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Towncouncil Community Magazine
Inside - all your local events, clubs & groups FolkestoQuarternly | 2020 e TownCouncil community magazine Photo: Pearl Sandilands 16th ISSUE Folkestone Town Council: 01303 257946 QUALITY GOLD The Town Hall, 1-2 Guildhall Street, Folkestone, CT20 1DY www.folkestonetc.kentparishes.gov.uk “Self storage made easy” • Grade A Security Open 7 Days Free Quotes • • Bu siness & Hou sehold BuTsel:in e01303ss & 850Hou 630sehold www.folkestone-storage.co.ukSelf Storage Self Storage “Self storageWindow made easy” cleaning“Self storage made easy” Local, friendly and reliable service Windows, frames, sills and doors with every clean. Call or text Jeremy 07709119996 Channel Cars Channel Cars We offer a full range of taxis from 4, 5, 6 7, 8 seats, black cabs, eastate cars, saloons and executive cars We now have a number of cars out every night from midnight to 6am We will get you to any destination in the UK, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week Call 01303 252 252 Welcome Happy New Year and welcome to our Spring edition of the Folkestone Town Council Plumbing, Heating, Gas & Building Services • Complete Bathroom Design, Installation & Repairs Community Magazine. Folkestone Town • Central Heating, Installation, Repairs & Upgrades • Unvented Hot Water Systems • Call Outs Council Officers and Councillors hope you had • WIAPS Approved for Mains Water Installation & Repairs a happy and healthy Christmas and New Year. • • Wall & Floor Tiling • Property Maintenance & Building Renovations Folkestone Town Council were once again very Fully insure Free estimates proud of the Christmas light switch on event T: 01303 278292 M: 07798 824538 and amazing fireworks which followed. The www.gsuttonplumbing.co.uk [email protected] crowds gathered from early in the day and • Minor Works enjoyed a variety of activities. -
Sanctuary Magazine Which Exemplary Sustainability Work Carried Westdown Camp Historic Environments, Access, Planning and Defence
THE MINISTRY OF DEFENCE SUSTAINABILITY MAGAZINE Number 43 • 2014 THE MINISTRY OF DEFENCE SUSTAINABILITY MAGAZINE OF DEFENCE SUSTAINABILITY THE MINISTRY MOD celebrates thirty years of conserving owls and raptors on Salisbury Plain Climate change adaptation Number 43 • 2014 and resilience on the MOD estate Spend 2 Save switch on the success CONTACTS Foreword by Jonathan Slater Director General Head Office and Defence Infrastructure SD Energy, Utilities & Editor Commissioning Services Organisation Sustainability Team Iain Perkins DIO manages the MOD’s property The SD EUS team is responsible for Energy Hannah Mintram It has been another successful year infrastructure and ensures strategic Management, Energy Delivery and Payment, for the Sanctuary Awards with judges management of the Defence estate as a along with Water and Waste Policy whole, optimising investment and Implementation and Data across the MOD Designed by having to choose between some very providing the best support possible to estate both in the UK and Overseas. Aspire Defence Services Ltd impressive entries. I am delighted to the military. Multi Media Centre see that the Silver Otter trophy has Energy Management Team Secretariat maintains the long-term strategy Tel: 0121 311 2017 been awarded to the Owl and Raptor for the estate and develops policy on estate Editorial Board Nest Box Project on Salisbury Plain. management issues. It is the policy lead for Energy Delivery and Payment Team Julia Powell (Chair) This project has been running for sustainable estate. Tel: 0121 311 3854 Richard Brooks more than three decades and is still Water and Waste Policy Implementation thriving thanks to the huge Operational Development and Data Team Editorial Contact dedication of its team of volunteers. -
Queen's Printer Version
STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS 2002 No. 998 NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE, ENGLAND The Shepway Primary Care Trust (Establishment) Order 2002 Made ---- 25th March 2002 Coming into force 1st April 2002 The Secretary of State for Health, in the exercise of the powers conferred on him by sections 16A(1), (2) and (3) and 126(4) of, and paragraph 1 of Schedule 5A to, the National Health Service Act 1977(a) and of all other powers enabling him in that behalf, following compliance with the consultation requirements contained in regulations made under section 16A(5) of the Act(b), hereby makes the following Order: Citation, commencement and interpretation 1.—(1) This Order may be cited as the Shepway Primary Care Trust (Establishment) Order 2002 and shall come into force on 1st April 2002. (2) In this Order, unless the context otherwise requires— “operational date” is to be construed in accordance with paragraph 1(2) of Schedule 5A to the Act; “the trust” means the Shepway Primary Care Trust established by article 2 of this Order. Establishment, operational date and name of the Primary Care Trust 2.—(1) There is hereby established with effect from 1st April 2002 a Primary Care Trust to be called the Shepway Primary Care Trust. (2) The operational date of the trust shall be 1st April 2002. Area of the trust 3. The trust shall be established for the area specified in the Schedule to this Order. (a) 1977 c.49; section 16A was inserted by the Health Act 1999 (c. 8) (“the 1999 Act”), section 2(1); section 126(4) was amended by the National Health Service and Community Care Act 1990 (c. -
Hythe Ward Hythe Ward
Cheriton Shepway Ward Profile May 2015 Hythe Ward Hythe Ward -2- Hythe Ward Foreword ..........................................................................................................5 Brief Introduction to area .............................................................................6 Map of area ......................................................................................................7 Demographic ...................................................................................................8 Local economy ...............................................................................................11 Transport links ..............................................................................................16 Education and skills .....................................................................................17 Health & Wellbeing .....................................................................................22 Housing .........................................................................................................33 Neighbourhood/community ..................................................................... 36 Planning & Development ............................................................................41 Physical Assets ............................................................................................ 42 Arts and culture ..........................................................................................48 Crime .......................................................................................................... -
Meadow View, Canterbury Road, Swingfield, Dover, CT15 7HX £485,000
Meadow View, Canterbury Road, Swingfield, Dover, CT15 7HX £485,000 Meadow View Canterbury Road, Swingfield, Dover A most charming detached property set in large landscaped gardens with outside garden room enjoying some beautiful rural views. NO CHAIN. Situation Meadow View is beautifully situated along the Oak, Cherry and Chestnut the current vendors have Canterbury Road with open countryside views and recently commissioned extensive quality outside wonderful walks. Together with the neighbouring landscaping. On entering through the five bar gate villages of Densole and Hawkinge, there are a good the pretty extensive border planting accompanies range of local amenities including Garden Centre, the sweeping blocked paved driveway offering Shops, Schools, Doctors, Dentist, Care Home, ample parking for almost 6 cars. These beautiful Public Houses, Community Halls, Sports and other gardens incorporate several decorative areas of facilities. Bus services run through Swingfield neat artificial lawn, Cotswold and ornate paving and giving access to the south, on the coast, to the quality fencing. In addition there is a fabulous Channel Tunnel town of Folkestone and, to the contemporary outside garden/office with electricity north, the historic Cathedral City of Canterbury; and light perfect for anyone now working from each offering a wider range of shopping, home. Access to the front of the property via a high recreational and educational facilities; together with timber gate where you will find a pretty timber high speed main line train services to London from veranda with steps leading to the front door. The Folkestone; with the travel time to St Pancras being current vendors have commissioned further some 59 minutes. -
Her Brother John in Plot 56 and Another Brother John Barber, Forty Years Her Senior
her brother John in plot 56 and another brother John Barber, forty years her senior. They had a William in plot 309. son. After John’s death, she married secondly James Baker, a coppersmith. They lived in Hythe Plot 306 Ovenden High Street. Her parents are buried in plot 589, her sister Elizabeth (Brizeley) in plot 58, Hannah Inscription In loving memory/of/Charlotte/the th (Maycock) in plot 186. beloved wife of/John Ovenden/who died May 12 1890/aged 73 years Plot 309 Day He giveth His beloved sleep Stone is broken and needs raising Charlotte Ovenden nee Ward was born in Kent in Plot 310 Ovenden about 1824. She married John Ovenden, a carpenter in 1844. They had four children. Their Inscription In/memory of/William/the beloved daughters are buried in plot 302, a son, John, in husband of/Lucy Ovenden,/who entered into plot 56 and their second son William in plot 309 rest/25th Nov. 1894,/aged 42 years Plot 307 My strength is made perfect in weakness Inscription Illegible God be with you till we meet again Plot 308#1 Also/Lucy Ovenden,/died/18 March 1941/aged 86 years. Inscription Illegible except for ‘JW 1878/CW’ on footstone Also of our dear Winnie who fell asleep/6th August 1901, aged 17 years Plot 308 Barber and Baker Hannah Louisa Pepper/died 11th Feb ???/aged 81 Inscription I know that my Redeemer liveth years Sacred/to the memory of/John Barber/who William Ovenden was born in Hythe, the second nd th departed this life/March 22 1873/in the 88 year son of John Ovenden, a carpenter, and Charlotte. -
Dungeness Complex Sustainable Access and Recreation Management Strategy (SARMS)
Dungeness Complex Sustainable Access and Recreation Management Strategy (SARMS) Supporting Document 1 – Nature Conservation Background and Assessment Prepared for Shepway District Council and Rother District Council Version 1.0 July 2017 Dungeness Complex Sustainable Access and Recreation Management Strategy Appendix Document 1 – Nature Conservation Background and Assessment www.theplacesteam.com The Places Team is the trading name of a consortium of environmental professionals working in partnership. The Places Team are: Val Hyland BA Dip LA (Hons) Landscape Architecure, PG Cert Urban Design Silverthorn, Scotton Street, Wye, Kent. TN25 5BZ [email protected] 00 44 1233 812195 - 00 44 7740 185381 The legal trading entity of Val Hyland is V Hyland Associates Ltd. Registered in England number 8953928. Registered Office: Silverthorn, Scotton Street, Wye, Kent, TN25 5BZ Alternative email: [email protected] Irene Seijo BA (Hons) Landscape Architecture, MA 42 Dane Park Road, Ramsgate, Kent. CT11 7LS [email protected] 00 44 7827 859269 The legal trading entity of Irene Seijo is Seijo Associates Ltd. Registered in England number 09385063. Registered Office: 42 Dane Park Road, Ramsgate, Kent. CT11 7LS Alternative email: [email protected] Sharon Bayne BSc (Hons) MSc LLM (Dist) MCIEEM 8 Herts Crescent, Loose, Maidstone, Kent. ME15 0AX [email protected] 01622 746316 - 07984 067055 The legal trading entity of Sharon Bayne is Blackwood Bayne Ltd. Registered in England Registered in England, number 8423224. Registered Office: 8 Herts Crescent, Loose, Maidstone Kent ME15 0AX Alternative email: [email protected] www.blackwoodbayne.co.uk Dungeness Complex Sustainable Access and Recreation Management Strategy Appendix Document 1 – Nature Conservation Background and Assessment Contents Introduction .................................................................................................................... -
Lydd and Walland Marsh This Area Is Locally Considered the Western End
Lydd and Walland Marsh This area is locally considered the western end of the Romney Marsh and is composed of six parishes and communities. Lydd Town, Dungeness and Lydd‐on‐Sea Lydd Town is an established community which traditionally included Dungeness and Lydd‐on‐Sea. As a corporate member of the Cinque Ports it acted as a source of wealth through both legal and illegal activities derived from its proximity to the coast, as did the requirement to provide ships for the sovereign’s military excursions. Today it acts as a “District Centre” in Shepway District Council’s core strategy, i.e it provides daily shopping facilities, a medical centre and has various commercial and industrial undertakings that provide for some local employment. To the east of the town is Lydd Airport which is presently subject to planning application for extension of its services. The number 11 bus service operates from Lydd Town to Lydd‐on‐Sea and Dungeness before serving the Marsh villages on its route to Ashford. The parishes of Snargate, Brookland and Brenzett are being organised as a “living” together with All Saints’ Church (Lydd) and St.Peter’s at Greatstone. The parish and town councils of the designated area of Lydd and Walland Marsh undertake some activities together and have made common cause with the higher local government tiers. Should the area be considered as a viable unit then it would allow for two councillors serving a ward of 6,168, a variance of 3.9% variance. 2013 2018 Lydd Town 2665 2864 Lydd‐on‐Sea 1172 1172 Dungeness 943 943 Total (a) 4780 4979 Old Romney 175 175 Brookland 367 395 Brenzett 281 302 Snargate 103 103 Ivychurch 214 214 Total (b) 1140 1189 Grand total 5920 6168 . -
The Folkestone School for Girls
Buses serving Folkestone School for Girls page 1 of 6 via Romney Marsh and Palmarsh During the day buses run every 20 minutes between Sandgate Hill and New Romney, continuing every hour to Lydd-on-Sea and Lydd. Getting to school 102 105 16A 102 Going from school 102 Lydd, Church 0702 Sandgate Hill, opp. Coolinge Lane 1557 Lydd-on-Sea, Pilot Inn 0711 Hythe, Red Lion Square 1618 Greatstone, Jolly Fisherman 0719 Hythe, Palmarsh Avenue 1623 New Romney, Light Railway Station 0719 0724 0734 Dymchurch, Burmarsh Turning 1628 St Mary’s Bay, Jefferstone Lane 0728 0733 0743 Dymchurch, High Street 1632 Dymchurch, High Street 0733 0738 0748 St. Mary’s Bay, Jefferstone Lane 1638 Dymchurch, Burmarsh Turning 0736 0741 0751 New Romney, Light Railway Station 1646 Hythe, Palmarsh Avenue 0743 0749 0758 Greatstone, Jolly Fisherman 1651 Hythe, Light Railway Station 0750 0756 0804 Lydd-on-Sea, Pilot Inn 1659 Hythe, Red Lion Square 0753 0759 0801 0809 Lydd, Church 1708 Sandgate Hill, Coolinge Lane 0806 C - 0823 Lydd, Camp 1710 Coolinge Lane (outside FSG) 0817 C - Change buses at Hythe, Red Lion Square to route 16A This timetable is correct from 27th October 2019. @StagecoachSE www.stagecoachbus.com Buses serving Folkestone School for Girls page 2 of 6 via Swingfield, Densole, Hawkinge During the daytime there are 5 buses every hour between Hawkinge and Folkestone Bus Station. Three buses per hour continue to Hythe via Sandgate Hill and there are buses every ten minutes from Folkestone Bus Station to Hythe via Sandgate Hill. Getting to school 19 19 16 19 16 Going -
A Guide to Parish Registers the Kent History and Library Centre
A Guide to Parish Registers The Kent History and Library Centre Introduction This handlist includes details of original parish registers, bishops' transcripts and transcripts held at the Kent History and Library Centre and Canterbury Cathedral Archives. There is also a guide to the location of the original registers held at Medway Archives and Local Studies Centre and four other repositories holding registers for parishes that were formerly in Kent. This Guide lists parish names in alphabetical order and indicates where parish registers, bishops' transcripts and transcripts are held. Parish Registers The guide gives details of the christening, marriage and burial registers received to date. Full details of the individual registers will be found in the parish catalogues in the search room and community history area. The majority of these registers are available to view on microfilm. Many of the parish registers for the Canterbury diocese are now available on www.findmypast.co.uk access to which is free in all Kent libraries. Bishops’ Transcripts This Guide gives details of the Bishops’ Transcripts received to date. Full details of the individual registers will be found in the parish handlist in the search room and Community History area. The Bishops Transcripts for both Rochester and Canterbury diocese are held at the Kent History and Library Centre. Transcripts There is a separate guide to the transcripts available at the Kent History and Library Centre. These are mainly modern copies of register entries that have been donated to the -
Notes on the Probable Course of the Roman Road from Lympne to Dover
Archaeologia Cantiana Vol. 62 1949 NOTES ON THE PROBABLE COURSE OF THE ROMAN ROAD FROM LYMPNE TO DOVER By IVAN D. MARGARY, F.S.A. THE existence of a Roman road connecting Lympne with. Dover is attested by its actual appearance upon the diagrammatic map known as the Peutinger Table. No traces of the road had, however, been identified, and the growth of Folkestone and its outskirts has now put much of the probable route beyond direct investigation. Some notes were put forward by the late S. E. Winbolt in his book Roman Folkestone (Methuen, 1925) as a tentative approach to the subject, and it was with a view to testing these on the ground that the present investigation was made. There is general agreement that the existing road along the old cliffs at Lympne represents the Roman road. East of Shipway Cross it bends a good deal and is probably an old ridgeway track rather than an engineered road, but there seems no reason to disregard it as a part of the route on that account. We thus arrive at the crossing of the Brockhill Stream, just at the western entry to Hythe, and it seems clear that the trackway is directly continued by an old lane, now in part only a footpath, straight up the hill north-eastwards to Saltwood, making no doubt for the hills inland. Consideration of the eastward course of a Roman road from this point is very largely determined by the topography, which here shows marked features some of which would entirely preclude the making of a direct road. -
Investigations and Excavations During the Year
http://kentarchaeology.org.uk/research/archaeologia-cantiana/ Kent Archaeological Society is a registered charity number 223382 © 2017 Kent Archaeological Society INVESTIGATIONS AND EXCAVATIONS DURING THE YEAR I. REPORTS ON EXCAVATIONS SUPPORTED BY THE SOCIETY Interim Report by Mr. P. J. Tester, F.S.A., on, the Excavations at Boxley Abbey. By the courtesy of our member, Sir John Best-Shaw, the Kent Archmological Society has conducted excavations during 1971 at Boxley Abbey for the purpose of determining the monastic layout. Five members of the Excavations Committee have taken an active part in the investigation and assistance has been given by the Archaeo- logical Society of Sir Joseph Williamson's Mathematical School, the Lower Medway Archwological Research Group and the Maidstone Area Archmological Group. A preliminary site-plan was prepared by Mr. J. E. L. Caiger who also conducted a resistivity survey. Excavation has consisted mainly of cross-trenching to locate buried footings, and by this means considerable additions have been made to our knowledge of the plan. In general, the arrangement as shown in the late F. C. Elliston- Erwood's plan in Arch. Cant., lxvi (1953) has been proved to be substantially correct, with several qualifications. The church was of the same form and dimensions as he showed except that the transepts were longer (north-south) and contained three eastern chapels each instead of two. Some walls discovered in a small excavation by Mr. B. J. Wilson in 1959 and 1966 are now seen to be related to the night-stair in the south-west corner of the south transept.