Hythe
Your magazine March 2017
This newsletter is compiled and edited by David Cowell who is totally responsible for content. If you do not wish to receive these newsletters please email UNSUBSCRIBE to him at david@davidcowell.net
If you have any photographs of the area either current or past do send them to me by email and I will feature them in future editions. If you just have prints do drop them round to Clyme House (see back page) and I will scan and return them.
Support your local Farmers' Markets
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31 Farmers Market
Art and Craft Market
Great range of bread, pies, biscuits, fruit & veg, meat, eggs, cheese and charcuterie, fish, cakes and quiches, preserves and chutneys and confectionery (stall holders may vary between markets).
REAL F
D. REAL CL
SE.
Shop Local. www.sandgatebusiness.org.uk
Sandgate Library is open Monday to Saturday 9:30am - 1:00pm (closed Wednesday) For more information call 01303 248563 (mornings only) Sandgate Library, James Morris Court, Sandgate High St. CT20 3RR
A
r ou y r fo y e r t da dia
July 21 - July 23 CT21 5AS Hythe
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W. MARTIN LTD. PET & GARDEN SUPPLIES 73 Cheriton High St.Folkestone.CT19 4HE PET FOODS & ACCESSORIES HUTCHES & RUNS ALL GARDEN REQUIREMENTS Large range of wild bird foods Seeds, bulbs, compost & fertilizers Vegetable & flower plants Concrete ornaments For a great pet and garden shop near you give us a call today on: 01303 275 223 or email wmartin4@btconnect.com
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From its heyday as a Victorian seaside resort to its role as a major departure point for cross-channel ferries, Folkestone has a proud and distinctive identity. This extraordinary history is embodied in the buildings that have shaped the town. Folkestone in 50 Buildings explores the history of this rich and vibrant community through a selection of its greatest architectural treasures. From the magnificent century-old Grand Hotel to the stunning new Rocksalt Restaurant, part of the ongoing regeneration of its famous seafront and harbour, this unique study celebrates the town's architectural heritage in a new and accessible way. Well-known local author Paul Harris guides the reader on a tour of the city’s historic buildings and modern architectural marvels. Due out on the 15th November. Click on photograph to visit the publisher's website.
To advertise in three The Sentinels with circa 3580 targetted readers and growing please email me at:
No job too small
david@davidcowell.net
Please call to discuss your needs
for a rate card. Thank you.
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Our ‘New Look’ Shop Proves a Big Hit! Our refurbished shop is proving extremely popular, with customers patiently queuing outside (well before opening time) for the reopening last Saturday. A steady stream of well over 200 customers came along on the first day alone and took advantage of the new, improved facilities. Come along and see – we have a very high standard of merchandise, at bargain prices! Address: 139D High St, Hythe CT21 5JL Phone: 01303 238661 www.folkestonehythe.cats.org.uk Hours: Monday to Saturday 9:30am–4:30pm Sunday Closed
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Hythe Farmers’ Market takes place on the second and fourth Saturdays of the month from 10am until 1pm. In the Methodist Church Hall, Chapel Street, Hythe, Parking is available nearby. For more information call (01303) 266118 or 268715
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Tynwald My research into Tynwald progresses well and I though I'd share my latest discovery. The official opening of the residential home took place in 1961 and was conducted by the local Member of Parliament, Albert Costain. A man better known for building rather than lyrical quatrains, the MP did put pen to paper and wrote this poem for the ocassion and it was published in the Folkestone Gazette: In ancient Hythe, upon this day, Some words of praise I gladly pay, To everyone who had a share In making Tynwald snug and fair. This old folks' home, the gift of Hythe, Shows many minds are well alive, Interpreting a neighbour's needs, Not in lip service - but in deeds.
Tynwald from a 1923 auction catalogue
For she who made the house bequest Will be remembered with the blest, Behind the unknown thousand mind Is someone who is very kind. To workers for our old folks' care, To all the donors everywhere, The Rotary and Venetion fun All praise to you for what you've done.
From the Folkestone Gazette
Then finally Hythe's civic pride Shines with new lustre by this stride, Such acts as this exalt the nation, And deserve its commendation. It would be churlish to criticise the sentiment expressed but I think it is a good he had a day job!
Albert Costain MP at the opening ceremony from the Folkestone Gazette
I am particularly keen to get an old photograph of the entrance of Tynwald which, according to the 1923 auction catalogue, was "approached from Hillside Street through iron gates....." 8
Friends of St Leonard’s Church
Oak Walk, Hythe, Kent CT21 5DN
Saturday 25 February 2017, 7.30pm
THE DARIUS BRUBECK QUARTET
with special choral performance by the Shepway Singers of Dave Brubeck’s Four New England Pieces ' 01303 264470 for further details Tickets £15 available from Brandon’s Music Shop 55 High Street, Hythe, Kent CT21 5AD – ' 01303 264429 and from www.friendsofstleonardshythe.org.uk 9
Ticket prices [Friends] Saturday 29 April 7.30pm £12 [£10] Saturday 25 February 7.30pm Daniel Cook (Sub-Organist Westminster Abbey) £15 [£13] Guilmant – March on a theme of Handel The Darius Brubeck Quartet: Stanford – Sonata No 2, Op 151 Darius (son of Duruflé – Prélude et Fugue sue le nom Dave) Brubeck d’Alain, Op 7 Widor – Symphonie VI, Op 42 No 1 (piano), Matt Ridley (bass), Wesley Gibbens Thursday 11 May 12 noon [L] £7 [£6] Robert Drury ‘Guitarra Romantica’ (drums), Dave O’Higgins (saxophone). Original music and jazz standards in addition Saturday 10 June 7.30pm £21 & £15 to Dave Brubeck compositions that Primavera Chamber Ensemble Mozart – Flute Quartet in C, K285b blend with special choral performance by Shepway Singers of Haydn – Symphony No 101 in D Dave Brubeck’s – Four New England ‘Clock’ arr. Salomon Brahms – Piano Quintet in F minor, Op 35 Pieces Saturday 11 March 7.30pm £12 [£10] Thursday 22 June 12 noon [L] £7 [£6] Just2 Harp Duo: Karina & Adel James Short (Organ Scholar, St Wilson Leonard’s Church). Works by Internationally acclaimed awardBruhns, Bach, Couperin, Elgar, winning harp duo, play variety of Reger, Vierne music to include traditional, classical, Saturday 8 April 7.30pm £15 [£13] Scottish, contemporary and jazz Dominic Alldis Trio: Dominic Alldis (piano), Andrew Cleyndert (double Saturday 24 June 5.00pm £7 [£6] bass), Martin France (drums). Jazz Verano Quintet: Ben Uden, Richard arrangements of classical themes, Williams, Phillip Scott Moore, folk songs, American Adam Young (guitarists) & songbook and original compositions Emmanuel Webb (violin) Awardwinning local young musicians Saturday 22 April 7.30pm £12 [£10] perform exciting repertoire from ‘Fiddle and Faff’: Christine Adams South America, Spain and elsewhere & Lissie Bayford. Traditional and own songs with accompaniments on Light lunches available in church after violin, double bass, accordion and lunchtime concerts indicated by [L]. nyckelharpa 10
KEVIN Plastering & Building Services Painting & Decorating Wall & Floor Tiling All aspects of building work undertaken Kevin 07948045255 Free Estimates
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A SERIES OF GUIDES TO EXTENDING YOUR HOME AND ADDING VALUE 2. PLANNING YOUR PROJECT- STATUTORY APPROVALS Once you have agreed the final design for your project, the next stage is obtaining all statutory approvals. The first step is planning approval. Planning approval is different from building regulations (which I will discuss later). Planning approval seeks to guide the way our towns, cities and countryside develop. It includes the use of land and buildings, the appearance of buildings, landscaping considerations, highway access and the impact that the development will have on the general environment. Planning permission. There are two types of planning permission: outline permission and full permission. Outline permission means you can build on the plot, in principle, and full permission describes exactly what can be built on that plot. Another option, which may or may not be applicable, is permitted development (PD). This is meant to be a ‘fast track’ through the planning process for simple domestic extensions. PD applies only to houses, extensions to the rear and side of the building and loft conversions in some circumstances. It also only applies to applications made in England, not the rest of the UK. Your extension should not take up more than 50 per cent of the land surrounding the original property; sheds and outbuildings count towards this percentage. There are additional rules on side extensions, proximity to boundary, eaves and materials, so always check the full criteria at planningportal.co.uk Listed buildings, conservation areas, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, World Heritage Sites and Sites of Special Scientific Interest do not normally qualify for PD. Check with your local planning authority for more information. You will be allowed to make changes to your home without a planning application If your project complies with the relevant PD criteria. It can take up to eight weeks for your local planning department to consider your planning application, and the department has the right to request more time to make its considerations. One of the most important things to know is that making an application to your local planning department will almost certainly be time consuming and is rarely straightforward. Your planning application may be refused, in which case you can either alter the proposal and resubmit it within 12 months at no extra charge, or alternatively, you can appeal against the decision but you must do so within twelve weeks. A decision will be made within eight weeks. If plans are approved you must start building within 12
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three years, otherwise the permission becomes invalid and a new application is required. Planning applications need to be accompanied by detailed drawings and relevant information. You will also have to pay a fee to make your application, and this will vary depending on the complexity of the plan and where you live. As an example, a fee of around ÂŁ172 is normal for an extension application. Go to planningportal.co.uk for more information and a fee calculator. The planning department in your local area is responsible for approving all submissions and will also be able to provide you with advice. BUILDING REGULATIONS Once the necessary planning approval has been obtained the detailed design of the project can begin. This can be carried out during the planning process but would be at risk if subsequently planning approval was not granted. Building Regulations vary from planning approval. They set standards for the design and construction of buildings to ensure the safety and health for people in or about those buildings. They also include requirements to ensure that fuel and power is conserved and facilities are provided for people, including those with disabilities, to access and move 13
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The Historic Houses Association (HHA) represents over 1,640 of the UK's privately and charitably owned historic houses, castles and gardens. These are listed buildings or designated gardens, usually Grade I or II*, and are often outstanding. Many are considered to be iconic symbols of Britain's unique heritage. Around 500 of these properties open their doors to visitors for days out, special tours, school visits, film locations, weddings and events, or as memorable places to stay. 24 million people a year visit HHA Member properties and there are over 45,000 Friends of the HHA. Members range from iconic stately homes such as Blenheim Palace, Highclere Castle, Castle Howard, Knebworth House, Longleat and Burghley House, to more intimate houses such as Traquair in Scotland, Treowen in Wales and Belle Isle in Northern Ireland. Most are still private family homes. The Association was established in 1973 to help owners conserve these wonderful places in the interests of the nation and carries out important lobbying, advisory and marketing work on behalf of Member properties.
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New season programme of films 7th March 2017
2nd May 2017
Raise the Red Lantern
The Salt of the Earth 6th June 2017
4th April 2017
Tangerines
Timbuktu
4th July 2017 O Brother Where Art Thou
Where The Tin Tabernacle, Portland Road, Hythe, CT 21 6FL. Parking in council car parks (including at Aldi) is free after 6 pm, and there are often spaces alongside the canal. Full disabled access. When 7.30 on the first Tuesday of the month, from October to July. Doors open 7.00. Entry ÂŁ5 on the door, or ÂŁ3 for Hythe Cinema Card holders.
Email: hythecommunitycinema@gmail.com Phone: 01303 264914 or 01303 237227
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www.aridzonaawnings.co.uk For the finest German engineered awnings and glass rooms Installed by a Kent based family company.
Call Sam Ruddle for a free survey on 0330 6600949
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A SAP energy calculation may also be required to verify energy use in the proposed building. Once the application has been prepared a submission can be made. A fee is payable, subject to the size and extent of works proposed. An extension of up to 40m2 would be £734 - check with local building control. Be sure to keep neighbours informed regarding your plans, and hire a chartered surveyor for any party wall issues that may arise. A Party Wall notice may be required if the proposed work is on or within a certain distance from a neighbour’s boundary. Check the Home Owners Alliance website - party wall agreements for more details: http://hoa.org.uk/advice/guides-forhomeowners/i-am-improving/party-wallagreement/ The notice should be submitted 8 weeks before work starts.
Paul worked at Crundens and since its closure has provided this excellent service. around inside buildings. Other consultants may be required to provide more technical information to support the building regulations application.
In future articles I will explain how to progress your project after the planning approval process and building regulations approvals, including how to work out your budget, money saving tips, planning a garden room, loft extension or garage conversion. More information appears on my website www.pmcross.co.uk. If you have any questions I will also try to answer them next time.
A structural engineer may be required to prepare foundation design and structural PETER CROSS RIBA support calculations, to accompany the peter@pmcross.co.uk application. 18
This is the second and final extract about Saltwood and Hythe from S. J. Mackie's A Descriptive and Historical Account of Folkestone and Its Neighbourhood published in 1883. By queen Elizabeth’s survey (1564) there were at Hythe at that time “ a customer, controller, and searher ; one hundred and twenty-two inhabited houses; t\vo creeks and landing places, -t he one called the Haven, the other the Stade. ”Of shipping in the port there were “17 tramellers of five tunne; seven shoters of 15; three crayers of 30; and four erayers of 40 tuns;” employing in all about one hundred and sixty persons, chiefly in fishing. Soon after this period, notwithstanding the attempts mmle to use the little streams of the district as back-waters, the harbour became entirely choked and abandoned. Hythe now contains about three thousand inhabitants, and has, since the troops have again been stationed in the great barracks, built here during the last war, once more risen into comparative prosperity. On the shore, by Fort Moncrief, is the practice ground for the instruction of the soldiers in the use of the Minié rifle. Several small but very pleasant lodging-houses and a bathroom have been erected on the beach, and a considerable number of visitors resort hither in the summer season. Near the east end is St. John’s hospital, for the residence and relief of nine poor persons; and near the church is another hospital, dedicated to St. Bartholomew, originally founded in 1336 by Hamo, bishop of Rochester. There are apartments in it for thirteen poor men and poor women, whom the revenue, derived from lands in the neighbourhood with which it is endowed, is sufficient to furnish with an allowance of coals and a yearly stipend of about £20 apiece. The new National Schools are situated in St. Leonard’s Place and are very finely built of ragstone with Caen facings. The old school house in thc High Street was an interesting structure of timber, highly ornamented withcarvings; not a trace of which now remains, the wholehaving been entirely demolished some two or threeyears ago. There are still many very old houses in the High Street, as well as in other parts, but generally of a plain description; one near the market, with its small shop-window and its little sentry-box affair perched on its great roof, is the only example now likely to attract the attention in passing through the town. This was once the residence of the Deedes family. The most attractive object in Hythe is the church, a mixture of late Norman and early English architecture. Some of the ornamentation ofthe later period is particularly beautiful, and the slender marble columns at the sides of the long narrow lancet windows in the chancel are extremely elegant. It has been at various 19
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times greatly mutilated and defaced, and the lines of walls and masonry in the neighbouring streets shew how extensive were the boundaries of the abbey or monastery with which it appears to have been formerly connected. The object, however, to which the attention of the general visitor is more especially drawn, is the great pile of human bones in the crypt under the chancel. Various apocryphal stories have been circulated about this curious heap, and a memorial, written in a fine hand by the favourite pupil of a local pedagogue, is hung in the vault, stating, on the authority of “an ancient history of England,” these bones to be the relics of a sanguinary battle with the Danes who landed here in 842, when the Britons (?), though victorious, were so horrified with the slaughter, that they fled and left the carcases of their enemies to whiten on the strand, from whence long afterwards their bones were gathered up and deposited in the church. This tale, however, is of modern invention; for the Rev. James Brome, the rector of Cheriton, who must have been thoroughly acquainted with this district, writing at the it beginning of the last century, mentions no such tradition. On the contrary, speaking of this “great stack of dead men’s bones and sculls,” Interior of Hythe Church he tells us, “that how or by what means they were brought to this place (the charnel-house under the church) the townsrnen are altogether ignorant, and can give no account of the matter.” He then adds, “probably the first occasion of them might be from what is related by Henry Knyghton (de Eventibus Anglioe, lib. iii, p. 2503), how that in the reign of Edward the First, about the year 1295, the then king of France sending about three hundred ships for an English invasion, one of them more forward than the rest came directly for Hythe, where landing her men, the English who were there placed for the defence of the port, killed at that time two hundred and forty men, all that ship’s crew, and afterwards burnt the ship out of which they landed. Now, after this slaughter, these men’s bones in all probability might be gathered up and laid there; after which daily accessions of more might be made, till they increased to so vast a number as is still visible.” Leland, too, though in the passage we have quoted he notices the “fair vault under the quire,” makes no mention whatever of these bones. Whether they are, after all, anything more than a mere assemblage of such relics dug up at various times in the churchyard, or brought from some Roman or Saxon cemetery in the vicinity, is perhaps doubtful, but it is certainly curious that many of the sculls have the marks of violence upon them. The author has, on the other hand, in his possession, many fragments of Roman and Saxon pottery and of mediaeval coarse earthenware, which have been found very recently in re-stacking a portion of the pile. As at Folkestone, several churches known to have existed have disappeared, though here, more probably, through the desecrating hands of man than by the destructive action of the sea, for the condition of the soil as well as historical facts, show the gain of the land at this spot for many centuries. Altogether there is much 20
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to interest us in Hythe, and more than I am able to bring into the limits of this little volume - indeed, its importance is such, that I feel it cannot be fairly treated as part of the neighbourhood of Folkestone, although the circle of my observations having extended considerably beyond it, I could not omit a brief notice. The quantities of beautifully-preserved charters, books of corporate meetings, accounts, deeds, and manuscripts, dating at least from the reign of Edward I, which by the courtesy of the mayor and corporation have been directed to be submitted to my inspection, have fully determined me to appropriate a little book specially to this ancient and highly interesting town, which will form another of the series of volumes which it is my intention to devote to the history of the Cinque Ports and their members. The abundance of material so liberally placed at my command by the council, makes me look forward with the greatest pleasure to resuming my acquaintance with those best of friends, the readers and purchasers of an author’s labours. West Hythe lies close under Lympne Hill, by the side of the military canal, and consists of a public house, a roofless cottage, two or three farms, and a demolished church of our Lady. When the estuary at Lympne became unnavigable, the haven of West Hythe grew into repute; but this in its turn becoming choked by the beach, the vessels stopped to the eastward at the long harbour of Hythe, and West Exterior of Hythe Church Hythe sank into decay. The church, of which the crumbling walls are yet standing, is of small dimensions, and was in ruins when Leland wrote in the time of HenryVlII, although in the previous reign Robert Beverley, the vicar, was buried in the choir. It seems to have been in a state of progressive decay for sometime even before this ; for there are in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury several wills bequeathing legacies for its repair, and in 1489 Chapel of Our Lady at West Hythe William Tylly left forty shillings towards the new roofing of it, and John Knatchbull, of Lympne, by his will proved in l504, left 3s. 4d. to the works of this church.
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CRAFTS
2017 SUNDAY 9 APRIL 10am to 4pm at the
Hythe Imperial
Princes Parade, Hythe, Kent CT21 6AE ✦ Step into a creative world and discover 30 stalls with quality, handcrafted goods ✦ Refreshments available FREE ADMISSION CaranoArtsCraftsFairs @Carano67 www.caranoevents.co.uk ✉ Carano@sky.com 22
I am researching the history of Tynwald House in Hillside Street Hythe and would be most grateful if you could pass on anything you may know about the property. It is now a residential home for the elderly but has been a private dwelling in the past with owners such as Admiral Hall-Thomson and Charles Dynely Twopeny who was Mayor of Hythe between 1919-1922. Thank you. david@davidcowell.net
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CHAMPAGNE BY THE SEA ALL YEAR ROUND Why wait for New Years or special occasions? We feel anytime is a good time for champagne!
Bar at the Hythe Imperial
Hythe Imperial Hotel, Princes Parade, Hythe, Kent CT21 6AE
01303 267441
Moet & Chandon, excellence from grape to glass. A seductive palette in every glass.
If you have any comments to make about this publication please do email me. I would be very interested in the things you like and the things you don't like and the things you'd like to see included. Thank you. If you would like to submit an article or letter please email it to me. I will print almost anything as long as it’s not libellous, racist or unkind. Name must be supplied but can be withheld if requested. Please put your articles etc in plain text or Word and images should be in .jpg, .tiff or .png. My contact details are: Address: Clyme House, Hillside Street, Hythe, Kent CT21 5DJ Mobile: 07771 796 446 Landline: 020 3239 5828 (via Skype) email: david@davidcowell.net