Sundridge, Kent

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Sundridge
Kent

St Mary's Church, Sundridge
Location
Location: 51°16’0"N, -0°7’60"E
Data
Post town: Sevenoaks
Postcode: TN14
Local Government
Council: Sevenoaks
Parliamentary
constituency:
Sevenoaks

Sundridge is a village and ancient parish in the Codsheath hundred of Kent. The village is located on the A25 road to the east of Westerham. It lies within the Kent Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and within the Metropolitan Green Belt. It is approximately 21 miles south of London. Its church is Anglican and dedicated to St Mary.[1]

Notable residents

  • Anne Seymour Damer (1748–1828), the daughter of Field Marshal Henry Seymour Conway and Caroline Conway, who would become a noted sculptor and the owner of Horace Walpole's famous estate, Strawberry Hill.[2]
  • Rt Hon. Michael Fallon, MP (born 1952), Secretary of State for Defence, 2014–2017.
  • Christopher Wordsworth (1807–1885), the youngest brother of the famous poet William Wordsworth. Christopher would later become Bishop of Lincoln.[3]
  • Beilby Porteus (1731–1809), Bishop of London and leading abolitionist, who spent several weeks in the autumn of each year at his small country home at Bishop's Court, Sundridge.[4] He died at Fulham Palace and was buried at St. Mary's Church, where his tomb lies in the churchyard.

Sundridge Aerodrome

Around 1910 an aerodrome with a three-bay timber-framed corrugated-iron-clad hangar was opened north of Chevening Road, by Russian Prince Serge de Bolotoff, a sales representative for Albatros Flugzeugwerke, Berlin, who had gained experience of aircraft design at the Voisin works, Billancourt, France and at Brooklands in Surrey. He set up a small aircraft factory at Sundridge Aerodrome shortly before World War One in the three-bay hangar. A two-seat De Bolotoff SDEB 14 biplane was built there and registered to the de Bolotoff and Company in August 1919. Around 1927 the factory building became a bus depot, but during World War II it reverted to military use with the Royal Air Force, providing storage and salvage facilities for crash-damaged aircraft. The aerodrome closed in 1945 but the hangar survives today in commercial use; it is believed to be the oldest aircraft hangar in the country and was designated as a Grade II listed building in 1988.[5][6]

Notes

  1. Collins, Mark. "Patron Saints List for the Roughwood Churches Album". Roughwood web site. Mark Collins. http://www.roughwood.net/ChurchAlbum/ChurchSaints.htm#St_Mary. 
  2. Margaret King, Ill Fares the Land; A Social History of the Village of Sundridge from 1719-1826 (Sundridge: Friends of St. Mary's Church, 2008), 71.
  3. Margaret King, Ill Fares the Land; A Social History of the Village of Sundridge from 1719-1826 (Sundridge: Friends of St. Mary's Church, 2008), 71.
  4. Margaret King, Ill Fares the Land; A Social History of the Village of Sundridge from 1719-1826 (Sundridge: Friends of St. Mary's Church, 2008), 57.
  5. Woodhead, Lindy (2008). Shopping, Seduction & Mr Selfridge. Profile Books. pp. 147–8. ISBN 978-1-86197-169-2.  De Bolotoff married Rosalie Selfridge, daughter of London store owner Harry Selfridge, in 1918.
  6. National Heritage List 1244242: 3 Aircraft Hangars to Former Sundridge Aerodrome at Coombe Bank Farm

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Sundridge, Kent)

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