Patrixbourne
Patrixbourne maps (2 available)
Patrixbourne books (30 available)
- 2 photos on Patrixbourne appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Patrixbourne
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Patrixbourne and Kent
Patrixbourne memories
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You can also read memories of nearby places in Kent below.
Kent memories
Lamberts Laundry
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 the Baptist Chapel.
My Monday round included Aylesham, Nonington, Elvington, Ash, Wingham, Ickham and Wickanbreaux, Littlebourne and stops in between. Adisham had its own charm [apart from the refreshments mainly offered by Mrs Hoskins at Hazlewood Bungalow] and made I several frends in the village. I left the laundry trade in 1964 to join the legal profession - but have fond ...read more here
A memory of Adisham contributed by Herbert Piddock
School holidays
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 I was put on the coach outside the pub to go back to London (a place I have always disliked). I used to dread that each summer. I remember Mrs Clegg who used to have the sweet shop where I used to buy sherbert powder. I now live in the Peak District but I still have wonderful memories of Ickham.
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A memory of Ickham contributed by John Travis
Seaton Mill, Ickham
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 were both sons of my great grandmother Sarah Clayden Rudd, who lived at the Green at Wickhambreaux. I would be very interested to learn of any further information about Seaton Mill if anyone has this.
A memory of Ickham contributed by First name Last name
Treasury farm
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.
A memory of Ickham contributed by Diane Long
Extracts From Patrixbourne & Kent books
This ‘Tudor’ house may not be all it seems, as many houses in this pretty village were built in this style as recently as 1860. There is a very good example of a Norman church here, built around 1160. The Nailbourne passes through in the form of a small stream, flowing intermittently; however, in February 2001 it was a raging torrent, swamping many of the properties hereabouts.
An extract from from"Villages of Kent Photographic Memories".
This peaceful view of Minster
shows its pleasant old houses.
Minster has the dubious claim to
fame of being the site of the world’s
first fatal motor-car accident.
An extract from from"Thanet Pocket Album".
The original monastic settlement at Minster was founded in AD670,
overlooking Minster Marshes, then the open Wantsum Channel. This
late Victorian view shows the present buildings; they are of Norman age,
built as a grange of St Augustine’s Abbey in Canterbury.The buildings
have been used as a nunnery since 1930.
An extract from from"Thanet Pocket Album".
Built in the 1840s, this row of coastguard
cottages still stands, although Pegwell itself
has been engulfed by Ramsgate.
Smuggling was endemic in Thanet, and
the Revenue was determined to stamp it
An extract from from"Thanet Pocket Album".
This prettily posed picture shows
two little girls and a fashionable
lady. The Belle Vue tea gardens,
on the right, were built in 1790
and were very popular.They were
visited in 1830 by the future
Queen Victoria, who had tea
there with her mother.
An extract from from"Thanet Pocket Album".







