Adisham, Kent
Adisham maps
Historic maps of Adisham and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Adisham maps
Adisham photos
We have no photos of Adisham, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Aylesham, Nonington, Patrixbourne, Wingham, Bekesbourne, Littlebourne, Ickham, Bishopsbourne, Frogham, Bridge, Barham, Barfrestone, Wickhambreaux, ElvingtonAdisham books
Displaying 3 of 15 books about Adisham and the local area. View all Adisham books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Adisham
Displaying a selection of personal
memories of Adisham
.
Add your memory of Adisham
or of a photo of Adisham.
I called on many customers in Adisham village before the popularity of the automatic washing machine affected the laundry trade. I served all the main traders: Hosking Post Office, Best Bakery, Colmans Farm, and numerous private households. The generosity of the customers in providing tea and cakes added pleasant hours to my journey and I sometimes took the Sunday service at... [more]
Shared on 30 August 2008
Kent memories
I lived in the Rectory for the whole Universty year 1968-1969. There were four of us - male students from the University of Kent. A fantastic place to live. I have revisited the place - now an old people's home, still just about the same. The pub was a pub in the 60s - it is now a posh restaurant.
Shared on 06 October 2008
I used to spend all my summer school holidays with Mr and Mrs Curtis who used to live in the school house in Ickham. He used to play the organ in Wickhambreux church. I was adopted in London, and Mr Curtis was a good friend of my birth mother(I will leave it at that). I always remember the awful day that... [more]
Shared on 07 March 2008
My great uncle Henry Charles Rudd was an India Rubber Manufacturer at Seaton Mill, Ickham, in 1891. He is on the 1891 census. He died there the following year, in 1892. I believe my grandmother, Margaret Hagar Rudd also worked at the Mill. She was married to my grandfather Herbert Edwin Rudd, Henry Charles' brother. They... [more]
Shared on 14 February 2008
The building on the right-hand side of the photo in the foreground is in fact the wall of the garage which belonged to Treasury Farm, my home for many years. Many a time I was in the forge with my ponies getting them reshod ... to think this is how it looked just one year before I moved there.
Shared on 19 March 2007
Great grand parents lived in Barhamn "Black" Mill
my ancestoers richard walter and family lived in Barham mill. The mill is also the "location" for the movie Raising a Riot.
Shared on 11 November 2007
I was born in my Grandparents house - "Wimbourne" - in the valley below the Mill. Many pleasant hours have I spent sitting in the kitchen with my grandmother shelling peas that granddad had grown in the garden. The Mill could be seen from the kitchen window high on the downs. When travelling through Bridge on the Canterbury Road, we would... [more]
Shared on 02 January 2007
My family history reveals that the name of Piddock was once known in Knowlton and the family name linked with the Church. Piddocks were also to be found at Nortbourne in the 1500s - do such facts have interest for anyone?
Shared on 18 December 2008
Extracts From Adisham & Kent books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Adisham, inspired by Frith photos.
The expansion of the dockyard, the building of permanent military installations and the garrisoning of large numbers of troops in the area enabled the population of Chatham to overtake that of Rochester.
Read more and see photos from this book.
Chatham and the Medway Towns Photographic Memories
Trees line one side, and telegraph poles the other side of this section of the A2 from Rainham to Gillingham, where Mrs Hall had her hairdresser's shop, E H Chatfield was the confectioner and Len Button the butcher. Zebra crossings gave pedestrians priority over vehicles from 1951, but the little dog on the right has other priorities; the number of pedestrians would seem to present no problems to either the disappearing horse-drawn vehicle or the approaching cyclist.... [more]
Read more and see photos from this book.
Chatham and the Medway Towns Photographic Memories
The shop with the telephone kiosk outside, the van, and the electricity supply lines dispel some of the timelessness that clings to one of the area's more remote villages, where The Bell inn has refreshed its customers (although not always with Style & Winch beers) since Tudor times.
Read more and see photos from this book.
