Coxheath

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Coxheath
Kent

Holy Trinity Church
Location
Grid reference: TQ742511
Location: 51°14’1"N, -0°29’49"E
Data
Population: 4,082  (2011[1])
Post town: Maidstone
Postcode: ME17
Dialling code: 01622
Local Government
Council: Maidstone
Parliamentary
constituency:
Maidstone and The Weald

Coxheath is a village and civil parish in Kent, approximately 2½ miles south of Maidstone. It is mainly centred along Heath Road which links the villages of Yalding and Boughton Monchelsea to the west and east, respectively.

A replica beacon pole and the village coat of arms celebrate the role that the village played as a signal bonfire site for many hundreds of years, although there is little visible evidence today of the area's location as a major army camp in the 18th century.

More recently the village was home of a large workhouse that served a large part of mid-Kent during the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. The workhouse is now gone, although its chapel now serves as the village church.

Today, Coxheath is home to the South East Coast Ambulance Service's emergency despatch centre for Kent[2] Esoterically, it was also the birthplace of the World Custard Pie Throwing Championships.

Toponymy

Early documentation shows the name of Coxheath as Cokkyshoth (1422 [3] & 1489) and Coxhoth (1585).[4] The nearby Cock Inn (founded 1568)[5] may point to its etymology.

History

Early history

Although there is little evidence of early settlement, nearby Boughton Monchelsea was the site of a Roman quarry.

In the 16th century, the strategic position of the ridge determined its choice for one of the sites in the network of beacons erected in the year of the Armada of 1588. The first known site of a beacon was on the ridge near what are known today as Amsbury Road and Westerhill Road.

Military Influence

Aside from this, until the eighteenth century the heath was a deserted tract of land that was the haunt of highwaymen. During the 1720s the land started to be used as a venue for cricket matches, becoming known as Coxheath Common cricket ground. This remained the area's main use until 1756, when, with the start of the Seven Years' War, it suddenly became a huge military camp, with 12,000 Hanoverian and Hessian troops quartered there.

Its former sinister reputation soon gave way to a new one - for the number of duels to be fought there, usually over the ladies of nearby Maidstone. The county town had mixed views about the camp. The business community was inclined, on the whole, to be forbearing about the disadvantages, but feelings ran high once or twice between Maidstone Corporation and the military authorities about which should exercise the right to punish soldiers who misbehaved themselves in the town's confines.

Inspired by the Prussian army of Frederick the Great which carried out manoeuvres whereby units "fought" against each other and who became the standard by which other European armies measured themselves, the British decided to hold mock battles themselves. Motivated at the time by fear of invasion from France, a number of training camps were established in southern Britain to allow raw militia and regular troops to train for what seemed an inevitable clash. One site chosen was Coxheath.

The Westminster Magazine covered the events at one such camp held there during the summers of 1778 and 1779. By all accounts, this camp was on a massive scale involving 17,000 troops as well as civilians, many representing the 700 retailers who had come from London to service the soldiers.[6] On 18 September 1778 a mock battle was held on Barming Heath with the Grenadiers, Light Infantry and Dragoons involved.

The camp was the scene of several big reviews of troops by visiting dignitaries, including one by the King himself, George III, and his Queen Charlotte in 1778. The king made it an occasion to knight the Mayor of Maidstone, William Bishop, before he left, which probably did something to reduce the friction between the camp and the nearby town. The last important cricket match was played in 1789, the year of the French Revolution.

It is believed that the nursery rhyme "The Grand old Duke of York", was set in the barracks and the hill involved was one of Linton Hill, Westerhill or Vanity Lane. Soon after the defeat of Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo, most of the troops were discharged. The army encampment was closed in 1815 by an Act of Parliament and then in 1817 the heath was enclosed by local landowners, removing the right of villagers to use it.

Heath Road (now designated as the B2163) which bisects the village, runs in an absolutely straight line for over two miles (although the majority of this section of the road resides within neighbouring Boughton Monchelsea and Linton). The very straight course of this road is the direct result of work by the military engineers.[7]

Coxheath Union

The enactment of the new Poor Law in 1834, led to the creation of the "Coxheath Poor Law Union" in 1835, more commonly known simply as the Coxheath Union. This union also involved many of the other local parishes. A reluctant Maidstone was finally coerced into joining in 1836,[8] bringing the number of parishes involved to 15 and leading to the union's name being officially changed to the Maidstone Union (although contemporary references appear to show that the Coxheath Union name remained in general use).

The Maidstone Union Workhouse was built in 1836 at a site to the south of Heath Road, replacing a smaller workhouse built near the junction of Heath Road and Stockett Lane in 1771.[9][10] By the mid-19th century when Kent was producing half of the entire national crop and something like 50,000 acres were under cultivation, thousands of Londoners were travelling into Kent in search of work in the hop gardens. Eventually, supply outstripped demand and many arrived in the countryside only to be told they were not required. Hungry and destitute, they threw themselves on the mercy of the union house-keepers. In 1867 the workhouse was home for 600 to 700 people.[11]

20th century

The modern civil parish was created in 1964 from areas of East Farleigh and Linton (and to a lesser extent areas from Hunton and Loose),[12] the timing coinciding with large scale housing developments in the village.

The old workhouse was incorporated into Linton Hospital, though this, in the mid-1990s, finally closed and was demolished.

Landmarks

Perhaps the most distinctive landmark in Coxheath is the Holy Trinity church, built in 1884 as the chapel to the workhouse and latterly the former Linton Hospital. It became the Parish church for the village in 1996 following the hospital's closure and falls under the Diocese of Rochester.[13]

A replica beacon bearing the village's coat of arms celebrates the area's role as a signal bonfire site since the time of the Armada stands on the side of the Heath Road opposite the Bird in Hand public house. The original beacon, and its first replica, were blown down and replaced.

Transport

The village does not have a railway station; the nearest station is East Farleigh on the Medway Valley Line. The closest mainline services are via Maidstone East to the north (serving London and Ashford/Canterbury/Ramsgate ) or Staplehurst and Marden to the south on the Southeastern Main Line.

Education

In May 2009 Coxheath Primary School had 238 pupils aged between 4 and 11.[14] Secondary education is provided by schools elsewhere in the Maidstone area.

World Custard Pie Throwing Championship

Custard Pie Flinging at Coxheath, during the World Custard Pie Throwing Championship of 2013

Coxheath has the distinction of being the original home of the World Custard Pie Throwing Championship, the inaugural event of which was held in the village on 24 June 1967.[15] Councillor Mike Fitzgerald, who founded the championships (and latterly served as Mayor of Maidstone in 2006/7),[16] originally organised the event to raise money to build a village hall and was inspired by the Charlie Chaplin comedy film Behind the Screen.[17] More than 80 teams threw custard pies at each other during its heyday dressed in Victorian Era-style costumes or the latest fashion style at that time. In its early days only men were allowed to join as they thought it was unacceptable for women to join in. Before long worldwide teams homed in on the act coming from Japan, Canada, Finland and Germany. The winners of the Custard Pie Trophy were usually women. This tradition came to an end in 1982 at Coxheath when Councillor Fitzgerald moved to Ditton taking the championships with him, and it died out in 1988 after the trophy was lost and never found. However, the competition was revived on 6 June 2007, and it has been held annually in Coxheath ever since.[18]

Notable people

  • Hugh Kennard (1918–95), Battle of Britain pilot and owner of a number of airlines postwar, was born in Coxheath.

Citations

  1. "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11122396&c=Coxheath&d=16&e=62&g=6437502&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1473951010218&enc=1. Retrieved 15 September 2016. 
  2. "South East Coast Ambulance Service | 404". secamb.nhs.uk. http://www.secamb.nhs.uk/about-us/trust-locations. Retrieved 16 August 2011. 
  3. Plea Rolls of the Court of Common Pleas; National Archives; CP 40/647; http://aalt.law.uh.edu/AALT1/H6/CP40no647/aCP40no647fronts/IMG_0419.htm; 8th entry, the place where defendant Nicholas lives
  4. "Coxheath Overview". South West Maidstone Traffic Management Partnership. Archived from the original on 20 August 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080820231026/http://www.trampmaidstone.co.uk/members/coxheath.htm. 
  5. "The Cock Inn". pubexplorer.com. http://www.pub-explorer.com/kent/pub/cockinnboughtonmonchelsea.htm. 
  6. "Prints, Drawings & Watercolors from the Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection". Dl.lib.brown.edu. http://dl.lib.brown.edu/askb/warley_fights.html. Retrieved 16 August 2011. 
  7. "digitalmaidstone.co.uk". digitalmaidstone.co.uk. Archived from the original on 20 January 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160120110049/http://www.digitalmaidstone.co.uk/pdf/081211_BM_cockstreet_MScentre.pdf. Retrieved 18 October 2015. 
  8. Clark & Murfin 1995, p.195
  9. [1]
  10. [2]
  11. http://www.gravesendreporter.co.uk/content/kent/columnists/story.aspx?brand=GVSROnline&category=colbobogley&tBrand=gvsronline&tCategory=columnists&itemid=WeED10%20Sep%202008%2014%3A43%3A47%3A973
  12. "Coxheath CP through time | Administrative history of Parish-level Unit: hierarchies, boundaries". Visionofbritain.org.uk. http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/relationships.jsp;jsessionid=AF2F53AD2B18BFD92207CD6D5A594FFE?u_id=10040358&c_id=10001043. Retrieved 16 August 2011. 
  13. "A Christian presence in every community". achurchnearyou.com. http://www.achurchnearyou.com/parish.php?p=31/280. Retrieved 18 October 2015. 
  14. "School Profile - Coxheath Primary School". Schoolsfinder.direct.gov.uk. 29 June 2009. http://schoolsfinder.direct.gov.uk/8862677/school-profile/. Retrieved 16 August 2011. 
  15. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 30 June 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090630181121/http://www.wcpc.me.uk/. Retrieved 16 May 2009. 
  16. "Residents - Maidstone Borough Council". maidstone.gov.uk. http://www.maidstone.gov.uk/council_and_democracy/councillors,_democracy__elect/mayor_-_general_information.aspx. Retrieved 18 October 2015. 
  17. "Just desserts for pie contestants". BBC News. 15 June 2008. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/kent/7455313.stm. Retrieved 30 April 2010. 
  18. "'World Custard Pie Champs' section, 28 May 2011". www.coxheath.net. http://www.coxheath.net/?pageid=176&textonly=1. Retrieved 16 August 2011. 

References

  • Murfin Lyn, Clark Peter (1995). The History of Maidstone: The Making of a Modern County Town. Alan Sutton, Stroud. ISBN 0-7509-1103-4. 

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Coxheath)