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Ashford, Kent

Ashford is a town in the county of Kent, England. It lies on the River Great Stour at the southern or scarp edge of the North Downs, about 61 miles (98 km) southeast of central London[2] and 15.3 miles (24.6 km) northwest of Folkestone by road. At the 2021 census, it had a population of 76,405.[1] The name comes from the Old English æscet, indicating a ford near a clump of ash trees.[3] It has been a market town since the Middle Ages, and a regular market continues to be held.

Ashford

High Street, Ashford, in February 2012
Ashford
Location within Kent
Population84,458 (2021 Census)[1]
OS grid referenceTR005425
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townASHFORD
Postcode districtTN23–TN27
Dialling code01233
PoliceKent
FireKent
AmbulanceSouth East Coast
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Kent
51°08′47″N 0°52′03″E / 51.1465°N 0.8676°E / 51.1465; 0.8676Coordinates: 51°08′47″N 0°52′03″E / 51.1465°N 0.8676°E / 51.1465; 0.8676

St Mary's Parish Church has been a local landmark since the 13th century, and expanded in the 15th. Today, the church functions in a dual role as a centre for worship and entertainment.

The arrival of the railways from the mid 19th century onwards, created a significant source of employment contributing to the town's growth as a rail hub at the centre of five distinct railway lines. The high speed rail line (HS1 High Speed 1) between London and the Channel Tunnel passes through Ashford's International Railway Station thus linking the town to Paris and other European destinations. The M20 motorway connects Ashford to the Channel Tunnel, the national motorway network (via the M25 Motorway) and to London (via the A20).

Ashford has been marked out for growth in several Government plans from the 1960s onwards. In the 1970s, the construction of a controversial four lane ring road together with the multi-storey Charter House building led to the destruction of significant parts of the old town although some areas were spared and preserved. Other changes in the last 40 years include the construction of the County Square shopping centre, the redevelopment of the Templer Barracks at Repton Park, the Finberry estate to the southeast, and the award-winning Ashford Designer Outlet.

History

Early developments

There has been evidence of human habitation around Ashford since the Iron Age, with a barrow dated to 1500 BC[4] on what is now Barrow Hill. Two axes from the Lower Paleolithic period have been found near Ashford. During the construction of the Park Farm estate in the late 1990s, excavation produced tools from the Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic period dating back to the 7th millennium BC. A number of other Mesolithic tools were discovered during construction of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link through Ashford.[5]

In Roman Britain, iron ore was mined in the Weald and transported to Ashford where two ironworks processed the ore into a workable metal.[6] Archaeological studies have postulated the existence of a Roman settlement to the north of the current centre, roughly at the junction of Albert Road and Wall Road.[7]

The present town originates from an original settlement established in 893 AD by inhabitants escaping a Danish Viking raid, who were granted land by a Saxon Lord for their resistance.[8] The name comes from the Old English æscet, indicating a ford near a clump of ash trees.[9] At the time of the Domesday Book of 1086 it was still known by its original Saxon name of Essetesford (or Eshetisford, Esselesford, Asshatisforde, Essheford).[10][11] The manor was owned by Hugh de Montfort, Constable of England and companion of William the Conqueror, and had a church, two mills and a value of 150 shillings (£7.50) at the time.[11][12][13][14] One of the earliest houses in the area still in existence is Lake House at Eastwell Park to the north of the town, which contains the grave of Richard Plantagenet.[15]

Middle Ages

Ashford's importance as an agricultural and market town grew in the 13th century, and in 1243, King Henry III granted the town a charter to hold a market for livestock. The pottery industry expanded in the 13th and 14th centuries, with the main works based at what is now Potter's Corner, a few miles west of the town centre. Later evidence from examining waste suggests that production was on a large scale.[16] The Kent Archaeological society have discovered sandy ware at this location dating from around 1125 – 1250.[17]

Jack Cade, who led the a rebellion against corrupt Royal officials in 1450, may have had links to Ashford.[18] In William Shakespeare's Henry VI, Part 2, Cade converses with "Dick, the Butcher from Ashford".[19]

In the 16th and 17th centuries, Ashford became known for nonconformism. A local resident, John Brown, was executed for heresy in 1517, and may have inspired the later namesake of the song "John Brown's Body".[20][21] Thomas Smythe acquired the manor of Ashford as dowry from Queen Elizabeth I in the mid-16th century, and is buried in the parish church.[22]

Dr John Wallis, the internationally recognised mathematician and one of Isaac Newton's main tutors was born in Ashford in 1616, but moved to Tenterden in 1625 to avoid the plague. He was a promising student, and subsequently graduated from Emmanuel College, Cambridge.[23]

Modern developments

 
Ashford Market in 1975. A market had been based here since 1856.[24]

By the 1780s, local farmers had begun to hold informal market days, and advertised the town's ideal location between London, Chatham and the Kent Coast.[25] The market was held in the High Street until 1856, when local farmers and businessmen relocated to Elwick Road and formed a market company that is the oldest surviving registered company in England and Wales.[24] There is still a regular street market in the town, but the market company relocated outside Ashford town centre after part of the 19th-century site was demolished to make way for the Channel Tunnel Rail Link. It is still used by around 5,000 farmers.[25]

Military

The Army first established a presence in Ashford in 1797 when it built a garrison on Barrow Hill, and storerooms along what is now Magazine Road.[26] The military presence was scaled back during the 19th century, though the town was still considered strategically important in the event of an invasion.[27] The Territorial Army established a presence in Ashford in 1910.[28]

During World War I, Ashford's importance as a transport hub and its location between the continent and London made it a target for aerial bombing. A bomb fell on the railway works on 25 March 1917, killing 61 people,[29] In the late 1920s an Ordnance Depot was established at Ashford; it remained in use until 1996.[30] The town was a target in the Battle of Britain during World War II,[31] including an attack on 15 September 1940.[32] During the latter war ultimately 94 civilians were lost to enemy action in the Urban District.[33]

The Joint Services School of Intelligence was based at Templer Barracks to the west of town.[34] Robert Runcie, later to become the Archbishop of Canterbury, was stationed at Ashford during the war [35] while Prince Andrew, Duke of York attended a course here in 1982 while he was stationed in the Royal Navy.[36] The barracks closed in 1997 to build the Channel Tunnel Rail Link,[34] and the site was sold to developers in 2002,[37] Repton Manor House, in the centre of the barracks, is a Grade II listed building and remains intact.[38]

Ashford has been associated with the German town Bad Münstereifel since the 20th century. British forces occupied the town in 1919 under the command of Major J Goode, following the end of the war. Goode subsequently formed close friendships with some Bad Münstereifel residents. John Wiles, Major Goode's brother in law, later became mayor of New Romney in 1946, and subsequently arranged a visit to the Rhineland with Winston Churchill. Wiles arranged several other exchange visits between British and German families, at a time where travel between the two countries was rare. He was declared an honorary citizen of Bad Münstereifel in 1961, which led to the two towns being formally twinned in 1964.[39][40] Bad Münstereifel was twinned with the French town of Fougères, Brittany two years later, which led to a twinning with Ashford in 1984.[39]

Industrial

During the early and mid-20th century, print and media became a noted industry in Ashford. The Headley Brothers, a printing services company, was founded in 1881[41] and by the mid-1950s printed and exported over 2 million books.[42] The business closed in 2017 and the factory was demolished two years later.[43] The Letraset company set up an arts material factory in Ashford in the 1960s. It closed in 2013, following the decline of Letraset and the company's decision to relocate works abroad.[44]

Redevelopments

 
Old buildings in Middle Row

Little is left of the old Ashford town centre, apart from a cluster of medieval half-timbered buildings in Middle Row and around the churchyard in the town centre. A number of old buildings were removed to make way for the controversial ring road around the centre, including four public houses.[45] Further demolition was required to build Charter House, an eight-story office building for Charter Consolidated, that opened in 1975.[46] Charter subsequently moved back to London in 1985,[47] and the building is now being converted into flats, though progress stalled owing to the discovery of asbestos.[48][49] Charter compensated for the demolition by funding a restoration scheme on North Street, preserving several historic buildings.[50] The borough council operated from a row of houses in Elwick Road, until the civic centre was opened by the Duchess of Kent on 8 December 1983.[51]

To accommodate a growing population in the area, the Finberry estate began construction in 2013. It is a 168-hectare (420-acre) site to the southeast of the town centre, which opened various houses, workspaces and shops in a series of phases through the remainder of the decade. It is planned to cater for 1,180 homes.[52][53] The development also includes plans for a pub and shops.[54]

Recent developments

A large factor in Ashford's recent redevelopment has been Ashford Borough Council's 'Big 8' strategy. This centred on eight major projects designed to add cultural and economic value to the town. The first proposed was the Commercial Quarter near the station, which opened in 2018, and the second was a new junction 10A of the M20 motorway.[55] The first of the housing projects to make progress was Chilmington Green, a 5,750-house development near Ashford's suburbs.[56] A primary school is set to be built as part of the residential development, with planning permission granted in 2022.[57]

The first of the Big 8 projects to be fully completed was a new campus for Ashford College, moving from Jemmett Road.[58] The building works on the Elwick Road site cost £16 million,[59] and was completed in 2017.[55] A leisure complex, Elwick Place, opened in 2018 with a Picturehouse cinema.[60] The Designer Outlet was redeveloped in a £90 million expansion project.[61] An expansion of the Jasmin Vardimon Company is also planned.[62]

Governance

The motto of Ashford Borough Council is "With stronger faith", taken from To Lucasta, Going to the Warres, a poem by the 17th-century poet Richard Lovelace who came from the borough.[63] The relevant verse is :[64]

True, a new mistress now I chase,

The first foe in the field;
And with a stronger faith embrace

A sword, a horse, a shield.

The council's coat of arms uses gold to symbolise richness, three sprigs of ash tree representing former council areas, and a lion to commemorate nearby Tenterden as one of the Cinque Ports.[63]

Geography

By road, Ashford is about 61 miles (98 km) southeast of central London, 20.9 kilometres (13.0 mi) southeast of Maidstone, and 15.3 miles (24.6 km) northwest of Folkestone.[65] The town lies at the intersection of two valleys in Kent – the south edge of the North Downs and the valley of the River Stour, at the confluence of the Great Stour and East Stour rivers. This made it an ideal place for a settlement.[66] The Borough of Ashford lies on the eastern edge of the ancient forest of "Andredsweald" or "Anderida". This originally stretched as far west as Hampshire and formed the basis from which the Weald is formed.[67]

The original town of Ashford, like many other settlements, has outgrown its original size and has combined with smaller villages in a conurbation. Clockwise these villages include Bockhanger, Kennington, Willesborough, Sevington, Singleton and Great Chart. In addition, housing estates have been built in the open spaces amongst Bybrook, Godinton, Kingsnorth, Park Farm and Stanhope.[68]

In 1727, an underground fire was reported in nearby Hinxhill, while an earthquake struck the town on 1 June 1756.[69] The 2007 Kent earthquake, which registered 4.3 on the Richter magnitude scale, was felt in Ashford, though its effects were greatest in Folkestone.[70]

Climate

Ashford gets around 750 millimetres (30 in) of rain a year, though the town generally has less rainfall than areas closer to the North Downs.[71] The area around the Stour, particularly south of the station, is prone to flooding, which means it has been generally uninhabited. Recent development has been possible by putting foundations on concrete stilts.[72]

The nearest official Met Office station is located in Faversham, which is 12 miles (19 km) north of the town.[73]

Demography

 
The population growth of the Ashford Borough

The 2011 census revealed that the borough of Ashford saw the largest population growth in Kent, with records showing a 14.6% rise to 118,000 inhabitants.[74] Ashford has been targeted as a key area for population development since the 1960s. In 1959, the London County Council negotiated 5000 new homes to be built in Ashford as overspill from London, which created most of what is now South Ashford and Kennington.[75] The Buchanan Report, published in 1967, identified Ashford as a major town for growth.[76] In 2001, Ashford was identified as one of four key areas for expansion in South East England. Subsequently, the Ashford's Future Company was set up to support a mix of publicly and privately funded projects in the town.[77]

Economy

The soup manufacturer Batchelors became a significant employer in Ashford when they opened a £2.5m factory in Willesborough, east of the town centre, in 1957. A substantial proportion of Batchelors staff moved from their main production unit in Sheffield to Ashford.[78] The factory is now owned by Premier Foods.[79] Proprietary Perfumes Ltd (PPL), a division of Unilever opened a fragrance and flavour factory and research laboratory next door to the Batchelors factory in 1962. It was subsequently renamed as Quest International[80] and purchased by Givaudan in 2007.[81]

The wholesale frozen food firm Brake Brothers was established in 1957. Initially based at nearby Lenham, it later moved to Ashford and expanded. The current European headquarters are in Eureka Park to the north of the town.[82]

In 2017, the Kent-based Curious Brewing constructed a factory on a brownfield site adjacent to Ashford International station in 2017 after a £1.7m crowdfunded cash investment.[83] It opened in May 2019.[84] The train operating company Southeastern partnered with Curious, and advertise the brewery around Ashford International station.[85]

In 2004 Regional Planning Guidance set out plans to invest £2.5m in Ashford, including a targets of 31,000 new homes and 28,000 new jobs in the area.[86] In 2005 a Channel 4 poll ranked Ashford the fourth-best place to live in the United Kingdom.[87] However, the formation of the coalition government in 2010 saw regional planning targets scrapped, along with growth area status.[88] Ashford has continued to develop, with new homes planned for urban areas such as Repton Park,[89] Park Farm,[90] Singleton and Chilmington,[91] and planning permission granted for a new £25m college campus.[92] The extension of Victoria Road has created new development space in Ashford, though plans to build a Morrisons supermarket here were scrapped in May 2014.[93]

 
Ashford Designer Outlet was designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and attracts around 3 million customers a year

In 2012, Ashford Borough Council predicted there would be a net gain of 620 jobs per year.[94] The increase in the town's commercial importance, as well as its strategic location, is witnessed by the number of industry, business and retail parks in the town.[95] These include Waterbrook Park, where there is dedicated space for HGV parking,[96] Eureka Science and Business Park, including manufacturing sites and office complexes;[97] and Orbital Park, the market's current location, which has a regular boot fair.[25]

Three modern shopping centres are located in the town. Park Mall opened in 1985 on the former Folkestone Glass Works site[98] and is now managed by Ashford Borough Council, as part of its strategy to regenerate the town centre.[99] The town's main shopping centre is County Square, which was built over Hempsted Street and connecting roads, opening in 1973 as the Tufton Centre.[100] In 1989, the centre was renamed to County Square and refurbished by CIN Properties, who added a glass roof.[101] In 2008, the centre was expanded to include 50,000 sq ft of new retail space[102] including a Debenhams store.[103] Outside the town centre is the Ashford Designer Outlet designed by Richard Rogers,[104] which attracts around 3 million customers a year.[105] The centre has won industry awards for Retail Destination of the Year and Best Shopping Venue[106] and has been praised by the British Parking Association for its range of facilities, cleanliness and lack of crime.[107] From 2018 the centre underwent a 100,000 sq. ft expansion, including 40 new stores and a new food piazza. Part of this expansion was the installation of Europe's largest living wall, comprising more than 120,000 plants. The expansion was formally opened in November 2019.[108] A Waitrose store opened in November 2009 on the former Templar Barracks site,[109] followed by a John Lewis store in November 2013.[110] The Debenhams store closed in January 2020, while the John Lewis store closed in March 2021.[111][112]

In 2014, Ashford Borough Council launched AshfordFor, an inward investment campaign, which has helped support the town's growth. Developers agreeing to invest in the town include Quinn Estates,[113] GRE Assets,[114] U+I[115] and Stanhope.[116] In 2014, Ashford Borough Council launched loveashford.com, a website designed to promote new businesses in the town centre as part of the Portas Pilot scheme, which encourages regeneration of town high streets in decline.[117][118] Brandon Lewis, High Streets Minister said he would "encourage all businesses in Ashford to sign up and be part of this excellent opportunity to boost their trade in the town centre."[119]

Culture and community

 
Statue of William Harvey by the entrance to William Harvey Hospital near Ashford

Ashford now has the oldest surviving St John Ambulance unit. John Furley, founder of the association, was born in Ashford. He established the British Red Cross Society in 1868, gaining support from the Duke of Edinburgh via a royal admiral living at Eastwell Park, close to the town.[120]

The Grosvenor Sanatorium opened in 1915 to help patients with tuberculosis, and could cater for 110 male patients, and 78 female.[121] The philosopher Simone Weil lived in Ashford after escaping from France during World War II. She felt guilty about leaving French people behind in suffering and did not eat well. She subsequently contracted tuberculosis and was moved to the sanatorium where she died in 1943.[122] A section of the old Ashford Bypass is now named Simone Weil Avenue, while the sanatorium subsequently became the Ashford Police Training Centre.[122]

Ashford Hospital opened to the west of town on 3 August 1928,[123] replacing a smaller 19th century building in town. It has more recently been used as a health centre and retirement home[124] but plans to redevelop it into a local health unit were cancelled in 2012.[125] The main building was threatened with demolition, but saved in 2015, with plans to turn it into accommodation.[126]

The main hospital in Ashford is William Harvey Hospital, in nearby Willesborough. It is named after William Harvey, the doctor who discovered the blood circulatory system.[127] The hospital was built because the government decided the old hospital would be too small for demand as Ashford grew, and looked for a 30-acre site that could have a hospital built on a budget of £7–8 million.[128] Work started on building the hospital in 1973[129] and it was commissioned in 1977,[130] opening in 1979.[131]

Landmarks

In the 17th century, a free grammar school was founded here; it was built on the churchyard's west side, and remained there until 1846, now used as a museum.[132] The church has been Grade I listed since 1951.[133]

 
The Mk. IV tank, St George's Square

A Mk. IV tank built in Lincoln and used in World War I was presented to the town on 1 August 1919 to thank the townsfolk for their war efforts. It is situated in St Georges Square near the town centre. For some years, electricity provider Seeboard fitted an electricity substation inside the tank, but this has now been removed; the substation is cited as the reason the tank was not reclaimed during World War II for its metal to be used, as happened with other tanks gifted to municipalities.[134] A protective cover was built over the tank in 1988.[135]

H.S. Pledge & Sons Ltd built two flour mills in Ashford, and became an important employer in the town. The first opened on Victoria Road in 1890[136] while the second opened on East Hill in 1901. The mills closed in 1972 and were both partially destroyed by subsequent fires. The East Hill Mill fire occurred in 1974, but the main six-storey tower block survived. It was used as a nightclub until 2014, when the nearby Ashford School, which acquired the building in 2011, decided not to renew the lease.[137] The Victoria Mills were almost completely destroyed by a fire in September 1984, and the remainder of the building had to be demolished.[136]

The Corn Exchange, situated at the junction of Bank Street and Elwick Road, opened on 3 December 1861.[138] As the name implies, it was originally used for trade, but during the early 20th century its role expanded to cover dinners, dances and trade shows. The building was extended to improve capacity in the 1930s.[139] It was demolished in 1963.[140]

 
Hubert Fountain in Victoria Park

The Ashford Green Corridor is a linear park alongside the two main rivers through the town, which is protected from development by lying on the main flood plain. Most of the area covered by the park has been marked by Ashford Borough Council as a nature reserve.[141] This area includes Victoria Park, which lies to the immediate south of the town centre and the railway. It includes an ornate fountain first shown at the 2nd International Exhibition in London in 1862, and presented to the park by George Harper on 24 July 1912.[142] The Coningbrook Lakes Country Park opened on a former quarry site to the northeast of town in 2015.[143]

Ashford's main library originally opened in 1966 on a war-damaged site on Church Road. In 2010, the building was redeveloped to house Ashford Gateway Plus, which provides local council services in addition to the library itself.[144] Other attractions near the town include Ashford Borough Museum, Godinton House and Gardens[145] and the New Mill at Willesborough, which is Grade II listed.[146]

The first cinema in Ashford was The Picture Palace on Tufton Street,[147] followed by the Odeon on Lower High Street, which opened in 1936 and closed in 1976.[148] The current main cinema in Ashford is a 12 screen theatre in Eureka Leisure Park to the north of town. In 2013, Ashford Borough Council announced plans to build a new cinema in the town, using vacant land off Elwick Road.[149] Construction of the six-screen Picturehouse cinema (along with a 58-room Travelodge hotel) began in May 2017 and was opened in December 2018.[150]

Transport

Rail

 
Ashford Locomotive Depot in 1946

Ashford station was established when the South Eastern Railway's London to Dover line opened between 1842 and 1845, and the company established its locomotive works in the town.[27] A line to Canterbury opened in 1846, followed by the Marshlink Line to Hastings in 1851 and a line to Maidstone in 1884,[27] which was served by Ashford West until 31 December 1898.[151] The railway community had its own village containing shops, schools, pubs and bathhouse.[152] It was first known as Alfred, but later renamed Newtown.[153] By 1864, there were 3000 people living around the railway line.[154] The railway works declined in use from the 1960 onwards, finally closing in 1982.[153]

 
Ashford International station

The Ashford International station opened by British Rail with the Channel Tunnel in 1994. It now serves Eurostar trains on High Speed 1, with trains to London, Lille, Brussels and Paris and connections to the rest of Europe.[155] In 1999, the Channel Tunnel Rail Link was approved,[156] which involved an extensive upgrade of the railways around Ashford. A trench between 20 metres (66 ft) and 42 metres (138 ft) was dug near the station to house the new line, a new tunnel was dug at Westwell Leacon, and a 19th-century level crossing near South Willesborough, the last remaining one between London and Folkestone, was removed.[157][158]

From 2007 to 2009, services to Brussels were withdrawn due to the opening of Ebbsfleet International railway station, but were restored after a petition.[159][160] Since December 2009, domestic train services run along this route, reducing journey times to London from 88 to about 38 minutes.[161] However, the international services were suspended in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, and Eurostar have announced they are unlikely to be resumed until 2025.[162]

Road

In Roman Britain, what is now Ashford was the meeting point of two main roads. One led from London to Lympne (Lemanis), the other from the Weald, through Canterbury (Durovernum) and ending at the port of Richborough (Rutupiae).[7] Ashford was one of the towns in Kent to become a hub when the roads were turnpiked in the second half of the 18th century.[163]

Ashford's first bypass was opened on 19 July 1957 by the then Minister of Transport, Harold Watkinson.[164] The main road through Ashford is now the M20, which opened in stages between 1981 and 1991.[165] Junctions 9, 10 and 10A serve the town. The other main roads are the A28 to Canterbury, the A2070 to Romney Marsh and Rye and the A251 to Faversham.[68]

 
Operation Stack causes HGVs to queue for channel crossings, and can result in the M20 around Ashford being closed eastbound

The Ashford Ring Road was completed in November 1974 around the town centre in an attempt to relieve congestion, though part of it involved demolition of existing properties[166] and part of the old market.[167] It initially opened as one way, but was converted back into a two-way operation in 2007, at a total cost of £14m,[168] so the town centre could expand and accommodate more people.[169][170] The two-way route incorporates the first shared space scheme in the country.[167] An art installation, Lost O, curated by the artist Michael Pinsky, was created as part of this redevelopment but confused drivers.[171] A new junction on the M20, 10A, opened in 2019 as part of the council's Big 8 proposals.[172]

Operation Stack is a traffic management system on the M20 through and near Ashford, which allows HGVs to queue for the Channel Tunnel and the Port of Dover when there is bad weather or industrial action. The scheme is controversial as it involves closing the entire eastbound motorway to through traffic. In 2013, Kent County Council sought funding to build a dedicated lorry park in Ashford.[173]

Other

Stagecoach in East Kent provide bus services around the town.[174] Most services include access from the station to the Designer Outlet. Out of town buses serve neighbouring towns, including Canterbury, Tenterden, Maidstone and Folkestone.[175]

Until 1974, Ashford was served by Lympne Airport, with commercial services to Beauvais,[176] The airport at Lydd, designated London Ashford Airport and approximately 13 miles (21 kilometres) south of Ashford, had regular flights to Le Touquet in France until 2018. It now operates charter flights by Lydd Air.[177] London Gatwick Airport, the nearest fully international airport is 45 miles (72 kilometres) from Ashford.

The National Cycle Network, a network of cycle routes in the United Kingdom, includes two routes through Ashford. These are NCR 17 from Rochester to Hythe[178] and NCR 18 from Canterbury to Tunbridge Wells.[179] The Stour Valley Walk also follows the main river, connecting Ashford with Lenham and Canterbury, and links with other long distance footpaths in this part of Kent.[180]

Education

Ashford has twelve primary schools[nb 1] two grammar schools, three secondary schools and a college. The Norton Knatchbull School was founded in Ashford around 1630 as a free grammar school by its namesake, Sir Norton Knatchbull.[184] The school continued to be led and funded by Knatchbull's family due to a stipulation in his will in 1636.[13] It was known simply as Ashford Grammar School until 1980.[184] The original school was based next to the church in the town centre, but has moved several times. By the 20th century it had moved to its present location on Hythe Road. The current school premises were built in the late 1990s.[185] The corresponding grammar school for girls is Highworth Grammar School for Girls to the west of town. It opened as the County School for Girls in 1908, before moving to its current premises on Maidstone Road in 1928.[186] There is also a private independent school, Ashford School on East Hill, which was founded in 1898. For much of its history, it has only allowed girls, though boys started to be admitted in 2006.[187]

Recent schools to open in Ashford include Repton Manor Primary School, built on the former Templar Barracks, which opened in September 2012[182] the Goat Lees Community Primary School, which opened in September 2013[183] and Finberry Primary School which opened in 2017.[188] In addition to the grammar schools, there are a number of other secondary schools, including those catering for special needs.[189][190] Ashford College was originally located on Henwood, to the east of town;[191] a new college building was constructed in the town centre, and opened in September 2017.[192][193]

Religious sites

 
St Mary's Church, Ashford, dates from the 13th century, but was extensively modified in the 15th by John Fogge

St Mary's parish church lies in the town centre. Parts of it date from the 13th century, including a brass of the first rector, Robert de Derby.[15] John Fogge supervised substantial changes to the church in the late 15th century, including creating the 120 feet (37 m) tower and raising the roof.[194][195] He was buried in the church and a memorial window is dedicated to him.[196]

On 7 October 2010, the church was reordered by the Bishop of Dover, Trevor Willmott, to improve its dual function as both a place of worship and an arts centre and performance space for up to 350 people, in a similar style to Union Chapel, Islington. Around £1.7m was spent improving the venue, of which £1.2m was provided by European Union funding through the Green Renovation Cluster programme.[197] Acts that have since appeared at the church include the Lightning Seeds, Tim Burgess, Gaz Coombes and Turin Brakes.[198]

Sport

 
A symbol outside the Julie Rose Stadium

Ashford United Football Club is based at the Homelands, about 4 miles (6.4 km) south of the town centre.[199] The club was formed in 1891 as Ashford United but was renamed to Ashford Railway Works in 1909 before settling on the name "Town" in 1930.[200] The club was reformed in 2011 after financial difficulties, including the resignation of owner Tony Betteridge[199] and became known once more as "United".[200] The club was promoted to the Southern League Premier Division in the 1986–87 season and best FA Cup performance was the second round in the 1996–97 season.[199]

Ashford has a local youth football team, South Ashford Football Club. The club formed in 2007 and caters for players from 4 to 21 years of age.[201]

The Julie Rose Stadium is an athletics stadium in nearby Willesborough. It opened in 1997 and was named after the local middle-distance runner Julie Rose, who was killed in a plane crash in 1985.[202] The stadium is part funded by the National Lottery. It is home to Ashford Athletics Club, and has held several international events.[203] It can accommodate up to 800 people.[204]

 
The Stour Centre

The Stour Centre, managed on behalf of Ashford Borough Council by Ashford Leisure Trust, is located in a park near the railway station and provides a range of recreational and leisure services including several pools, water slides, gyms and athletic facilities.[205]

Ashford Rugby Football Club was formed in 1885. The club plays at Kinneys Field, near the Canterbury Road.[206] The club's 1st XV play in London Division 3 South East.[207]

Ashford has an archery club which provides archery teaching to adults and children over 10.[208] The club runs an annual UK Record Status Portsmouth tournament.[209]

Ashford Hockey Club is based at Ball Lane, Kennington and was formed in 1898.[210] Ashford also has several cricket clubs, including Great Chart Cricket Club, which celebrated their 150th Anniversary in 2006.[211]

Media

Ashford's local commercial radio station was KMFM Ashford. The Ashford studios hosted both local and networked programmes for KMFM stations until the county-wide amalgamation of all network output[212] The town is also served by other county wide stations BBC Radio Kent, Heart South and Gold. Ashford also has its own community radio station Radio Ashford 107.1 FM.[213][214] This started broadcasting in May 2011 and includes programmes from the Ashford Hospital Broadcasting Service, Ashford's hospital radio station, which has been operating in Ashford since 1971.[215]

Ashford has had several newspapers, some of which are still in production. The Kent Messenger in Ashford was established in the 19th century, with main offices on the High Street. It remained in operation until the 1970s.[216] There are currently three local newspapers being produced – the Kentish Express, published by the KM Group; yourashford, published by KOS Media; and the Ashford Herald, which has been published by Kent Regional News and Media since July 2009.[217]

Cultural references

Russell Hoban repurposed Ashford as "Bernt Arse" in his 1980, post apocalyptic novel Riddley Walker. Wye became "How"; Dover, "Do It Over", and Canterbury, "Cambry".[218]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Ashford St Mary's, Ashford Oaks Primary School, Beaver Green, Downs View Infants, East Stour, Goat Lees, Great Chart, Godinton, Kennington Junior, Repton Park, Victoria Road, Willesborough[181][182][183]

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External links

ashford, kent, other, places, with, same, name, ashford, ashford, town, county, kent, england, lies, river, great, stour, southern, scarp, edge, north, downs, about, miles, southeast, central, london, miles, northwest, folkestone, road, 2021, census, populatio. For other places with the same name see Ashford Ashford is a town in the county of Kent England It lies on the River Great Stour at the southern or scarp edge of the North Downs about 61 miles 98 km southeast of central London 2 and 15 3 miles 24 6 km northwest of Folkestone by road At the 2021 census it had a population of 76 405 1 The name comes from the Old English aescet indicating a ford near a clump of ash trees 3 It has been a market town since the Middle Ages and a regular market continues to be held AshfordHigh Street Ashford in February 2012AshfordLocation within KentPopulation84 458 2021 Census 1 OS grid referenceTR005425DistrictAshfordShire countyKentRegionSouth EastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townASHFORDPostcode districtTN23 TN27Dialling code01233PoliceKentFireKentAmbulanceSouth East CoastUK ParliamentAshfordList of places UK England Kent 51 08 47 N 0 52 03 E 51 1465 N 0 8676 E 51 1465 0 8676 Coordinates 51 08 47 N 0 52 03 E 51 1465 N 0 8676 E 51 1465 0 8676St Mary s Parish Church has been a local landmark since the 13th century and expanded in the 15th Today the church functions in a dual role as a centre for worship and entertainment The arrival of the railways from the mid 19th century onwards created a significant source of employment contributing to the town s growth as a rail hub at the centre of five distinct railway lines The high speed rail line HS1 High Speed 1 between London and the Channel Tunnel passes through Ashford s International Railway Station thus linking the town to Paris and other European destinations The M20 motorway connects Ashford to the Channel Tunnel the national motorway network via the M25 Motorway and to London via the A20 Ashford has been marked out for growth in several Government plans from the 1960s onwards In the 1970s the construction of a controversial four lane ring road together with the multi storey Charter House building led to the destruction of significant parts of the old town although some areas were spared and preserved Other changes in the last 40 years include the construction of the County Square shopping centre the redevelopment of the Templer Barracks at Repton Park the Finberry estate to the southeast and the award winning Ashford Designer Outlet Contents 1 History 1 1 Early developments 1 2 Middle Ages 1 3 Modern developments 1 3 1 Military 1 3 2 Industrial 1 3 3 Redevelopments 1 3 4 Recent developments 2 Governance 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 4 Demography 5 Economy 6 Culture and community 7 Landmarks 8 Transport 8 1 Rail 8 2 Road 8 3 Other 9 Education 10 Religious sites 11 Sport 12 Media 13 Cultural references 14 See also 15 References 15 1 Footnotes 15 2 Citations 15 3 Sources 16 External linksHistory EditEarly developments Edit There has been evidence of human habitation around Ashford since the Iron Age with a barrow dated to 1500 BC 4 on what is now Barrow Hill Two axes from the Lower Paleolithic period have been found near Ashford During the construction of the Park Farm estate in the late 1990s excavation produced tools from the Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic period dating back to the 7th millennium BC A number of other Mesolithic tools were discovered during construction of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link through Ashford 5 In Roman Britain iron ore was mined in the Weald and transported to Ashford where two ironworks processed the ore into a workable metal 6 Archaeological studies have postulated the existence of a Roman settlement to the north of the current centre roughly at the junction of Albert Road and Wall Road 7 The present town originates from an original settlement established in 893 AD by inhabitants escaping a Danish Viking raid who were granted land by a Saxon Lord for their resistance 8 The name comes from the Old English aescet indicating a ford near a clump of ash trees 9 At the time of the Domesday Book of 1086 it was still known by its original Saxon name of Essetesford or Eshetisford Esselesford Asshatisforde Essheford 10 11 The manor was owned by Hugh de Montfort Constable of England and companion of William the Conqueror and had a church two mills and a value of 150 shillings 7 50 at the time 11 12 13 14 One of the earliest houses in the area still in existence is Lake House at Eastwell Park to the north of the town which contains the grave of Richard Plantagenet 15 Middle Ages Edit Ashford s importance as an agricultural and market town grew in the 13th century and in 1243 King Henry III granted the town a charter to hold a market for livestock The pottery industry expanded in the 13th and 14th centuries with the main works based at what is now Potter s Corner a few miles west of the town centre Later evidence from examining waste suggests that production was on a large scale 16 The Kent Archaeological society have discovered sandy ware at this location dating from around 1125 1250 17 Jack Cade who led the a rebellion against corrupt Royal officials in 1450 may have had links to Ashford 18 In William Shakespeare s Henry VI Part 2 Cade converses with Dick the Butcher from Ashford 19 In the 16th and 17th centuries Ashford became known for nonconformism A local resident John Brown was executed for heresy in 1517 and may have inspired the later namesake of the song John Brown s Body 20 21 Thomas Smythe acquired the manor of Ashford as dowry from Queen Elizabeth I in the mid 16th century and is buried in the parish church 22 Dr John Wallis the internationally recognised mathematician and one of Isaac Newton s main tutors was born in Ashford in 1616 but moved to Tenterden in 1625 to avoid the plague He was a promising student and subsequently graduated from Emmanuel College Cambridge 23 Modern developments Edit Ashford Market in 1975 A market had been based here since 1856 24 By the 1780s local farmers had begun to hold informal market days and advertised the town s ideal location between London Chatham and the Kent Coast 25 The market was held in the High Street until 1856 when local farmers and businessmen relocated to Elwick Road and formed a market company that is the oldest surviving registered company in England and Wales 24 There is still a regular street market in the town but the market company relocated outside Ashford town centre after part of the 19th century site was demolished to make way for the Channel Tunnel Rail Link It is still used by around 5 000 farmers 25 Military Edit The Army first established a presence in Ashford in 1797 when it built a garrison on Barrow Hill and storerooms along what is now Magazine Road 26 The military presence was scaled back during the 19th century though the town was still considered strategically important in the event of an invasion 27 The Territorial Army established a presence in Ashford in 1910 28 During World War I Ashford s importance as a transport hub and its location between the continent and London made it a target for aerial bombing A bomb fell on the railway works on 25 March 1917 killing 61 people 29 In the late 1920s an Ordnance Depot was established at Ashford it remained in use until 1996 30 The town was a target in the Battle of Britain during World War II 31 including an attack on 15 September 1940 32 During the latter war ultimately 94 civilians were lost to enemy action in the Urban District 33 The Joint Services School of Intelligence was based at Templer Barracks to the west of town 34 Robert Runcie later to become the Archbishop of Canterbury was stationed at Ashford during the war 35 while Prince Andrew Duke of York attended a course here in 1982 while he was stationed in the Royal Navy 36 The barracks closed in 1997 to build the Channel Tunnel Rail Link 34 and the site was sold to developers in 2002 37 Repton Manor House in the centre of the barracks is a Grade II listed building and remains intact 38 Ashford has been associated with the German town Bad Munstereifel since the 20th century British forces occupied the town in 1919 under the command of Major J Goode following the end of the war Goode subsequently formed close friendships with some Bad Munstereifel residents John Wiles Major Goode s brother in law later became mayor of New Romney in 1946 and subsequently arranged a visit to the Rhineland with Winston Churchill Wiles arranged several other exchange visits between British and German families at a time where travel between the two countries was rare He was declared an honorary citizen of Bad Munstereifel in 1961 which led to the two towns being formally twinned in 1964 39 40 Bad Munstereifel was twinned with the French town of Fougeres Brittany two years later which led to a twinning with Ashford in 1984 39 Industrial Edit During the early and mid 20th century print and media became a noted industry in Ashford The Headley Brothers a printing services company was founded in 1881 41 and by the mid 1950s printed and exported over 2 million books 42 The business closed in 2017 and the factory was demolished two years later 43 The Letraset company set up an arts material factory in Ashford in the 1960s It closed in 2013 following the decline of Letraset and the company s decision to relocate works abroad 44 Redevelopments Edit Old buildings in Middle Row Little is left of the old Ashford town centre apart from a cluster of medieval half timbered buildings in Middle Row and around the churchyard in the town centre A number of old buildings were removed to make way for the controversial ring road around the centre including four public houses 45 Further demolition was required to build Charter House an eight story office building for Charter Consolidated that opened in 1975 46 Charter subsequently moved back to London in 1985 47 and the building is now being converted into flats though progress stalled owing to the discovery of asbestos 48 49 Charter compensated for the demolition by funding a restoration scheme on North Street preserving several historic buildings 50 The borough council operated from a row of houses in Elwick Road until the civic centre was opened by the Duchess of Kent on 8 December 1983 51 To accommodate a growing population in the area the Finberry estate began construction in 2013 It is a 168 hectare 420 acre site to the southeast of the town centre which opened various houses workspaces and shops in a series of phases through the remainder of the decade It is planned to cater for 1 180 homes 52 53 The development also includes plans for a pub and shops 54 Recent developments Edit A large factor in Ashford s recent redevelopment has been Ashford Borough Council s Big 8 strategy This centred on eight major projects designed to add cultural and economic value to the town The first proposed was the Commercial Quarter near the station which opened in 2018 and the second was a new junction 10A of the M20 motorway 55 The first of the housing projects to make progress was Chilmington Green a 5 750 house development near Ashford s suburbs 56 A primary school is set to be built as part of the residential development with planning permission granted in 2022 57 The first of the Big 8 projects to be fully completed was a new campus for Ashford College moving from Jemmett Road 58 The building works on the Elwick Road site cost 16 million 59 and was completed in 2017 55 A leisure complex Elwick Place opened in 2018 with a Picturehouse cinema 60 The Designer Outlet was redeveloped in a 90 million expansion project 61 An expansion of the Jasmin Vardimon Company is also planned 62 Governance EditThe motto of Ashford Borough Council is With stronger faith taken from To Lucasta Going to the Warres a poem by the 17th century poet Richard Lovelace who came from the borough 63 The relevant verse is 64 True a new mistress now I chase The first foe in the field And with a stronger faith embraceA sword a horse a shield The council s coat of arms uses gold to symbolise richness three sprigs of ash tree representing former council areas and a lion to commemorate nearby Tenterden as one of the Cinque Ports 63 Geography EditBy road Ashford is about 61 miles 98 km southeast of central London 20 9 kilometres 13 0 mi southeast of Maidstone and 15 3 miles 24 6 km northwest of Folkestone 65 The town lies at the intersection of two valleys in Kent the south edge of the North Downs and the valley of the River Stour at the confluence of the Great Stour and East Stour rivers This made it an ideal place for a settlement 66 The Borough of Ashford lies on the eastern edge of the ancient forest of Andredsweald or Anderida This originally stretched as far west as Hampshire and formed the basis from which the Weald is formed 67 The original town of Ashford like many other settlements has outgrown its original size and has combined with smaller villages in a conurbation Clockwise these villages include Bockhanger Kennington Willesborough Sevington Singleton and Great Chart In addition housing estates have been built in the open spaces amongst Bybrook Godinton Kingsnorth Park Farm and Stanhope 68 In 1727 an underground fire was reported in nearby Hinxhill while an earthquake struck the town on 1 June 1756 69 The 2007 Kent earthquake which registered 4 3 on the Richter magnitude scale was felt in Ashford though its effects were greatest in Folkestone 70 Climate Edit Ashford gets around 750 millimetres 30 in of rain a year though the town generally has less rainfall than areas closer to the North Downs 71 The area around the Stour particularly south of the station is prone to flooding which means it has been generally uninhabited Recent development has been possible by putting foundations on concrete stilts 72 The nearest official Met Office station is located in Faversham which is 12 miles 19 km north of the town 73 Demography Edit The population growth of the Ashford Borough The 2011 census revealed that the borough of Ashford saw the largest population growth in Kent with records showing a 14 6 rise to 118 000 inhabitants 74 Ashford has been targeted as a key area for population development since the 1960s In 1959 the London County Council negotiated 5000 new homes to be built in Ashford as overspill from London which created most of what is now South Ashford and Kennington 75 The Buchanan Report published in 1967 identified Ashford as a major town for growth 76 In 2001 Ashford was identified as one of four key areas for expansion in South East England Subsequently the Ashford s Future Company was set up to support a mix of publicly and privately funded projects in the town 77 Economy EditThe soup manufacturer Batchelors became a significant employer in Ashford when they opened a 2 5m factory in Willesborough east of the town centre in 1957 A substantial proportion of Batchelors staff moved from their main production unit in Sheffield to Ashford 78 The factory is now owned by Premier Foods 79 Proprietary Perfumes Ltd PPL a division of Unilever opened a fragrance and flavour factory and research laboratory next door to the Batchelors factory in 1962 It was subsequently renamed as Quest International 80 and purchased by Givaudan in 2007 81 The wholesale frozen food firm Brake Brothers was established in 1957 Initially based at nearby Lenham it later moved to Ashford and expanded The current European headquarters are in Eureka Park to the north of the town 82 In 2017 the Kent based Curious Brewing constructed a factory on a brownfield site adjacent to Ashford International station in 2017 after a 1 7m crowdfunded cash investment 83 It opened in May 2019 84 The train operating company Southeastern partnered with Curious and advertise the brewery around Ashford International station 85 In 2004 Regional Planning Guidance set out plans to invest 2 5m in Ashford including a targets of 31 000 new homes and 28 000 new jobs in the area 86 In 2005 a Channel 4 poll ranked Ashford the fourth best place to live in the United Kingdom 87 However the formation of the coalition government in 2010 saw regional planning targets scrapped along with growth area status 88 Ashford has continued to develop with new homes planned for urban areas such as Repton Park 89 Park Farm 90 Singleton and Chilmington 91 and planning permission granted for a new 25m college campus 92 The extension of Victoria Road has created new development space in Ashford though plans to build a Morrisons supermarket here were scrapped in May 2014 93 Ashford Designer Outlet was designed by the Richard Rogers Partnership and attracts around 3 million customers a year In 2012 Ashford Borough Council predicted there would be a net gain of 620 jobs per year 94 The increase in the town s commercial importance as well as its strategic location is witnessed by the number of industry business and retail parks in the town 95 These include Waterbrook Park where there is dedicated space for HGV parking 96 Eureka Science and Business Park including manufacturing sites and office complexes 97 and Orbital Park the market s current location which has a regular boot fair 25 Three modern shopping centres are located in the town Park Mall opened in 1985 on the former Folkestone Glass Works site 98 and is now managed by Ashford Borough Council as part of its strategy to regenerate the town centre 99 The town s main shopping centre is County Square which was built over Hempsted Street and connecting roads opening in 1973 as the Tufton Centre 100 In 1989 the centre was renamed to County Square and refurbished by CIN Properties who added a glass roof 101 In 2008 the centre was expanded to include 50 000 sq ft of new retail space 102 including a Debenhams store 103 Outside the town centre is the Ashford Designer Outlet designed by Richard Rogers 104 which attracts around 3 million customers a year 105 The centre has won industry awards for Retail Destination of the Year and Best Shopping Venue 106 and has been praised by the British Parking Association for its range of facilities cleanliness and lack of crime 107 From 2018 the centre underwent a 100 000 sq ft expansion including 40 new stores and a new food piazza Part of this expansion was the installation of Europe s largest living wall comprising more than 120 000 plants The expansion was formally opened in November 2019 108 A Waitrose store opened in November 2009 on the former Templar Barracks site 109 followed by a John Lewis store in November 2013 110 The Debenhams store closed in January 2020 while the John Lewis store closed in March 2021 111 112 In 2014 Ashford Borough Council launched AshfordFor an inward investment campaign which has helped support the town s growth Developers agreeing to invest in the town include Quinn Estates 113 GRE Assets 114 U I 115 and Stanhope 116 In 2014 Ashford Borough Council launched loveashford com a website designed to promote new businesses in the town centre as part of the Portas Pilot scheme which encourages regeneration of town high streets in decline 117 118 Brandon Lewis High Streets Minister said he would encourage all businesses in Ashford to sign up and be part of this excellent opportunity to boost their trade in the town centre 119 Culture and community Edit Statue of William Harvey by the entrance to William Harvey Hospital near Ashford Ashford now has the oldest surviving St John Ambulance unit John Furley founder of the association was born in Ashford He established the British Red Cross Society in 1868 gaining support from the Duke of Edinburgh via a royal admiral living at Eastwell Park close to the town 120 The Grosvenor Sanatorium opened in 1915 to help patients with tuberculosis and could cater for 110 male patients and 78 female 121 The philosopher Simone Weil lived in Ashford after escaping from France during World War II She felt guilty about leaving French people behind in suffering and did not eat well She subsequently contracted tuberculosis and was moved to the sanatorium where she died in 1943 122 A section of the old Ashford Bypass is now named Simone Weil Avenue while the sanatorium subsequently became the Ashford Police Training Centre 122 Ashford Hospital opened to the west of town on 3 August 1928 123 replacing a smaller 19th century building in town It has more recently been used as a health centre and retirement home 124 but plans to redevelop it into a local health unit were cancelled in 2012 125 The main building was threatened with demolition but saved in 2015 with plans to turn it into accommodation 126 The main hospital in Ashford is William Harvey Hospital in nearby Willesborough It is named after William Harvey the doctor who discovered the blood circulatory system 127 The hospital was built because the government decided the old hospital would be too small for demand as Ashford grew and looked for a 30 acre site that could have a hospital built on a budget of 7 8 million 128 Work started on building the hospital in 1973 129 and it was commissioned in 1977 130 opening in 1979 131 Landmarks EditSee also Listed buildings in Ashford Kent In the 17th century a free grammar school was founded here it was built on the churchyard s west side and remained there until 1846 now used as a museum 132 The church has been Grade I listed since 1951 133 The Mk IV tank St George s Square A Mk IV tank built in Lincoln and used in World War I was presented to the town on 1 August 1919 to thank the townsfolk for their war efforts It is situated in St Georges Square near the town centre For some years electricity provider Seeboard fitted an electricity substation inside the tank but this has now been removed the substation is cited as the reason the tank was not reclaimed during World War II for its metal to be used as happened with other tanks gifted to municipalities 134 A protective cover was built over the tank in 1988 135 H S Pledge amp Sons Ltd built two flour mills in Ashford and became an important employer in the town The first opened on Victoria Road in 1890 136 while the second opened on East Hill in 1901 The mills closed in 1972 and were both partially destroyed by subsequent fires The East Hill Mill fire occurred in 1974 but the main six storey tower block survived It was used as a nightclub until 2014 when the nearby Ashford School which acquired the building in 2011 decided not to renew the lease 137 The Victoria Mills were almost completely destroyed by a fire in September 1984 and the remainder of the building had to be demolished 136 The Corn Exchange situated at the junction of Bank Street and Elwick Road opened on 3 December 1861 138 As the name implies it was originally used for trade but during the early 20th century its role expanded to cover dinners dances and trade shows The building was extended to improve capacity in the 1930s 139 It was demolished in 1963 140 Hubert Fountain in Victoria Park The Ashford Green Corridor is a linear park alongside the two main rivers through the town which is protected from development by lying on the main flood plain Most of the area covered by the park has been marked by Ashford Borough Council as a nature reserve 141 This area includes Victoria Park which lies to the immediate south of the town centre and the railway It includes an ornate fountain first shown at the 2nd International Exhibition in London in 1862 and presented to the park by George Harper on 24 July 1912 142 The Coningbrook Lakes Country Park opened on a former quarry site to the northeast of town in 2015 143 Ashford s main library originally opened in 1966 on a war damaged site on Church Road In 2010 the building was redeveloped to house Ashford Gateway Plus which provides local council services in addition to the library itself 144 Other attractions near the town include Ashford Borough Museum Godinton House and Gardens 145 and the New Mill at Willesborough which is Grade II listed 146 The first cinema in Ashford was The Picture Palace on Tufton Street 147 followed by the Odeon on Lower High Street which opened in 1936 and closed in 1976 148 The current main cinema in Ashford is a 12 screen theatre in Eureka Leisure Park to the north of town In 2013 Ashford Borough Council announced plans to build a new cinema in the town using vacant land off Elwick Road 149 Construction of the six screen Picturehouse cinema along with a 58 room Travelodge hotel began in May 2017 and was opened in December 2018 150 Transport EditMain article Transport in Ashford Kent Rail Edit See also Ashford railway works Ashford Locomotive Depot in 1946 Ashford station was established when the South Eastern Railway s London to Dover line opened between 1842 and 1845 and the company established its locomotive works in the town 27 A line to Canterbury opened in 1846 followed by the Marshlink Line to Hastings in 1851 and a line to Maidstone in 1884 27 which was served by Ashford West until 31 December 1898 151 The railway community had its own village containing shops schools pubs and bathhouse 152 It was first known as Alfred but later renamed Newtown 153 By 1864 there were 3000 people living around the railway line 154 The railway works declined in use from the 1960 onwards finally closing in 1982 153 Ashford International station The Ashford International station opened by British Rail with the Channel Tunnel in 1994 It now serves Eurostar trains on High Speed 1 with trains to London Lille Brussels and Paris and connections to the rest of Europe 155 In 1999 the Channel Tunnel Rail Link was approved 156 which involved an extensive upgrade of the railways around Ashford A trench between 20 metres 66 ft and 42 metres 138 ft was dug near the station to house the new line a new tunnel was dug at Westwell Leacon and a 19th century level crossing near South Willesborough the last remaining one between London and Folkestone was removed 157 158 From 2007 to 2009 services to Brussels were withdrawn due to the opening of Ebbsfleet International railway station but were restored after a petition 159 160 Since December 2009 domestic train services run along this route reducing journey times to London from 88 to about 38 minutes 161 However the international services were suspended in 2020 because of the COVID 19 pandemic and Eurostar have announced they are unlikely to be resumed until 2025 162 Road Edit In Roman Britain what is now Ashford was the meeting point of two main roads One led from London to Lympne Lemanis the other from the Weald through Canterbury Durovernum and ending at the port of Richborough Rutupiae 7 Ashford was one of the towns in Kent to become a hub when the roads were turnpiked in the second half of the 18th century 163 Ashford s first bypass was opened on 19 July 1957 by the then Minister of Transport Harold Watkinson 164 The main road through Ashford is now the M20 which opened in stages between 1981 and 1991 165 Junctions 9 10 and 10A serve the town The other main roads are the A28 to Canterbury the A2070 to Romney Marsh and Rye and the A251 to Faversham 68 Operation Stack causes HGVs to queue for channel crossings and can result in the M20 around Ashford being closed eastbound The Ashford Ring Road was completed in November 1974 around the town centre in an attempt to relieve congestion though part of it involved demolition of existing properties 166 and part of the old market 167 It initially opened as one way but was converted back into a two way operation in 2007 at a total cost of 14m 168 so the town centre could expand and accommodate more people 169 170 The two way route incorporates the first shared space scheme in the country 167 An art installation Lost O curated by the artist Michael Pinsky was created as part of this redevelopment but confused drivers 171 A new junction on the M20 10A opened in 2019 as part of the council s Big 8 proposals 172 Operation Stack is a traffic management system on the M20 through and near Ashford which allows HGVs to queue for the Channel Tunnel and the Port of Dover when there is bad weather or industrial action The scheme is controversial as it involves closing the entire eastbound motorway to through traffic In 2013 Kent County Council sought funding to build a dedicated lorry park in Ashford 173 Other Edit Stagecoach in East Kent provide bus services around the town 174 Most services include access from the station to the Designer Outlet Out of town buses serve neighbouring towns including Canterbury Tenterden Maidstone and Folkestone 175 Until 1974 Ashford was served by Lympne Airport with commercial services to Beauvais 176 The airport at Lydd designated London Ashford Airport and approximately 13 miles 21 kilometres south of Ashford had regular flights to Le Touquet in France until 2018 It now operates charter flights by Lydd Air 177 London Gatwick Airport the nearest fully international airport is 45 miles 72 kilometres from Ashford The National Cycle Network a network of cycle routes in the United Kingdom includes two routes through Ashford These are NCR 17 from Rochester to Hythe 178 and NCR 18 from Canterbury to Tunbridge Wells 179 The Stour Valley Walk also follows the main river connecting Ashford with Lenham and Canterbury and links with other long distance footpaths in this part of Kent 180 Education EditSee also List of schools in Kent Ashford has twelve primary schools nb 1 two grammar schools three secondary schools and a college The Norton Knatchbull School was founded in Ashford around 1630 as a free grammar school by its namesake Sir Norton Knatchbull 184 The school continued to be led and funded by Knatchbull s family due to a stipulation in his will in 1636 13 It was known simply as Ashford Grammar School until 1980 184 The original school was based next to the church in the town centre but has moved several times By the 20th century it had moved to its present location on Hythe Road The current school premises were built in the late 1990s 185 The corresponding grammar school for girls is Highworth Grammar School for Girls to the west of town It opened as the County School for Girls in 1908 before moving to its current premises on Maidstone Road in 1928 186 There is also a private independent school Ashford School on East Hill which was founded in 1898 For much of its history it has only allowed girls though boys started to be admitted in 2006 187 Recent schools to open in Ashford include Repton Manor Primary School built on the former Templar Barracks which opened in September 2012 182 the Goat Lees Community Primary School which opened in September 2013 183 and Finberry Primary School which opened in 2017 188 In addition to the grammar schools there are a number of other secondary schools including those catering for special needs 189 190 Ashford College was originally located on Henwood to the east of town 191 a new college building was constructed in the town centre and opened in September 2017 192 193 Religious sites Edit St Mary s Church Ashford dates from the 13th century but was extensively modified in the 15th by John Fogge St Mary s parish church lies in the town centre Parts of it date from the 13th century including a brass of the first rector Robert de Derby 15 John Fogge supervised substantial changes to the church in the late 15th century including creating the 120 feet 37 m tower and raising the roof 194 195 He was buried in the church and a memorial window is dedicated to him 196 On 7 October 2010 the church was reordered by the Bishop of Dover Trevor Willmott to improve its dual function as both a place of worship and an arts centre and performance space for up to 350 people in a similar style to Union Chapel Islington Around 1 7m was spent improving the venue of which 1 2m was provided by European Union funding through the Green Renovation Cluster programme 197 Acts that have since appeared at the church include the Lightning Seeds Tim Burgess Gaz Coombes and Turin Brakes 198 Sport Edit A symbol outside the Julie Rose Stadium Ashford United Football Club is based at the Homelands about 4 miles 6 4 km south of the town centre 199 The club was formed in 1891 as Ashford United but was renamed to Ashford Railway Works in 1909 before settling on the name Town in 1930 200 The club was reformed in 2011 after financial difficulties including the resignation of owner Tony Betteridge 199 and became known once more as United 200 The club was promoted to the Southern League Premier Division in the 1986 87 season and best FA Cup performance was the second round in the 1996 97 season 199 Ashford has a local youth football team South Ashford Football Club The club formed in 2007 and caters for players from 4 to 21 years of age 201 The Julie Rose Stadium is an athletics stadium in nearby Willesborough It opened in 1997 and was named after the local middle distance runner Julie Rose who was killed in a plane crash in 1985 202 The stadium is part funded by the National Lottery It is home to Ashford Athletics Club and has held several international events 203 It can accommodate up to 800 people 204 The Stour Centre The Stour Centre managed on behalf of Ashford Borough Council by Ashford Leisure Trust is located in a park near the railway station and provides a range of recreational and leisure services including several pools water slides gyms and athletic facilities 205 Ashford Rugby Football Club was formed in 1885 The club plays at Kinneys Field near the Canterbury Road 206 The club s 1st XV play in London Division 3 South East 207 Ashford has an archery club which provides archery teaching to adults and children over 10 208 The club runs an annual UK Record Status Portsmouth tournament 209 Ashford Hockey Club is based at Ball Lane Kennington and was formed in 1898 210 Ashford also has several cricket clubs including Great Chart Cricket Club which celebrated their 150th Anniversary in 2006 211 Media EditAshford s local commercial radio station was KMFM Ashford The Ashford studios hosted both local and networked programmes for KMFM stations until the county wide amalgamation of all network output 212 The town is also served by other county wide stations BBC Radio Kent Heart South and Gold Ashford also has its own community radio station Radio Ashford 107 1 FM 213 214 This started broadcasting in May 2011 and includes programmes from the Ashford Hospital Broadcasting Service Ashford s hospital radio station which has been operating in Ashford since 1971 215 Ashford has had several newspapers some of which are still in production The Kent Messenger in Ashford was established in the 19th century with main offices on the High Street It remained in operation until the 1970s 216 There are currently three local newspapers being produced the Kentish Express published by the KM Group yourashford published by KOS Media and the Ashford Herald which has been published by Kent Regional News and Media since July 2009 217 Cultural references EditRussell Hoban repurposed Ashford as Bernt Arse in his 1980 post apocalyptic novel Riddley Walker Wye became How Dover Do It Over and Canterbury Cambry 218 See also EditChrist Church Ashford List of people from Ashford Kent List of twin towns and sister cities in the United KingdomReferences EditFootnotes Edit Ashford St Mary s Ashford Oaks Primary School Beaver Green Downs View Infants East Stour Goat Lees Great Chart Godinton Kennington Junior Repton Park Victoria Road Willesborough 181 182 183 Citations Edit a b Ashford City population Archived from the original on 2 January 2023 Retrieved 1 January 2023 1 High St Ashford TN24 8TA to Trafalgar Square Charing Cross Google Maps Archived from the original on 7 May 2022 Retrieved 2 February 2020 Key to English Place names kepn nottingham ac uk Archived from the original on 1 July 2021 Retrieved 19 July 2021 Lawrie 2004 p 6 10 Kent Archaeology 2009 p 4 Lawrie 2004 p 13 a b Lawrie 2004 p 11 Ashford in the spotlight Kent Life 14 December 2010 Archived from the original on 24 May 2014 Retrieved 23 May 2014 Dictionary of American Family names Oxford University Press 2013 Archived from the original 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