Ash-next-Sandwich

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Ash
Kent

The War Memorial in Ash
Location
Grid reference: TR285582
Location: 51°16’39"N, 1°16’34"E
Data
Population: 3,365  (2011[1])
Post town: Canterbury
Postcode: CT3
Dialling code: 01304
Local Government
Council: Dover
Parliamentary
constituency:
South Thanet

Ash or Ash-next-Sandwich is a village and parish in the Wingham Hundred of Kent, about three miles west of Sandwich. The longer version of the name is necessary to distinguish the village from that of Ash-next-Ridley, also in Kent.

The civil parish has a population of 2,767, increasing to 3,365[1] at the 2011 census, and includes the villages of Ash, Westmarsh, Ware, Hoaden and Richborough. The Ash Level, by the River Stour, takes up the northern part of the parish.

History

Ash was once on the main thoroughfare from Canterbury to the channel port of Sandwich. It takes its name from the Old English æsc (ash) and shows its toponymy in its first recorded form, Æsce, in about 1100.[2]

A variation may be Esch in 1418.[3]

Ash was once part of the Royal manor of Wingham and having been given to the See of Canterbury in AD 850 by King Athelstan, it became a separate parish in 1282, one of the largest in Kent at that time.

The Harflete or Harfleet family were Lords of the Manor for many years. The family died out in the late seventeenth century.

The Grade-I-listed parish church, is dedicated to St Nicholas [4] and probably built on the site of an earlier Saxon church, dates partly from the 12th century and has a 15th-century tower with a green copper spire (once used as a navigation aid), which now houses a ring of ten bells. It also has the best collection of mediæval monumental effigies in Kent, including one to Jane Kerriel (c. 1455) which reveals a unique horseshoe head-dress.

Ash is known for its market gardens, and at one time had its own brewery and organ maker. There are two vineyards nearby. The village has a primary school, a prep school, doctors' surgery and several shops.

There are many mediæval buildings in the village, including 'Molland House' which is named as a Historic Building of Kent [5] and eleven of the twelve original manor houses. In the same lane are a number of Tudor cottages. The Chequer Inn began life as a timber-framed hall house, dating from about 1500.[6]

From 1916 to 1948 it had a station ("Ash Town") on the East Kent Light Railway, one of Colonel Stephens' lines, which ran between Shepherdswell and Wingham.

The village is also on the Miner's Way Trail. The trail links up the coalfield parishes of East Kent.[7]

References

Further reading

  • Planché, J. R. (1864) A Corner of Kent, or some account of the parish of Ash-next-Sandwich

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Ash-next-Sandwich)