, in Rolvenden, 195. Beaufitz, family of, 443. Beavor, yoke of, in Ashford, 526, 536. Beavor, John, 536. Beaumont’s, 451. Beckford, John, clerk, 315. Bedford, Ingelram, earl of, 375. Bedford’s, 394; account of, 504. BEDGEBURY MANOR and SEAT in Goudhurst, 73; chancel, 84. Bedgebury, Joane de, 66; John de, 73. Bedleston, Little, HAMLET, in Brooke, 381. Bekewell’s, 391. Belcher, William, M. D. 68; Samuel, 446. Belke, Thomas, D. D. 282; Belke’s, 283, 288, 310. Belknap, Sir Robert, 177, 352, 391; Belknap’s, 549, 585, 586. Bellamont’s. See Beaumonts. Bello, Abbatia de. See Battle abbey. Beltyng’s, of Wye, 351. Bending, Peter de, 414, 457, 462. Benge, William, Capellanus, 236. Benger’s, 9. BENENDEN, parish of, 173. Benenden, John de, 175, 176. Bennet’s, 174. Benson, Thomas, 295. Bentham’s, 282. Beornulph, king of Mercia, 321. Bere, Quickmannus de, 505. Berham’s, of Sissinghurst, 100, 109. Berkeley, Sir Maurice, 77; lady, a justice of the peace, 520. Berry, Peter, 133; John, lessee of Brooke MANOR, 383. Bertin, St. abbey of, 289. Best, John, 15; Best’s, 2. Best, George, possesses OLD SURRENDEN, alias BE= THERSDEN MANOR, 489. Best’s, of Kennington, 549, 553. Beswick, William, of Spelmon= den, 77. BETHERSDEN, parish of, 485. Betmonteston. See Beamston. Betnam’s wood HAMLET, in Cranbrooke, 104, 107. BETTENHAM MANOR, in Cran= brooke, 104. Bettenham’s, of Cranbrooke, account of, 104, 109, 471, 476. BETHERINDEN, alias SAND= HURST MANOR, 160. Betterinden, John de, 160. Bewbridge, borough of, 341. Bewle river, 64. BEWPER MANOR, in Fritten= den, 115. Beyham abbey, 107. BIDDENDEN, parish of, 130; PLACE, 131; HOUSE, 133; denne of, 457. Bigge, Egelric, 456. Bilsington, MANOR OF, 558. BILTING HOUSE, in God= mersham and Wye, 320, 350; COURT MANOR, 320. Bilting’s, of Bilting, 320, 351. Bing’s, of Wickhambreaux, 294. Bishop, Richard, 69; Samuel possesses Newenden, Losen= ham, and Woods MANOR, 167, 168.
Recommended publications
  • Canterbury Road, Boughton Aluph, Kent, TN25 4EW LOCATION Contents
    Canterbury Road, Boughton Aluph, Kent, TN25 4EW LOCATION Contents LOCATION Introduction An invaluable insight into your new home This Location Information brochure offers an informed overview of Canterbury Road as a potential new home, along with essential material about its surrounding area and its local community. It provides a valuable insight for any prospective owner or tenant. We wanted to provide you with information that you can absorb quickly, so we have presented it as visually as possible, making use of maps, icons, tables, graphs and charts. Overall, the brochure contains information about: The Property - including property details, floor plans, room details, photographs and Energy Performance Certificate. Transport - including locations of bus and coach stops, railway stations and ferry ports. Health - including locations, contact details and organisational information on the nearest GPs, pharmacies, hospitals and dentists. Local Policing - including locations, contact details and information about local community policing and the nearest police station, as well as police officers assigned to the area. Education - including locations of infant, primary and secondary schools and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for each key stage. Local Amenities - including locations of local services and facilities - everything from convenience stores to leisure centres, golf courses, theatres and DIY centres. Census - We have given a breakdown of the local community's age, employment and educational statistics. Gould Harrison 1 Middle Row, High Street, Ashford, TN24 8SQ 01233 646411 LOCATION The Property CANTERBURY ROAD, BOUGHTON ALUPH £410,000 x3 x2 x1 Bedrooms Living Rooms Bathrooms Where you are CANTERBURY ROAD, BOUGHTON LOCATION ALUPH £410,000 Gould Harrison 1 Middle Row, High Street, Ashford, TN24 8SQ 01233 646411 CANTERBURY ROAD, BOUGHTON LOCATION ALUPH £410,000 Gould Harrison 1 Middle Row, High Street, Ashford, TN24 8SQ 01233 646411 LOCATION Features Internal inspection strongly recommended.
    [Show full text]
  • Letter C Introduction This Index Covers Volumes 110–112 and 114–120 Inclusive (1992–2000) of Archaeologia Cantiana, Volume 113 Being the Preceding General Index
    Archaeologia Cantiana - On-line Index 2012 GENERAL INDEX TO VOLUMES CX 1992 ( 110 ) to CXX 2000 ( 120 ) Letter C Introduction This index covers volumes 110–112 and 114–120 inclusive (1992–2000) of Archaeologia Cantiana, volume 113 being the preceding General Index. It includes all significant persons, places and subjects with the exception of books reviewed. Volume numbers are shown in bold type and illustrations are denoted by page numbers in italic type or by (illus.) where figures occur throughout the text. The letter n after a page number indicates that the reference will be found in a footnote and pull-out pages are referred to as f – facing. Alphabetisation is word by word. Women are indexed by their maiden name, where known, with cross references from any married name(s). All places within historic Kent are included and are arranged by civil parish. Places that fall within Greater London are to be found listed under their London Borough. Places outside Kent that play a significant part in the text are followed by their post 1974 county. Place names with two elements (e.g. East Peckham, Upper Hardres) will be found indexed under their full place name. T. G. LAWSON, Honorary Editor Kent Archaeological Society, February 2012 Abbreviations m. married Ald. Alderman E. Sussex East Sussex M.P. Member of Parliament b. born ed./eds. editor/editors Notts. Nottinghamshire B. & N.E.S. Bath and North East f facing Oxon. Oxfordshire Somerset fl. floruit P.M. Prime Minister Berks. Berkshire G. London Greater London Pembs. Pembrokeshire Bt. Baronet Gen. General Revd Reverend Bucks.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Bay Tree Cottage Boughton Aluph Local Village Property the Villages Local Village Property #Thegardenofengland
    The Vlles 1 Bay Tree Cottage Boughton Aluph LOcaL VILLAGE PROPERTY The Villages LOcaL VILLAGE PROPERTY #TheGardenOfEngland 1 Bay Tree Cottage The Lees, Boughton Aluph, Ashford, Kent TN25 4HH A character semi-detached Grade II Listed cottage with 2 bedrooms, 2 bath/shower rooms, kitchen with pantry, inglenook fireplace in sitting room and cottage gardens. Overlooking the popular cricket green in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, within Wye school catchment and easy access to Ashford International Station (with fast train to London St Pancras only 37 minutes). Guide Price £350,000 Accommodation • Entrance porch • Entrance hall • Kitchen/Dining area • Pantry with stairs to cellar/basement • Utility room • Sitting room • Ground floor shower room • Family bathroom • 2 Double Bedrooms • Separate cloakroom Outside • Front and rear gardens • Shed • Potting shed • Original well Communications • Wye – 1.6 miles • Ashford (International Station) – 3.7 miles • Canterbury – 12 miles Situation from build in cupboards and enjoying fabulous views over the cricket pitch. There is an en- 1 Bay Tree Cottage is located directly in front suite bathroom too off the master bedroom of the popular cricket green in Boughton Aluph with bath, w/c and wash basin. There is also a with its cricket pavilion and being only a short separate cloakroom with w/c and wash basin walk to The Flying Horse pub. Boughton Aluph is a pretty Kentish village Gardens close to the old Pilgrims Way in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The heart of the The front of the property is set back from the village is the picturesque green overlooked by road attached to the neighbouring property.
    [Show full text]
  • POLITICS, SOCIETY and CIVIL WAR in WARWICKSHIRE, 162.0-1660 Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History
    Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History POLITICS, SOCIETY AND CIVIL WAR IN WARWICKSHIRE, 162.0-1660 Cambridge Studies in Early Modern British History Series editors ANTHONY FLETCHER Professor of History, University of Durham JOHN GUY Reader in British History, University of Bristol and JOHN MORRILL Lecturer in History, University of Cambridge, and Fellow and Tutor of Selwyn College This is a new series of monographs and studies covering many aspects of the history of the British Isles between the late fifteenth century and the early eighteenth century. It will include the work of established scholars and pioneering work by a new generation of scholars. It will include both reviews and revisions of major topics and books which open up new historical terrain or which reveal startling new perspectives on familiar subjects. It is envisaged that all the volumes will set detailed research into broader perspectives and the books are intended for the use of students as well as of their teachers. Titles in the series The Common Peace: Participation and the Criminal Law in Seventeenth-Century England CYNTHIA B. HERRUP Politics, Society and Civil War in Warwickshire, 1620—1660 ANN HUGHES London Crowds in the Reign of Charles II: Propaganda and Politics from the Restoration to the Exclusion Crisis TIM HARRIS Criticism and Compliment: The Politics of Literature in the Reign of Charles I KEVIN SHARPE Central Government and the Localities: Hampshire 1649-1689 ANDREW COLEBY POLITICS, SOCIETY AND CIVIL WAR IN WARWICKSHIRE, i620-1660 ANN HUGHES Lecturer in History, University of Manchester The right of the University of Cambridge to print and sell all manner of books was granted by Henry VIII in 1534.
    [Show full text]
  • BIDDENDEN PARISH COUNCIL 5 January 2021 CORRESPONDENDCE LIST 1 – 31 December 2020 RECEIVED 31/12 Emergency Road Closure – Te
    BIDDENDEN PARISH COUNCIL 5 January 2021 CORRESPONDENDCE LIST 1 – 31 December 2020 RECEIVED 31/12 Emergency Road Closure – Tenterden Road, Biddenden for 11 days – 26/12 31/12 Email from KALC re government update 30/12 Acknowledgement from Damian Green MP re Castletons Oak email 30/12 Email from South Eastern re train time changes 30/12 Email from contractor re white lines 30/12 Email from parishioner re sewage issue x 2 30/12 Emergency Road Closure – Gill Lane, Mersham – 29/12 29/12 Email from Parishioner re sewage issue 29/12 Email re Community Project fund payment x 2 29/12 Email from Squash Club re Community project fund 28/12 Email from KALC re Op Fennell Stakeholder Briefing 27/12 Emails re Southern Water sewage issue x 3 25/12 Email from KALC re Op Fennell Stakeholder Briefing 24/12 24/12 Emails from Community Project Fund recipients re payment methods 24/12 Email from contractor re slide 24/12 Email re next Ashford Kalc meeting on 6/1/21 23/12 ABC Planning Committee minutes 23/12 ABC Covid-19 Business update 23/12 ABC Parish Briefing re Waterbrook Traffic Management 23/12 Email re car park lamp from contractor 23/12 Urgent Road Closure – Steeds Lane, Kingsnorth – 6/1/21 23/12 Urgent Road Closure – Mill Hill, Chilham – 4/1/21 23/12 Emergency Road Closure – Naccolt Road, Wye – 4/1/21 23/12 KALC re daily update from Gov.uk for covid-19 22/12 Temporary closure – Harris Lane, High Halden, Tenterden – 20/1/21 22/12 Temporary Closure – Mulberry Hill, Chilham, Ashford – 18-22 January 2021 22/12 Temporary Closure – Benenden Road Biddenden
    [Show full text]
  • Watermans Boughton Lees Local Village Property the Villages Local Village Property #Thegardenofengland
    The Vlles Watermans Boughton Lees LOCAL VILLAGE PROPERTY The Villages LOCAL VILLAGE PROPERTY #TheGardenOfEngland Watermans Boughton Lees, Ashford, Kent TN25 4HP A stylish detached, 4 bedroomed family home, boasting light and well presented accommodation, enjoying mature established good sized gardens, with Eastwell Manor parkland to the rear, and to the front a lovely outlook over the popular cricket green with rural views beyond, set in an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and within Wye school catchment and within easy reach of Ashford International Station with high speed (HS1) trains to London St Pancras in only 37 minutes. Offers in excess of £600,000 Accommodation Ground Floor – Spacious Entrance Hall • Sitting Room • Dining Room • Fitted Kitchen • Conservatory • Utility Room • Cloakroom. First Floor – Landing with balcony • Three double bedrooms and further bedroom currently used as a study • Bathroom and separate W.C. Gardens Off-road Parking • Garage • Front garden • Good sized rear garden • Terrace • Greenhouse • Shed. Communications • Wye – 1.6 miles • Ashford International Station – approx. 3.7 miles • Canterbury – approx. 12 miles Situation over, dishwasher, fridge, freezer and there is a Watermans is set just off the Faversham Road, ceramic one and half bowl sink with drainer. overlooking the popular cricket green in From the kitchen is a part glazed door leading Boughton Aluph with its cricket pavilion and to a covered walkway and the useful utility/ within walking distance of The Flying Horse laundry room and garage with light and power. pub. Boughton Aluph is a pretty Kentish village To complete the ground floor is the cloakroom close to the old Pilgrims Way in an Area of off the Entrance Hall.
    [Show full text]
  • 2014/531 BIDDENDEN PARISH COUNCIL APPROVED Minutes of the Parish Council Meeting Held on Tuesday 8Th July 2014 at 7.30 Pm in Th
    BIDDENDEN PARISH COUNCIL APPROVED Minutes of the Parish Council Meeting held on Tuesday 8th July 2014 at 7.30 pm in the Village Hall, Biddenden Present: Cllr C Friend (Chair) Cllr T Lupton Cllr E Cansdale Cllr S Parks Cllr P Harris Cllr E Stevenson-Rouse Cllr A Lidgett Cllr J Tydeman Mrs A Swannick (Clerk) Cllr N Bell, ABC 1 parishioner attended. 1. Apologies for absence Apologies were received from Cllr D Boulding due to personal commitments. 2. Parishioners’ questions None. 3. Any Declarations of Interest in items on the agenda There were no declarations of interest in items on the agenda. 4. Any changes to the Register of Members Interests There were no changes. 5. Minutes of the Parish Council meeting held on 10 June 2014 There were no amendments or comments on the minutes and they were therefore declared a true and proper record of the meeting. Proposed by: Cllr P Harris Seconded by: Cllr E Stevenson-Rouse. Unanimous. 6. Matters for information not on the agenda The Chairman stated that there was an item of correspondence on the Correspondence List which may be taken in closed session. 7. Report by Cllr Bell, ABC Cllr Bell stated that a planning officer would be looking further into concerns regarding planning application 14/00781/AS. He hoped the PC would support the planning officer. A new junction on the M20, 10A, is being created to support the building development around Ashford. The government has now upgraded it to a full junction. If this junction had 2014/531 not gone ahead there would be even more demand for housing development around Biddenden.
    [Show full text]
  • Cumulative Index - Volumes 1 to 15 (Pages in Volume 4, Number 2 Were Through Error Not Numbered Insecutively
    Cumulative Index - Volumes 1 to 15 (Pages in Volume 4, Number 2 were through error not numbered insecutively. Page numbers in all other issues are correct. In this Index the corrected page numbers for the Number 2 issue of Volume 4 will be given, so that librarians and others may correct their issues for binding. The page ambers as they appear in the issue are given additionally in parentheses to distinguish them from the corresponding page numbers in issue Number I of volume 4.) A lst Infantry Division 12:211 24 Karat Club 13:327 42nd "Rainbow" Infantry Division 13:348-355 46th Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteers 12:96 48th Evacuation Hospital 12:465 57th Regiment 12:98 100 Club 13:141 243rd Coast Artillery (National Guard) 13:364 A and H Manufacturing Company 9:345 A and Z Chain Company 2:76; 10:295; catalog cover 10:illust 401-402 A. Feder and Son 9:247, 253 A.Z.A. of Pawtucket 10:185, 186, 187 "A Brief Note on Some `Jewish' Diseases of the Nervous System" by Stanley M. Aronson, M.D. and Betty E. Aronson, M.D. 12:333-339 "A Civil War Hero and His Rhode Island Family: Leopold Karpeles" by Joyce Blackman 12:93-113 "A Common Civil Purpose: The Jewish Role in the Providence Community Fund" by Adam Harris Skolnik 13:220- 243 A Key to the Language of America by Roger Williams 11:345 "A Population in Transition: The Role of Demographic Data" by Stanley M. Aronson, M.D. and Betty E. Aronson, M.D.
    [Show full text]
  • Biddenden Design Statement
    BIDDENDEN DESIGN STATEMENT THE BIDDENDEN PARISH DESIGN STATEMENT STEERING GROUP, BIDDENDEN PARISH COUNCIL c/o THE PARISH CLERK, 15 ORCHARD GLADE, HEADCORN, KENT, TN27 9SS www.biddenden.gov.uk BIDDENDEN DESIGN STATEMENT ‘Kent is a county of timber and brick, not stone, not slate and not thatch’ CLIFTON-TAYLOR, 1972 ‘New developments in and around Ashford are designed to fit naturally into the Kent vernacular and reflect the strong sense of place, characteristic of the local area. Red clay tiled roofs and walls in brick, hung tile, painted weatherboard and painted brick and render should dominate.’ ATKINS - DESIGN, ENVIRONMENT & ENGINEERING CONSULTANTS (PLANNING, LANDSCAPE & HERITAGE DEPT.) 2002 This Design Statement has been formally adopted by Ashford Borough Council as Supplementary Planning Guidance. The document expresses many views held by local people involved in its preparation. In adopting the Design Statement the Council is not necessarily supporting all of these opinions but is undertaking to take into account the ‘design guidelines’ included in the text when making planning decisions. The Council does not have sufficient powers as planning authority to require these ‘design guidelines’ to be met in all cases - the active support and commitment of developers, landowners and householders is also essential. The points noted under ‘Local Views’ reflect the views of local residents expressed during the preparation of this document, and have not been adopted by Ashford Borough Council. ©2003 The Biddenden Parish Design Statement Group No part of this document may be reproduced for any purpose without the express written permission of the Biddenden Parish Design Statement Group BIDDENDEN DESIGN STATEMENT INTRODUCTION In common with many other parishes and villages around the country, the residents of Biddenden greatly value the community in which we live and wish to protect its character and way of life.
    [Show full text]
  • Parish Clerks
    CLERKS OF PARISH COUNCILS ALDINGTON & Mrs T Hale, 9 Celak Close, Aldington, Ashford TN25 7EB Tel: BONNINGTON: email – [email protected] (01233) 721372 APPLEDORE: Mrs M Shaw, The Homestead, Appledore, Ashford TN26 2AJ Tel: email – [email protected] (01233) 758298 BETHERSDEN: Mrs M Shaw, The Homestead, Appledore, Ashford TN26 2AJ Tel: email – [email protected] (01233) 758298 BIDDENDEN: Mrs A Swannick, 18 Lime Trees, Staplehurst, Tonbridge TN12 0SS Tel: email – [email protected] (01580) 890750 BILSINGTON: Mr P Settlefield, Wealden House, Grand Parade, Littlestone, Tel: New Romney, TN28 8NQ email – [email protected] 07714 300986 BOUGHTON Mr J Matthews (Chairman), Jadeleine, 336 Sandyhurst Lane, Tel: ALUPH & Boughton Aluph, Ashford TN25 4PE (01233) 339220 EASTWELL: email [email protected] BRABOURNE: Mrs S Wood, 14 Sandyhurst Lane, Ashford TN25 4NS Tel: email – [email protected] (01233) 623902 BROOK: Mrs T Block, The Briars, The Street, Hastingleigh, Ashford TN25 5HUTel: email – [email protected] (01233) 750415 CHALLOCK: Mrs K Wooltorton, c/o Challock Post Office, The Lees, Challock Tel: Ashford TN25 4BP email – [email protected] (01233) 740351 CHARING: Mrs D Austen, 6 Haffenden Meadow, Charing, Ashford TN27 0JR Tel: email – [email protected] (01233) 713599 CHILHAM: Mr G Dear, Chilham Parish Council, PO Box 983, Canterbury CT1 9EA Tel: email – [email protected] 07923 631596 EGERTON: Mrs H James, Jollis Field, Coldbridge Lane, Egerton, Ashford TN27 9BP Tel:
    [Show full text]
  • The Northern Clergy and the Pilgrimage of Grace Keith Altazin Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected]
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2011 The northern clergy and the Pilgrimage of Grace Keith Altazin Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Altazin, Keith, "The northern clergy and the Pilgrimage of Grace" (2011). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 543. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/543 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. THE NORTHERN CLERGY AND THE PILGRIMAGE OF GRACE A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of History by Keith Altazin B.S., Louisiana State University, 1978 M.A., Southeastern Louisiana University, 2003 August 2011 Acknowledgments The completion of this dissertation would have not been possible without the support, assistance, and encouragement of a number of people. First, I would like to thank the members of my doctoral committee who offered me great encouragement and support throughout the six years I spent in the graduate program. I would especially like thank Dr. Victor Stater for his support throughout my journey in the PhD program at LSU. From the moment I approached him with my ideas on the Pilgrimage of Grace, he has offered extremely helpful advice and constructive criticism.
    [Show full text]
  • Some Problems of the North Downs Trackway in Kent
    http://kentarchaeology.org.uk/research/archaeologia-cantiana/ Kent Archaeological Society is a registered charity number 223382 © 2017 Kent Archaeological Society SOME PROBLEMS OF THE NORTH DOWNS TRACKWAY IN KENT By REV. H. W. R. Liman, S.J., M.A.(0xon.) THE importance of this pre-historic route from the Continent to the ancient habitat of man in Wiltshire has long been recognized. In the Surrey Archceological Collections of 1964 will be found an attempted re-appraisal of its route through the county of Surrey. Although the problems connected with its passage through Kent are fewer owing to its being better preserved, there are some points which I think still deserve attention—the three river crossings of the Darenth, the Medway and the Stour; the crossing of the Elham valley; and the passage to Canterbury of the branch route from Eastwell Park, known as the Pilgrims' Way. It may be worth while, before dealing with the actual crossings, to note a few general characteristics. Mr. I. D. Margary—our most eminent authority on ancient roads in Britain—has pointed out the dual nature of this trackway. It com- prises a Ridgeway and a Terraceway. The first runs along the crest of the escarpment. The second runs parallel to it, usually at the point below the escarpment where the slope flattens out into cultivation. In Kent for the most part the Terraceway has survived more effectually than the Ridgeway. It is for much of its length used as a modern road, marked by the familiar sign 'Pilgrims' Way'. Except at its eastern terminus the Ridgeway has not been so lucky, although it can be traced fairly accurately by those who take the trouble to do so.
    [Show full text]