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Faversham
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{{infobox England place with map|
|Place= Faversham
|Map = Faversham - Kent dot.png
|Population =
|District=
Swale
|County=
Kent
|Region=
South East England
|Ceremonial=
Kent
|Traditional=
Kent
|Constituency=
|Police=
|PostalTown= FAVERSHAM
|PostCode= ME13
|DiallingCode= 01795
|GridReference= TR015615
|Euro=
South East England (European Parliament constituency) South East England
}}
'''Faversham''' is a town in
Kent,
England, in the district of
Swale, roughly halfway between
Sittingbourne and
Canterbury, Kent Canterbury. The parish of Faversham (Feversham) includes an ancient sea port and market town, some 47 miles east of
London, on the London to
Dover A2 road and 18 miles east north-east of
Maidstone in Kent.
History and features
Established as a settlement before the
Roman Empire Roman conquest, Faversham was held in
Royal Family royal demesne in
811, and is further cited in a charter granted by Kenulf, the King of
Mercia. Faversham was recorded in the
Domesday Book as Favreshant. The town has regularly throughout its history obtained curious royal privileges and charters.
In
1147 an
abbey was established in Faversham by
Stephen of England King Stephen, who along with his son,
Eustace IV of Boulogne Eustace, the Earl of Boulogne and
Matilda of Boulogne, his consort, was later buried there, thus acquiring a special status as one of only a few churches outside London where an English king was interred.
Sir
Thomas Culpeper was later granted Faversham Abbey by
Henry VIII of England during the
Dissolution of the Monasteries about
1536. The abbey was demolished directly after the dissolution and much of its masonry taken to
Calais to reinforce that town's defences against
France French interests. In
1539, the ground upon which the abbey had stood, along with nearby land was passed to Sir
Thomas Cheney,
Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports. Queen Elizabeth's Grammar School has been built on the abbey site.
The town of Faversham is known in Kent as a
harbour and market community but is also at the centre of the county's
brewing industry — home to
Shepherd Neame, a brewery, acquired from the last heir of the Shepherd family by Percy Beale Neame in the
1840s. Abbey Street and the centre of the town include a remarkable collection of original
medieval houses. Perhaps as remarkable is that much of it was intended for demolition as recently as the 1960s, until the value of the buildings, now listed, was recognized and local people began a determined fight to restore and preserve the area. The parish church (of St. Mary of Charity), with its unusual flying spire, is another gem, having a most unexpected interior, whose
acoustics make it an exceptional venue for musical performances. It was restored and transformed by Sir
George Gilbert Scott, known for his
St Pancras Station, the
Foreign Office and many college and cathedral buildings, in
1874. (His son, Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, designed the classic once-ubiquitous 1930s phone boxes, of which Faversham has one in its Fleur collection).
The attractive and historic central area, and especially the part-pedestrianized parts of the old but vibrant town between the station and the creek, attracts visitors, who can learn about the town's history and features at the "Fleur-de-Lis" centre, which provides tourist information and houses a museum. There is still a regular market several days each week in the market square where the old Guildhall stands. In the same part of the town there is an early and largely-unchanged but functioning cinema and the modern Arden Theatre, named after the local playwright. All the nearby streets feature interesting old pubs, some exceptional
Alms houses, shops and a growing collection of art galleries and restaurants, including one which specializes in local fare, such as Kentish wines and
Luddenham beef and pork. The Shepherd Neame brewery contributes inviting smells on weekdays and also offers tours for visitors. The town formerly also housed Fremlins and Whitbread breweries. One of these has recently been converted into a supermarket but retains many of its nineteenth century features. (Being in the town centre, an unusual characteristic for such large supermarket chains, there is much debate about whether this - and its car park - attracts business to other local shops. The pull of a farmer's market and an exceptional farm-shop in nearby
Macknade - next to a
Michelin-starred restaurant on the outskirts of Faversham on the A2 - also contributes to this controversy). There are hopes that imaginative uses may be found for the rest of the interesting town-centre former brewery buildings; most of Shepherd Neame's brewing now takes place in modern buildings closer to the creek but their head office is an attraction in itself. Old sail-powered Thames barges are repaired, re-built and moored along the picturesque old creekside and the works of local artists is revealed in open houses linked to the
Canterbury Festival each autumn.
The area is now sought-after by retired people and by commuters to London. The abundance of characterful and period homes in Faversham and neighbouring villages (see
Swale) combine with a number of recent developments in the town to provide a lively housing market; for commuters, the good motorway links and the regular train services to Victoria make it a manageable distance to travel. This will be made quicker from 2007, when the proposed fast link connects via the
Channel Tunnel Rail Link to
Dartford International railway station (previously to have been known as
Ebbsfleet), and London's
Stratford, London Stratford and
St Pancras station St Pancras stations.
The attractions of a lively medieval town near the fascinating
Oare marshes and coast and to the inviting
North Downs countryside and its villages combine with the proximity to
Canterbury, the
Bluewater shopping centre and employement opportunities in London and locally. The area's reputation has not been enhanced, however, by the fact that, for a less-skilled minority, local employment has proved more elusive, especially since the local fruit and hop-picking and packing industries and other agricultural activities have needed much less labour. Recent media references to "Chaversham", following a spate of reports of criminal activities and a drug culture (hardly unique to the area), have not been welcomed locally where it is felt that such issues need to be seen in the context of the town's many rather more noticeable charms.
The years during the
World War I First World War saw an uncertain time for the breweries. In the first instance, there was the scarcity of labour from
1915 which soon became evident, as a number of employees turned to offers of higher wages elsewhere, including the local
ammunitions works. The explosion at the gunpowder works (see below) and subsequent changes in the local economy have, however, meant that Shepherd Neame is now one of the area's more promising industries despite a decline in consumption of traditional bitter beer. It now also makes Indian and other beers under licence and, in common with many other "gastro-pubs", its largely-Kentish pub franchise is as noted for its food as its owner's beers, following trends in food consumption and drink-driving laws. It is both one of the most profitable breweries in Britain and also claims to be its oldest.
By contrast, the ammunition industry in the area is now extinct and the part of the Oare marshes where the 1916 gunpowder explosion (see below) took place is now even more isolated and has been an important reserve for birds, attracting binocular-toting enthusiasts to view the many sepcies of migrants. There is an interesting information centre (as well as other bird hides) near the site of the former Harty ferry over the Swale to the isle of Sheppey.
Faversham holds the record for the highest temperature recorded in the
United Kingdom UK. 38.5C (101.3F) was recorded at the
Brogdale Brogdale Horticultural Trust on
10 August 2003.
Faversham munitions works
Like the brewery, munitions production was not new to Faversham. It was some time about 1753 that the first of Faversham’s gunpowder factories was established, leading over subsequent years to a growth in development, that by 1786 saw in total three such factories in and around Faversham.
The first real problem arose shortly after the introduction of a new material, with the discovery in Germany in 1846 of guncotton, the first high explosive that was distinct from the more usual forms of propellant such as gunpowder, in terms of its superior destructive effect. Under agreement with the innovator, a professor of chemistry at
Basle, Dr Christian Schonbein, the first guncotton plant in the world opened at the Faversham Marsh Works later that year.
On
14 July 1847 an explosion killed 18 workers and injured others. The detonation was heard as far away as
Maidstone and only 10 of the dead could be identified. With only one accident of a less serious nature in 1899, the Cotton Powder Plant continued to prosper and by 1915 had expanded to cover a 500-acre (2 km²) site including in its range of products along with
guncotton,
cordite,
gelignite,
nitroglycerine, detonators,
dynamite and distress rockets.
The plant offered well-paid work to men as far afield as
Herne Bay and
Margate, Kent Margate and Faversham had become for a short period one of the centres of the nations munitions industry.
To lessen the expense of production for the war effort a cheap but highly volatile chemical
amatol was introduced into the process of bomb and shell manufacture at the Explosives Loading Company (ELC) site that had opened in 1912 next to the guncotton plant.
The Great Explosion at Faversham
At 14:20 on Sunday
2 April 1916, a huge explosion ripped through the gunpowder mill at Uplees, near Faversham, when 200 tons of TNT ignited. 109 people died in the explosion, and many were buried in a mass grave at Faversham Cemetery.
The weather might have contributed to the origins of the fire that followed on the morning of Sunday
2 April 1916. The previous month had been wet but had ended with a short dry spell so that by that Sunday the weather was "glorious" ... but provided perfect conditions for heat-generated combustion.
The munitions factory was in a remote spot in the middle of the open marshes of North Kent, next to the Thames coastline. Perhaps that is why it was chosen. It also explains why the great explosion at about noon on
2 April was heard across the Thames estuary as far away as
Norwich,
Great Yarmouth and
Southend-on-Sea, where domestic windows were blown out and two large plate-glass shop windows shattered.
The ''East Kent Gazette'' of
Sittingbourne reported the explosion on
29 April. Although recognising the need for some censorship, it referred to the reply given in Parliament to the question as "mystifying and ambiguous" and called for the fullest precautions to be implemented to "prevent another calamity of the kind" occurring again.
Although not the first such disaster of this kind to have happened at Faversham’s historic munitions works, the April 1916 blast is recorded as "the worst ever in the history of the UK explosives industry", and yet the full picture is still somewhat confused. The reason for the fire is uncertain. And considering the quantity of explosive chemical stored at the works — with one report indicating that a further 3,000 tons remained in nearby sheds unaffected — it is remarkable, and a tribute to those who struggled against the fire that so much of the nation's munitions were prevented from contributing further to the catastrophe.
The Secretary of State for War,
Horatio Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener Earl Kitchener, had in 1914 written to the management of the CPC, and it is presumed the ELC, instructing the workforce on "the importance of the government work upon which they (were) engaged". "I should like all engaged by your company to know that it is fully recognised that they, in carrying out the great work of supplying munitions of war, are doing their duty for their King and Country, equally with those who have joined the Army for active service in the field," Kitchener said.
Sources
*''The Great Explosion at Faversham'' by Arthur Percival: also reprinted in ''Archaeologia Cantiana'' Vol. C. (1985).
*''Faversham Times''
*''East Kent Gazette''
External links
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The Faversham Website
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Faversham Gunpowder Mill showing burial plot and list of dead
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Faversham - Associate Cinque Port
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Online article on chavs, with a particular reference to Faversham
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Chavtowns.com article on Faversham
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Queen Elizabeth Grammar school french twinning
Category:Towns in Kent
eo:Faversham
fr:Faversham
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