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Higham
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Information About

Higham, Kent




  District Gravesham
  County Kent
  Region South East England
  Ceremonial Kent
  Traditional Kent
  Constituency
  PostalTown ROCHESTER
  PostCode ME3
  DiallingCode 01474, 01634
  GridReference TQ715715
  Euro South East England
  Police Kent Police


Higham is a small village bordering the Hoo Peninsula , in Kent , between Gravesend and Rochester . It is in two parts — Higham itself on the main road, and Lower Higham around Higham Railway Station , a mile to the north. The Civil Parish of Higham is located in Gravesham district.


HISTORY


The priory dedicated to St Mary was built on land granted to Mary, daughter of King Stephen. In 1148, the nuns of St Sulphice-la-Foret, Brittany, moved to Higham. Higham priory was also known as Lillechurch. (Medieval Religious Houses, p. 259).
On the 6th of July 1227, King Henry III confirmed the royal grant to the abbey of St Mary and St Sulpice of Lillechurch.

The original parish church is dedicated to St Mary, now in the care of the Redundant Churches. The pulpit there is one of the oldest in Kent, dating from the 14th century.


The Larkin Memorial


Standing almost hidden from sight yet in the highest spot at Higham is the Larkin memorial on Telegraph Hill. This needle was raised in 1835 to the memory of Charles Larkin (1775-1833), an auctioneer from Rochester who promoted the Parliamentary reforms of 1832 that gave the vote to every householder whose property rental value was more than £10. By 1860 this unusual concrete monument was in danger of collapse, but was repaired in 1869 after local newspaper reports about its condition. It was renovated again in 1974.


GAD'S HILL


Shakespeare refers to Gad's Hill (or ''Gadshill'') and its relationship with highway robbery in his Henry IV Part I. As far back as 1558 there was a ballad entitled ''The Robbers of Gad's Hill''. The Sir John Falstaff public house stood at the top of a steep thickly wooded hill, an ideal spot for highwaymen.

Gad's Hill remains the only factual detail concerning the incident of the legend of the long ride north made by Dick Turpin , a highway man of some repute. The basic facts of the story are true, but they were told by Turpin to his admirers before he went to the gallows, and he was taking credit for the deed of one of his fellow highwaymen, and gang member, a certain Captain, Richard Dudley whom was guilty of the deed.

Gad's Hill Place was once the home of Charles Dickens who bought it in 1856 for £1,790. In its garden once stood a Swiss chalet in which Dickens would compose his works. The chalet is now in the gardens of Eastgate House, a Tudor building of great character in Rochester .


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