Borough Green

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Borough Green
Borough Green Station 23-08-05.JPG
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Borough Green
Location within Kent
Population4,554 (2011 Census)
OS grid reference TQ605575
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town SEVENOAKS
Postcode district TN15
Dialling code 01732 88
Police Kent
Fire Kent
Ambulance South East Coast
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Kent
51°17′29″N0°18′22″E / 51.291300°N 0.306200°E / 51.291300; 0.306200

Borough Green is situated in the borough of Tonbridge and Malling in Kent, England. The central area is situated on the A25 road between Maidstone and Sevenoaks, with the M26 motorway running through the centre dividing Wrotham and Borough Green.

Contents

History

Pre-Roman

Two Paleolithic rock shelters were found at Oldbury Hill some two miles west of Borough Green with flint tools from about 50,000 years BCE. [1]

Roman Remains

Roman cinerary urns were first found in Barrow Field off Staley's Road in 1839 but were reburied and lost to history. [2] In the 1880s there was a much more important find on location north of the railway station where sand was being excavated. In 1898 a local archaeologist Benjamin Harrison of Ightham persuaded the owners to stop destroying them. He called in George Payne who identified them as Roman. There was a Roman cemetery consisting of rows of cinerary urns six feet apart and two feet deep. The burials date from around the year 100 CE.

Historical Inns

The first record of this name was in 1575, when it appears as Borrowe Grene. Middle English grene means village green The name itself is much older. It is not known if this from Old English burh ‘manor, borough' or from beorg 'hill, mound'. [3]

The name of the community describes what it originally was – a green to which the people of the area went for sports and games. [2] There is also a view that "borough", which predates any borough council in the area, relates to the word barrow, possibly referring to the Roman remains near the station site.

Its location at a crossroads with the old route from Gravesend to Hastings meant that inns were gradually opened. The Red Lion, originally the "White Bear", first mentioned in 1586, is now closed. The 1592 Black Bull became the Black Horse, then The Black Horse and Hooden, and recently The Black Horse again. The Bull of 1753 survives, but the "Red Lion", Fox and Hounds (1837) and The Rock (1860) have been turned into private housing. The Red Lion building still exists as part of the Red Lion Square housing development. The Fox and Hounds and the Rock were demolished to make way for Foxlea and Tavern Close respectively. The 1878 Railway Hotel, later The Henry Simmonds, is now a Sainsbury's Local food store.

The Red Lion, once the White Bear, dates back to 1576. This front section is 19th Century. It closed in 2007 and the building and its garden and car park were later transformed into housing - Red Lion Square. Red Lion pub in Borough Green.jpg
The Red Lion, once the White Bear, dates back to 1576. This front section is 19th Century. It closed in 2007 and the building and its garden and car park were later transformed into housing - Red Lion Square.

Nineteenth Century

This map of Borough Green is from early 19th Century and shows the purchase of the future Baptist plot in 1816. Borough Green around 1816.jpg
This map of Borough Green is from early 19th Century and shows the purchase of the future Baptist plot in 1816.
Bridge House, later Clokes department store, was built circa 1887/1889 by Joseph Walls, whose firm bought most of Yew Tree Farm. There is currently one of Borough Green's two pubs and a takeaway (presently closed) on the site. Bridge House.jpg
Bridge House, later Clokes department store, was built circa 1887/1889 by Joseph Walls, whose firm bought most of Yew Tree Farm. There is currently one of Borough Green's two pubs and a takeaway (presently closed) on the site.

In Borough Green there were 360 residents in 1841, 241 in 1861, 232 in 1871. The village expanded after the railway opened and in 1891 there were 682 inhabitants.

The London, Chatham and Dover Railway opened a line to Maidstone on 1 June 1874, and a station named Wrotham and Borough Green was built. Later the names were reversed to Borough Green and Wrotham, in line with the position of the station within Borough Green, and the fact that Borough Green had outgrown Wrotham.

An infant school was built on the direction of the local school board in 1875 to the design of architect Robert Wheeler. [4]

Western Road was planned in 1877 after the sale of 56 acres of land by the Tomlyn family between the High Street and Fairfield. [2] Town gas was provided by the Wrotham and Borough Green Gas Co from 1880 and in 1904 was taken over by the Mid Kent Gas Light and Coke Company. [2]

The River Bourne flows through the southern part of the parish. It once powered a paper mill at Basted.

Recent History

Piped water came from the Mid Kent Water Co. in 1900. Kent Electric Power Co. brought electricity in 1930.

Governance

There are three tiers of local government covering Borough Green, at parish, district and county level: Borough Green Parish Council, Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council and Kent County Council. The parish council meets at the village hall on High Street. [5]

Borough Green was historically part of the parish of Wrotham. In 1863 the parish was made a local government district, governed by a local board. [6] Such districts were reconstituted as urban districts in 1894. [7] Although named after Wrotham, the urban district council was always based in Borough Green, which was growing to become the largest settlement in the parish following the opening of the railway station in 1874. The council met at the Railway Hotel on Wrotham Road (now Sainsbury's) until 1902, then at a converted house it leased at 2 Sevenoaks Road from 1902 until 1924, before building its own headquarters at 16–18 Maidstone Road in 1924. [8] [9] [10] Wrotham Urban District was abolished in 1934, with the area being absorbed into Malling Rural District and divided into the parishes of Borough Green (which also took some territory from Ightham), Platt, Plaxtol and Wrotham. [11] [12] Malling Rural District in turn was abolished in 1974 to become part of Tonbridge and Malling.

Sports

Borough Green is home to the British Racing and Sports Car Club, one of the major organisers of motorsports events in the United Kingdom. The village's main football team is Potters Football Club of the Sevenoaks & District Premier Division, which fields one men's team.[ citation needed ] It has close ties with Borough Green Junior Football Club, which is also located in the village.[ citation needed ]

Churches

Several denominations have places of worship in Borough Green:

Church of the Good Shepherd, consecrated in 1906 Church of the Good Shepherd, Borough Green.JPG
Church of the Good Shepherd, consecrated in 1906

Borough Green did not become a separate Church of England parish until 1973. Before that the village was divided into three church parishes. Most of the village was in Wrotham parish. The part in Ightham parish started at the junction of Rock road and the A25 and included everything West of Rock Road. After 1843 part of the village was in Platt parish and the Black Horse Inn marked the boundary.

Borough Green Baptist Church Borough Green Baptist Church side view 01.jpg
Borough Green Baptist Church
This new Catholic Church is part of the Catholic parish of Sevenoaks and was opened in 2017. St Joseph's Church, Borough Green.jpg
This new Catholic Church is part of the Catholic parish of Sevenoaks and was opened in 2017.

Amenities

The village and nearby communities are served by Borough Green Primary School. The Medical Centre on Quarry Hill Road, opened in 1993 provides GP care. [2] The first recorded practitioners in Borough Green were Dr AA Lipscomb and the Walker family.

The library was started in 1922 at the council school. it moved several times and finally to its purpose built building in 1977. [2]

The Fire Brigade was founded in 1934. The modern Fire Station in Western Road was opened in 1964. [2] The Village Hall was built in 1964-65. [2] It serves as a polling station during elections.

The ten small shops were built by a Mr Gregory between 1904 and 1908. A Bank opened on Fridays in 1904. High Street Borough Green early 20th Cenrury.jpg
The ten small shops were built by a Mr Gregory between 1904 and 1908. A Bank opened on Fridays in 1904.
A similar view today. NatWest Bank closed in 2017 and is now Costa Coffee. High Street Borough Green today.jpg
A similar view today. NatWest Bank closed in 2017 and is now Costa Coffee.

Borough Green had branches of two nationwide retail banks, both of which closed in 2017. The former NatWest building on High Street is now Costa Coffee. There are branches of the Co-op, Sainsbury's Local and Nisa. Borough Green Post Office on the High Street is located in Nisa. There are several independent retailers and teashops.

Notable people

Related Research Articles

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References

  1. 'Seal: The History of a Parish' by Jean Fox, David Williams and Peter Mountfield, published by Philimores in 2007
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Borough Green Past and Present by Frank G Bangay 1994
  3. Poulton-Smith, Anthony (2013). West Kent Place Names. Great Britain: Copytech (UK) Limited, Peterborough. p. 18. ISBN   9781780912295.
  4. A Friendly Glimpse by Frank G Bangay 1989
  5. "Borough Green Parish Council" . Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  6. "No. 22739". The London Gazette . 26 May 1863. p. 2750.
  7. Kelly's Directory of Kent. London. 1913. p. 779. Retrieved 17 December 2023.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. "Wrotham's New Council Offices: Public Enquiry". Kent Messenger and Gravesend Telegraph. 13 October 1923. p. 5. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  9. "Ten Years Ago: 28th March 1924 - Their new home". Sevenoaks Chronicle. 30 March 1934. p. 2. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  10. "First meeting at new offices". Sevenoaks Chronicle. 16 May 1924. p. 8. Retrieved 18 December 2023.
  11. Ministry of Housing Order No. 78186. The Kent Review Order, 1934
  12. Youngs, Frederic (1979). Guide to the Local Administrative Units of England: Volume 1. London: Royal Historical Society. p. 295. ISBN   0901050679.
  13. ODNB: Joanne Wilkes, "Crowe, Catherine Ann..." Retrieved 22 September 2010, pay-walled.
  14. Kent and Sussex Courier, 15 October 2010. Retrieved 13 March 2014. Archived 14 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  15. Simkin, John. "Eva McLaren". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 15 January 2017.