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Ightham ( ) is a parish and village in , England, located approximately four miles east of and six miles north of . The parish includes the hamlet of Ivy Hatch.

Ightham is famous for the nearby medieval manor of (National Trust), although the village itself is of greater antiquity.


Place Names
The name Ightham derived from the name of Ehta (a personal name) and ham ('homestead'). It is spelt 'Ehteham' in the Many place names in the parish are of Anglo-Saxon or Jutish origin. Places were named as these settlers found them. Oldbury had clearly been fortified so the Jutes called it Eald-byrig from the Anglo-Saxon eald (old) and byrig (fortified place).


History

Stone Age
The presence of flint workshops at , excavated by Benjamin Harrison in 1905 and at Rose Wood on Ightham Common are evidence of the presence of humans in the period. The earliest trackway crossing the parish runs mainly as a ridgeway on top of the from East Kent to Salisbury Plain.


Iron Age
The fort at Oldbury is assumed to have been built around 100 BC, possibly to protect against Belgic invaders. Oldbury was in the centre of a series of forts running 70 miles from in to the west to Bigberry near Canterbury to the east. Oldbury is the largest of all at 123 acres. It held a position on a key communications route, and was useful to the romans.


Roman period
Benjamin Harrison of Ightham excavated the site of a tile works and possible Roman villa at Patchgrove Wood on the northwest edge of Oldbury Hill, close outside the parish.


Early Medieval Period
In the 6th century, there was a settlement by the River Bourne.


Medieval period
It is not known how the boundaries of the parish were established. There is no hard evidence for the establishment of a Saxon church, and Ightham was not mentioned in the Domesday Book. The inclusion of the church in the Textus Roffensis in 1122 may reflect an older church as it may be a copy of an earlier Saxon list. The network of parishes has been relatively stable since Anglo-Saxon times. In North West Kent parishes are single townships and cover 1000–6000 acres. Originally Ightham had 2611 acres. Tithes were paid to a parish priest.

In 1315 Edward II granted a request for permission to hold an annual fair in the village.


War Years
During the First World War 46 men of the parish fought and died. A war memorial was erected opposite the George and Dragon and unveiled on 5 December 1920 by Major General Sir William Furse. The Bishop of Rochester unveiled a tablet in their honour in February 1921 in St Peter's Church.

With Ightham close to West Malling and Biggin Hill airfields, local people would have had a good view of the Battle of Britain. For example, in September 1940, the Button factory on Church lane was evacuated due to . During the Blitz in 1940–41 Ightham was directly under a route of German bombers on their way to attack London. Ightham was hit by 450 high-explosive bombs and 20 flying bombs or rockets. Oldbury Hatch was badly burnt by incendiary bombs and in September 1940 a bomb hit two houses in Jubilee Crescent and another in Copt Hall. During the war a bomb also fell on a house in Chapel Row.

In September 1940, pilot Noel Karl Stansfield's crashed at Ightham Place after combat with German Messerschmitt Bf 109s over Edenbridge. In the same confrontation, Malcolm Ravenhill was shot down, and he died after his Hurricane crashed on Church Road.

Although bombs were dropped in the village, the school continued its usual pattern, some of the children were evacuated to the West Country in 1941 but they soon returned. June 1944 attacks by V-1 flying bombs prompted the evacuation of Ightham children, as well as London evacuees in Ightham and a number of mothers, to Devon and to Chard in Somerset.


Other
Ightham was famous for growing Kentish . These seem to have been cultivated first by James Usherwood, who lived at Cob Tree Cottage. There was a public house nearby called the Cob Tree Inn, which has now reverted to a private house, and the local school has a cobnut as its logo. There are still a number of cob trees in and around the village, but the work of pruning them and picking the nuts is labour-intensive, and the industry has fallen into decline.

Ightham also has its own football team, Ightham FC. Home games are played at the recreation ground adjoining the A25 motorway. It also has a Scout group 1st Ightam scouts


Main Manor Houses
There were three Manor Houses in the original parish – the St Clere estate, Ightham Court (Ightham Lodge) and in the far south of the parish, at the northernmost Kent Weald. All three have origins stretching back to at least the late 12th Century. At the end of the 1400s the parish consisted of the village centre, several hamlets and a large number of dispersed farms.


St Peter’s Church
The earliest record of a church in Ightham is in the Textus Roffensis, which lists the churches paying for blessed oil on Thursday of Holy Week. Ightham was charged nine pence.

The position of St Peter's Church on a knoll overlooking the village and with views over the parish is typically Saxon; however there is no trace of the earliest, perhaps wooden church. The fabric of the church is early Norman onwards. There are several fine monuments, and a collection of 20 hatchments.Hatchments: The twelve hatchments of St Peter's Church, Ightham, Kent (2020)


Geography
The chalk have a layer of in many places, including the finger of Ightham parish which reaches the crest of the Downs near Drane Farm. The highest point of the ancient parish in the north was near Drane Farm at over 700 feet above sea level. The Vale of Holmesdale runs through the parish south of the Downs. There is a steep drop to about 320 feet in the Vale of Holmesdale south of St Clere. Along the length of the Vale runs a band of , blue-grey clay, a mile wide with some alluvial deposits. This was cultivated by the early settlers. To the south the land climbs gradually towards the northern part of . This hill covers 123 acres and climbs from 400 to over 600 feet then drops and climbs to nearly 650n feet at the edge of the Chart at Beacon or Raspit Hill.In the southern part of the parish are the or Greensand Ridge.Ightham common is at the western end of the eastern end of the eastern part of the hills and was covered with woodland and ferns, often boggy, limiting agricultural use. To the South of the Chart Hills the parish edges into the Wealden forest. The land was more suitable for agriculture than on the chart Hills. The inhabitants of Ightham would have used the forest to fatten their pigs in autumn on acorns.


Demographics
+Ightham compared
49,138,831
9.2%
90.9%
4.6%
2.3%
71.7%
3.1%
1.1%
14.6%
3.3%
13.5%
The estimated population of the parish of Ightham in 1660 was 325 and this approximately doubled to 709 by the first national census in 1801. Ightham at the Crossroads by Jean Stirk and David Williams published by Red Court Publishing, copyright Ightham Parish Council, Jean Stirk and David Williams, 2015. ISBN 978-0-9930828-0-1

At the 2001 UK census, the Ightham had a population of 1,940. The ethnicity was 99.1% White, 0% Mixed Race, 0.6% Asian, 0.3% Black and 0% Other. The place of birth of residents was 91.9% United Kingdom, 0.5% Republic of Ireland, 2% other Western European countries, and 5.6% elsewhere. Religion was recorded as 82.4% Christian, 0.2% Buddhist, 0% Hindu, 0% Sikh, 0.5% Jewish, and 0.2% Muslim. 11.6% were recorded as having no religion, 0.4% had an alternative religion and 4.7% did not state their religion.

The economic activity of residents aged 16–74 was 38.2% in full-time employment, 11.6% in part-time employment, 14.7% self-employed, 1.9% unemployed, 1.9% students with jobs, 3.5% students without jobs, 13.9% retired, 11.2% looking after home or family, 1.1% permanently sick or disabled and 1.9% economically inactive for other reasons. The industry of employment of residents was 12.3% retail, 9.4% manufacturing, 7.2% construction, 18.3% real estate, 8.2% health and social work, 8.3% education, 4.3% transport and communications, 3.2% public administration, 4.3% hotels and restaurants, 17.9% finance, 1.3% agriculture and 5.3% other. Compared with national figures, the ward had a relatively high proportion of workers in finance and real estate. There were a relatively low proportion in manufacturing, public administration, transport and communications. Of the ward's residents aged 16–74, 35.7% had a higher education qualification or the equivalent, compared with 19.9% nationwide.


Nearest settlements

Notable people
  • , singer with and TV presenter lives in the village.
  • (born 30 March 1959), novelist. Has lived in the village since 2005.
  • Thomas Riversdale Colyer-Fergusson VC (18 February 1896 – 31 July 1917), recipient of the , which is displayed in the chapel at Ightham Mote.
  • Lord Eversley (when Mr. George John Shaw-Lefevre), and his wife, Constance, lived at Oldbury Place in Ightham during the time he was Postmaster General.Picton W. and Stirk J., Life in Ightham in the 1800s (Directwish Limited, 1989)
  • Roger K. Furse - (1903–1972), costume designer
  • - (1944–2023), TV presenter
  • Benjamin Harrison (1837–1921), a grocer who won international recognition as a pioneer in the realm of . He contended that flints he found in the pre-glacial drift on the near Ash were artefacts, thus vastly antedating the antiquity of man.
  • , author of the first English county history, A Perambulation of Kent, married his first wife, Jane, in 1570 at Ightham Church on her 17th birthday. They then lived at the family home of the Manor of St Clere. Jane died on 21 September 1573, but William continued to live at the house for another 10 years.
    (1981). 9780859741002, Bachman and Turner Publications.
  • (1913–2004), British actress.
  • William Sutton (1830–1888), recipient of the Victoria Cross
  • (1860–1940), British watercolour artist, draughtsman and Assistant to General Augustus Pitt Rivers. Along with other family members he is buried in the village churchyard.


External links

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