Articles of interest in Aylesford
Park Wood is a mixture of private housing and a former council estate on the south east extremity of Maidstone in Kent, England. The former council properties are now managed by Golding Homes. In 2006, a large part of Park Wood was redevoloped, and …
Oldbury hillfort is a large Iron Age hill fort near the village of Ightham, Kent, England.
Oare Mill is a Grade II* listed house converted Tower mill in Oare, Kent, England that was built in the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century.
The Oare Marshes on the north coast of Kent to the north west of Faversham bordering The Swale.
Nettlestead Green, like its near neighbour Nettlestead lies in the Medway valley SW of Maidstone in Kent.
Medway Ports, incorporating the Port of Sheerness and Chatham Docks is part of Peel Ports, the second largest port group in the United Kingdom. The Ports authority is also responsible for the harbour, pilotage and conservancy matters for 27.3 nauti…
A Commissioners' church is an Anglican church in the United Kingdom built with money voted by Parliament as a result of the Church Building Act 1818, and subsequent related Acts. Such churches have been given a number of titles, including "Commissio…
Kit's Coty is a small village on the slopes of Blue Bell Hill between Maidstone and Rochester in the English county of Kent.
The John Brunt V.C. is a public house in Paddock Wood in Kent. Originally named The Kent Arms, on 3 September 1947 the pub was formally renamed John Brunt V.C. in honour of an English soldier, John Brunt, who won the Victoria Cross in the Second Wor…
Holcombe Manor was built in 1887 as a house by the first mayor of Chatham, George Winch (September 20, 1842 – February 22, 1914), for him and his wife Mary Clarke Bluette to live in. Mary was brought up in the village of Holcombe Rogus, Devon. Winch…
The Headcorn & Maidstone Junction Light Railway was a proposed railway in Kent. An Act of Parliament authorised its construction, but only a short branch at Tovil, opened to goods only, was built.
Hadlow Cricket Club was one of the early English cricket clubs, formed in the early to mid eighteenth century.
HVDC Kingsnorth was a high-voltage direct-current (HVDC) transmission system connecting Kingsnorth in Kent to two sites in London. It was at one time the only application of the technology of high voltage direct current transmission for the supply o…
Great Mill or Ride's Mill is a Grade II listed smock mill just off the High Street in Sheerness, Kent, England that was demolished in 1924, and now has a new smock tower built on it as residential accommodation.
Great Culverden Park is a small, 9½ acre, woodland, about half a mile from the centre of Tunbridge Wells in Kent, England west of Mount Ephraim and bounded entirely by houses along Royal Chase, Knightsbridge Close, Culverden Park Road and Mt.Ephraim.
Gravesend West was a railway station on the Gravesend West Line which served Gravesend in Kent. It opened in 1886 and was, for some time, a regular destination for boat trains from London which linked with steamers on the station's pier to ferry pas…
Goudhurst is a closed railway station on the closed Hawkhurst Branch in Kent, England.
Frittenden Road was a railway station on the Kent and East Sussex Railway which closed in 1954. The wooden station building had been derelict for years was destroyed by fire in October 2003.
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