Hawkhurst is a village and civil parish in the borough of Tunbridge Wells in Kent, England. The village is located close to the border with East Sussex, around 12 miles (19 km) south-east of Royal Tunbridge Wells and within the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.
Hawkhurst | |
---|---|
Cottages at The Moor | |
Location within Kent | |
Population | 4,911 (2011)[1] |
OS grid reference | TQ765305 |
District | |
Shire county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | CRANBROOK |
Postcode district | TN18 |
Dialling code | 01580 |
Police | Kent |
Fire | Kent |
Ambulance | South East Coast |
UK Parliament | |
Hawkhurst is virtually two villages: The Moor, to the south, consists mainly of cottages clustered around a large triangular green, while Highgate, to the north, features a colonnade of independent shops, two country pubs, hotels, a digital cinema in a converted lecture hall, and Waitrose and Tesco supermarkets.
There are four designated conservation areas in Hawkhurst parish – one at Sawyers Green, two in Highgate (Highgate and All Saints' Church) and one at The Moor. There are also over 200 listed buildings across the parish.
Since boundary changes in the 2010 general election, Hawkhurst is part of the parliamentary constituency of Tunbridge Wells, represented by Conservative Greg Clark. Prior to this it was in the Maidstone and The Weald constituency, formerly represented by Ann Widdecombe.
Transport
editRoads
editHawkhurst (Kent) lies at the intersection of the A229 and A268 (see map). The village lies on the route of a Roman road which crossed the Weald here.
Railway
editA railway station was built in Hawkhurst in 1892, to the west side of the Cranbrook Road, on the northern edge of the village. It was rarely busy except during hop picking time, when up to 26 special trains per day, each carrying up to 350 Cockneys from London, would arrive at Hawkhurst – up to 10,000 people per day. As this declined, the station became uneconomic, and it was closed in 1961.
The station site is now an industrial area just off the Cranbrook Road, but some original buildings are still standing and in a good state of preservation. The nearest open station is now Etchingham.
Buses
editHawkhurst is served by the Stagecoach South East bus routes 254, 304 and 349. These provide connections to Tunbridge Wells, Wadhurst, Robertsbridge, Battle, Bodiam and Hastings.[2][3][4] The village is also served by the Arriva Southern Counties route 5 to Sandhurst, Staplehurst and Maidstone.[5]
History
editHawkhurst has over 1,000 years of recorded history. The oldest known settlement was the Saxon manor of Congehurst, which was burnt by the Danes in 893 AD. There is still a lane of this name to the east of the village. At the time of the Domesday Book in 1096, the parish was mainly in the Lathe of Wye.
The ancient parish of Hawkhurst straddles the boundaries of four hundreds, including three that by 1295 were parts of the south of the Lathe of Scray in East Kent. The western portion of the parish of Hawkhurst was the entirety of the hundred of Great Barnfield (or East Barnfield). The eastern portion of the parish was partially in the hundred of Cranbrook and the hundred of Selbrittenden. Some acreage of the eastern portion was also in the hundred of Henhurst in the Rape of Hastings, East Sussex.
Etymology
editThe name Hawkhurst is derived from Old English heafoc hyrst, meaning a wooded hill frequented by hawks – 'Hawk Wood'. Hurst (Hyrst) in a place name refers to a wood or wooded area – there are several in West Kent and East Sussex. The 11th-century Domesday Monachorum refers to the village as Hawkashyrst, belonging to Battle Abbey. In 1254, the name was recorded as Hauekehurst; in 1278, it is often shown as Haukhurst; by 1610, it had changed to Hawkherst, which then evolved into the current spelling.[6][7]
Iron industry
editThe village is located towards the Eastern end of the Weald, where iron has been produced from Roman times.[8][9] The Weald produced over a third of all iron in Britain, and over 180 sites have been found across the Weald. Ironstone was taken from clay beds, then heated with charcoal from the abundant woods in the area. The iron was used to make everything from Roman ships to medieval cannon, and many of the Roman roads in the area were built to transport the iron. William Penn, founder of the state of Pennsylvania, is erroneously claimed to have owned ironworks at Hawkhurst.[10] The industry eventually declined during the industrial revolution of the 18th Century, when coal became the preferred method of heating, and could not be found nearby.
Hop growing
editIn the 14th century, Edward III, wanting to break the Flemish (Dutch) monopoly on weaving, encouraged Flemish weavers to come to England. Many chose to settle in the Weald, because it had all the elements needed for weaving – oak to make mills, streams to drive them, and fuller's earth to treat the cloth.
The Kentish domination of the hop industry was stimulated by that same influx of Flemish weavers, who brought with them a taste for beer, and beer making skills. Several wealthy Kentish farmers invested in this new opportunity and approach. Although not the centre of the industry, Hawkhurst Brewery and Malthouse was built in 1850, on the edge of Hawkhurst Moor (now a house).
Hop growing also gave the area its distinctive skyline of hop gardens and oast houses, which were used to dry the hops. Nowadays, most hops are imported. However, at its peak 35,000 acres (140 km2) of hop gardens existed in England, almost all of them in Kent, including much around Hawkhurst. Eventually mechanisation and cheap imports ended the industry, but the oast houses remain.
The Hawkhurst Gang
editA witness before a 1745 Committee of Enquiry estimated there were 20,000 smugglers operating in Britain at that time.[11] An infamous group, the "Holkhourst Genge", terrorised the surrounding area between 1735 and 1749. They were the most notorious of the Kent gangs, and were feared all along the south coast of England. At Poole in Dorset, where they had launched an armed attack on the customs house (to take back a consignment of tea that had been confiscated), several were hanged including Thomas Kingsmill, one of the gang's leaders.
A number of inns and local houses in Hawkhurst claim associations with the gang: high taxation on luxury goods in the early 18th century had led to an upsurge in smuggling, and the gang brought in brandy, silk and tobacco up from Rye and Hastings to be stowed away in hidden cellars and passages, before being sold off to the local gentry. It was reputed that when needed for a smuggling run, 500 mounted and armed men could be assembled within the hour. The Battle of Goudhurst eventually brought their career to an end.[12]
Notable buildings
editIn 1886, the largest Barnardo's home for orphans under six years old was built in Hawkhurst, caring for hundreds of babies.[13] It was known as Babies' Castle, and followed nine inspiring principles, known as "The Nine Nos":
- No destitute child refused
- No Race Barrier
- No Creed Clause
- No Physical Disability
- No Age Limit
- No Money Promise
- No Voting
- No Waiting
- No Red Tape
Unfortunately, the building stood neglected for many years and was eventually redeveloped into a care home for the elderly, Hawkhurst House, in 2017.
In 1903 Gunther and his wife Leonie bought the Tongswood Estate. When he died in 1935, the house, dating from the 1860s, was sold and became St Ronan's School. Earlier owners of Tongswood were the Dunks family, who lived there from about 1500–1750. Sir Thomas Dunk, a wealthy clothier, who died in 1718, bequeathed enough money to build almshouses for six 'decayed housekeepers' (three men and three women) and a village school, plus enough money to buy lands to generate a steady income.
In 1875, the Victoria Lecture Hall was built by Henry Maynard "for the good of the village". It now houses Kino, a digital cinema.
Churches
editHawkhurst has several churches. The parish church of St Laurence stands at the south end of the village known as The Moor, which is the older part of Hawkhurst. It falls within the Diocese of Canterbury, and has as patron the Dean and Chapter of Christ Church, Oxford. It is likely that a church has stood on this site since 1100, or even earlier. After the Battle of Hastings William I gave the Manor of Wye, with rights over a large part of the parish, to the Abbot of Battle. The first mention of the church is in the charter of 1285, and its first rector was Richard de Clyne in 1291. The Chancel and North Chapel are the oldest parts of the church. The Great East Window was built about 1350 and has been described as one of the finest pieces of architecture in the country. Most of the rest of the church dates from around 1450, when the nave was lengthened and raised, the aisles, porches and tower added, and it took on its present appearance. The room over the North porch was used by Battle Abbey officials for rent collecting, and used to be called "The Treasury". In 1574, communion rails were introduced at a cost of 53 shillings, to keep communicants from the altar, the first parish church in England to have done so.[citation needed]
In 1944 a German flying bomb fell in the churchyard, causing considerable damage, and the church was put out of action until 1957. Part of the flying bomb can be seen on the south side at the back of the church.
There is a Roman Catholic church in the High Street, dedicated to St Barnabas, but, apart from Sunday, services are now held at the sister church in Goudhurst. An active Baptist Church is in Cranbrook Road, built partly on the site of the original Rootes cycle factory. A Methodist church on Highgate Hill is now being converted to a domestic dwelling: the congregation now holds services in Dunk's Almshouses.
All Saints' Church, Rye Road was a former chapel of ease for St Laurence's at Highgate. Built in 1861 by Sir George Gilbert Scott, the Church sits on the Highgate ridge with its spire visible from some distance. Grade II listed, the property is a local landmark that sat derelict for over two decades, but has now been sympathetically restored and converted into a number of private apartments.
Hospital
editHawkhurst Community Hospital (formerly the Cottage Hospital) provides 22 beds for patients who do not need to be in an acute hospital.[14]
Education
editHawkhurst is home to three schools, one local authority primary and two independent preparatory schools.
Notable residents
editThe 19th-century astronomer Sir John Herschel (1792–1871) lived in Hawkhurst for thirty years. It was he who named the four moons of Uranus, the planet which had been discovered by his father, Sir William Herschel. He was also a mentor and inspiration to a young Charles Darwin. Herschel lived at Collingwood House in Hawkhurst.
Richard Kilburne, born in London to a Kentish family, was a lawyer and historian. He died at Hawkhurst on 16 November 1678, at age 74. Kilburne is buried in the chancel of the church at Hawkhurst under a flat stone inscribed with Latin declaring him "an ornament and an honor to his country."
Hawkhurst was the birthplace of the Rootes car empire.[15]
Another leading local businessman was Charles Eugene Gunther, head of the Liebig Meat Extract Company, later known as Oxo. He was also Lord Lieutenant of Kent in 1926.
Philip Langridge, the 20th-century operatic tenor, was born in Hawkhurst.
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Hawkhurst Church
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All Saints Church
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Mouse Hall and Toad Hall, Highgate
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Oast
References
edit- ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Archived from the original on 20 October 2016. Retrieved 25 September 2016.
- ^ "Routes 254: Tunbridge Wells to Hawkhurst". Stagecoach South East, August 2020.
- ^ "Route 304: Hawkhurst to Hastings via Battle". Stagecoach South East, August 2020.
- ^ "Route 349: Hawkhurst to Hastings via Bodiam". Stagecoach South East, August 2020.
- ^ "Route 5: Maidstone to Sandhurst". Arriva Southern Counties, August 2020.
- ^ The Place Names of Kent, Judith Glover ISBN 0-905270-61-4
- ^ The Origin of English Place Names, P.H.Reaney ISBN 0-7100-2010-4
- ^ Delany, M.C.; Mary Cecilia Delany (1921). "Internet Archive". The historical geography of the Wealden iron industry. Benn Brothers Ltd, London. p. 25. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
- ^ "Open Plaques". Hawkhurst. pp. Note #1470. Archived from the original on 25 July 2010. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
- ^ The Gombach Group (1997–2007). "Living Places". Pennsylvania Forges and Furnaces. Julia Gombach. Retrieved 21 August 2009.
- ^ Policing and War in Europe, Louis Knafla. Greenwood Publishing Group, p.179,"KENT RESOURCES: Smuggling - the Groombridge and Hawkhurst Gangs". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
- ^ http://www.kent-life.co.uk/people/battle_of_goudhurst_1_2006855, "KENT RESOURCES: Goudhurst, Kent". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 31 December 2015.
- ^ Higginbotham, Peter. "Babies' Castle, Hawkhurst, Kent". childrenshomes.org.uk. Retrieved 11 September 2022.
- ^ https://www.nhs.uk/Services/hospitals/Overview/DefaultView.aspx?id=46263 "NHS Hawkhurst Hospital"
- ^ Plaque #1475 on Open Plaques
External links
edit- Includes list of Hawkurst Gang members
- Hawkhurst Fish Farm
- Wealden Iron
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.