East Peckham is a village and civil parish in Kent, England on the River Medway. The parish covers the main village as well as Hale Street and Beltring.
Part of the manor of East Farleigh lay within what is now East Peckham.
There is a persistent myth that the village was originally around the far northern border with Mereworth. Sheet 80 of the First Edition One-Inch Ordnance Survey map published on 1 January 1819 shows the village as being two miles north east as St Michael's church stands on high ground there, now cared for by the Churches Conservation Trust and open daily. In the mid-nineteenth century the new parish church of the Holy Trinity was built in what had for centuries been, and likely since the first multi-family settlement arose, the parish population centre. The architects were Whichcord and Walker of Maidstone, and the foundation stone was laid on 24 October 1840.
The River Bourne joins the Medway in the south of the parish and powered a watermill, Little Mill. Another watermill on the River Medway stood at Branbridges. Large, populated parts used to flood with unusual frequency among parishes along the Medway. The East Peckham Flood Relief partnership was formed in 2003. A dam since 2005 exists on the Coult Stream at Bullen Farm. It is long and high and has the capacity to hold of floodwater. The scheme cost just over £1 million. East Peckham Flood Relief Partnership
In 2012, a local amateur theatre group, The Russett Players, was formed in the village.
Pound Road has most of the village's amenities including the primary school, Co-op convenience store and local shops.
The village is served by the Arriva Southern Counties routes 6 and 6A which provide connections to Tunbridge Wells and Maidstone as well as the Go-Coach route 208 to Tonbridge.
Beltring railway station on the Medway Valley Line is the closest rail station to East Peckham and is served by hourly Southeastern train services to , Maidstone and .
James Pimm (1798–1866) created the gin-based liqueur known as Pimm's. He died at his family home in East Peckham and is buried at Holy Trinity Church.
Roger Twysden (1597–1672) lived at Roydon Hall, and was born in East Peckham.
Settlement and amenities
Transport
Notable people
Twinning
External links
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