Wye, Kent
Wye | ||
---|---|---|
Shire county | ||
Region | ||
Country | England | |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom | |
Post town | Ashford | |
Postcode district | TN25 | |
Dialling code | 01233 | |
Police | Kent | |
Fire | Kent | |
Ambulance | South East Coast | |
UK Parliament | ||
Wye is a village and former
In 2013, Sunday Times readers voted Wye the third best place to live in the UK.[3]
History
The village's name comes from the
Wye may have been used for worship by the pre-Christian Angles.[4]
Wye became an important communications centre because of a
In 1798, Hasted described Wye as:-
...a neat well-built town, consisting of two parallel and two cross streets, the whole
unpaved. There is a large green in it, built round, on one side of which is the church and college close to it.— Edward Hasted, 1798[7]
Later in the 18th century a turnpike had bypassed the village on the west bank of the River Stour, which the A28 road still does today. Wye railway station was built for the South Eastern Railway line from Ashford to Margate and opened on 1 December 1846.[8]
RAF Wye
During World War I the Royal Flying Corps established an unpaved aerodrome off Bramble Lane near Wye Railway Station. It became RAF Wye in 1918 but closed the following year. As of 2022[update], it is farmland.[9]
Wye Racecourse
Wye Racecourse's inaugural 1849 meeting was held in Fanscombe Valley, an isolated
By 1878, Wye's racing had moved to the
Wye Court
As early as the
Wye was important for being the first
In 1307,
The Manor House at Wye Court was a large building, with a circular
Wye was not isolated from
Queen Elizabeth I granted Wye Court to the Boleym related Hunsden family but by the time of King Charles I, ownership had passed to the Finches, a distant branch of the Earls of Winchilsea.[12] [17][15]
Following the 1572 lightning strike at Wye Church, yeoman farmer Roger Twysden of Wye Court provided timber for reconstruction of the tower.[15] He became High Sheriff of Kent in 1599 but following a fire at his own home he moved from Wye Court to a family dwelling at Chelmington, and then Roydon Hall.[18]
A 1648
By 1732,
Wye Court formerly extended beyond the present day farm, including land to Churchfield Way. Wye College purchased parts of Wye Court for expansion along Olantigh Road in 1925.[22] In 1917, Wye Church agreed to purchase a parcel of Wye Court, to extend its graveyard, from Wanley Elias Sawbridge Erle-Drax, a descendant of John Sawbridge.[23] The Long family purchased their present Wye Court farm and former racecourse on Harville Road in 1925.[24]
In September 1940, a
Wye College
Wye College was founded in 1447 as a
Imperial College scheme
In 2005, Imperial College promoted a controversial scheme to develop Wye College as a centre for
Landscape
Wye stands in the
Culture and community
Wye Farmers Market
51°11′00″N 0°56′17″E / 51.18329°N 0.93801°E
A
Wye Village Hall
51°11′02″N 0°55′56″E / 51.18379°N 0.932162°E
Wye
Wye Library
51°10′56″N 0°56′14″E / 51.18227°N 0.93728°E
Wye Library is at the top of Bridge Street.[33]
Wye Church
51°11′04″N 0°56′16″E / 51.18449°N 0.93791°E
The present
A church on the present site was first constructed in 1290, and considerably more extensive than the present building. There was a longer
In the
In 1548, the
Five years later, Catholic Queen Mary (1553-8) reinstated ornamentation and the lighting of candles, but
In 1572, the steeple was struck by lightning and burned, melting the lead cladding of the spire. Extensive repairs were finally paid for by 1579, but the structure was reported to be in much ruin and decay again by 1581. That may have been caused by the 1580 Dover Straits earthquake. In any event, further repairs to the steeple were carried out in 1582 and 1584.[15]
The five great bells had been damaged by the 1572 fire and were finally, satisfactorily recast in 1593, though once raised back into place their weight would have added considerably to stresses on the steeple. In 1628, the wooden spire was replaced once again, but concerns about the state of the chancel, and risk of the steeple falling were not addressed.[15]
On 22 March 1686, the steeple tower collapsed. Almost all the
Lady Joanna Thornhill, for whom the Lady Joanna Thornhill School is named, died during the period of reconstruction and was buried in the new building she had helped fund.[15]
Since 2011, and as of 2024[update], the incumbent (
They're Middle Class, Middle Aged and Middle England. And all three are working vicars
Saint Ambrose Catholic Church
51°10′54″N 0°56′15″E / 51.18153°N 0.93763°E
Saint Ambrose Catholic Church, off Oxenturn Road, is a chapel of ease built in 1954 for the Parish of Saint Teresa of Avila, Ashford. Mass was celebrated in Wye for the first time since the reformation during World War II, when Wye College's dining hall was made available to Catholic servicemen and local residents. Subsequently, and before the present building was constructed, a former stable at the Old Vicarage on Bridge Street was used as a chapel.[40][15][41]
The pews are from E. W. Pugin's original, demolished church of St Teresa in Ashford. Two possibly 18th century benches came from the chapel at Calehill House, Little Chart, itself demolished in 1952.[40][42]
Sport
Wye Cricket Club plays at Horton Meadow off Cherry Garden Lane. In 2014, it received a £2,000 grant from the Wye Children's Playing Field Charity[43][44]
Wye Tennis Club's five courts, and a
Wye Juniors FC plays football from the former Wye College recreation ground off Cherry Garden Lane. A fire destroyed its pavilion in 2022.[47][48][49]
Lady Joanna Thornhill School
51°11′00″N 0°55′59″E / 51.18327°N 0.93292°E
Lady Joanna Thornhill
Her trust purchased part of
Boys attending Lady Thornhill's charity school were taught in the Old Hall, and girls the Parlour.[6] Their schoolmaster received £30 per annum salary and the school mistress £20, from rent on property purchased in Wye and on Romney Marsh.[52]
Nevertheless, the situation was poor. In spite of the trust's "munificent" annual endowment income of £200, an inspector passed the facilities "but with the greatest reluctance". He observed the Old Hall used as boys' schoolroom "though a fine old room, is ill-adapted for a school and requires constant repair", and bemoaned that "as long as they are allowed to use this old room, the inhabitants of Wye will not lift a finger towards the erection of new schools". His conclusion was that Wye "has about the worst schools in the neighbourhood".[6]
In 1892, Kent and Surrey County Council purchased the old school premises for £1,000, in order to establish the South Eastern Agricultural College there, the school ultimately moving to its current location.[6]
As of 2022[update], Lady Joanna Thornhill School is operated by The Care Foundation Trust.[53]
Edward Vincer[6] | In office 1797 |
William Adams[6] | In office c. 1820, c. 1842 |
Henry Holmes[6] | 1855–1859 |
John Herbert[6] | Appointed 1859, in office 1862 |
Wye School
Wye School is a mixed, secondary free school that opened on Olantigh Road in 2013, and expanded into new buildings in 2017. It is operated by United Learning and includes the former Wye College Kempe Centre and Department of Hop Research site.[54]
Spring Grove School
51°10′59″N 0°55′14″E / 51.18311°N 0.92069°E
Spring Grove School on Harville Road is an independent, fee paying nursery and preparatory school for boys and girls aged 2–11. Its 14 acres (5.7 ha) site includes a forest school.[55]
The 10 bedroom 17th century mansion was formerly home of author Joseph Conrad, politician Baroness Trumpington, and clergyman Thomas Brett.[56][57]
Landmarks
Wye Bridge
51°11′05″N 0°55′49″E / 51.18474°N 0.93017°E
The present
The weir downstream of the bridge was constructed in 1962 to replace an earlier one.[60]
Wye Mill
51°11′04″N 0°55′49″E / 51.184420°N 0.93040°E
The 18th century brick built mill house; timber framed
Wye Crown
To the east of the village, Wye Crown is a
Olantigh
Olantigh has been home to the Kempe, Thornhill, Sawbridge, Sawbridge-Erle-Drax and Loudon families.[67]
Withersdane Hall
In 2019,
Other listed buildings
As of 2022[update], there are 139 separately designated listed buildings in Wye with Hinxhill Parish, including:[69]
Listing | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Old Swan House | 134, Bridge Street | II*
|
15th | [70] |
Old Flying Horse | 1, The Green | II*
|
14th | [71] |
Old Manor House | 36, Church Street | II*
|
16th | [72] |
Yew Trees | Scotton Street | II*
|
17th | [73] |
Transport
Railway
Until 2022, the level crossing gates at Wye railway station had been manually operated.[74] Road closures of typically 10–12 minutes, and sometimes up to 15 minutes, for trains to pass had been reported. One resident produced a telephone app to advise residents when the barrier was closed, and help them choose when to travel.[75][76]
Walking
Wye is on the southern route of the
Cantii Way
The Cantii Way is a 145 miles (233 km), circular cycling route that uses
The route also passes through
People
- Evelyn Mary Dunbar (1906–1960), artist[82]
- Bryan Keith-Lucas (1912–1996), political scientist[83]
- Catharine Macaulay (1731–1791), historian and republican[84]
- Alex Loudon (born 1980), cricketer[87]
- Thomas Kempe (died 1489), Bishop of London[88]
- Thomas Brett (1667–1743), nonjuring clergyman and author[56]
- Joseph Conrad (1857–1924), author[56]
- Sir Charles Scudamore (1779–1849), physician[89]
- Robert Billing (1834–1898), Bishop of Bedford[15][90]
- theologian and author[15]
- John Richardson (born 1950), Dean of Bradford[15][91]
- John Sawbridge (1732–1795), politician[92]
- Samuel Elias Sawbridge (1769–1850), politician[92]
- John Erle-Drax (1800–1887), landowner and politician[92][67]
- Jacob Sawbridge (1665–1748), banker, politician and scoundrel[92]
- Mark Deller (born 1938), conductor and countertenor[93]
- Anne Finch, Countess of Winchilsea (1661–1720), poet[94]
- Heneage Finch, 5th Earl of Winchilsea (1657–1726), nonjuror[94]
- John Locke (1632–1704), philosopher and physician[95]
- Caleb Banks (1659–1696), politician[95]
- Sir John Banks, 1st Baronet (1627–1699), merchant and politician[95]
- lithographer and war artist[96]
- Tobias Boshell (born 1950), musician[97]
- plant pathologist[98]
- Jean Barker, Baroness Trumpington (1922–2018), politician[57]
- Frederick Vincent Theobald (1868–1930), entomologist[25]
In popular culture
Riddley Walker
Author Russell Hoban repurposes Wye as "How" in his 1980, post apocalyptic novel Riddley Walker. Withersdane becomes "Widders Dump"; The Devil's Kneading Trough, "Mr Clevvers Roaling Place", and Pet Street, "Pig Sweet".[99][100][101]
The Perfect Village
In 2006, Wye featured in the BBC Television show The Perfect Village.[102]
Cape Wrath
2007 television drama Cape Wrath includes scenes filmed at Wye College. The Old Lecture Theatre's steeply tiered oak benches masquerade as a London academic institution.[103]
Gadget Man
Female war artists
Centennial
1978 American miniseries
Civil parish
In 1961 the parish had a population of 1989.
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External links
- Wye with Hinxhill Parish Council
- Media related to Wye, Kent at Wikimedia Commons