Chattenden

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Chattenden
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Looking over Rough Shaw towards Chattenden
Chattenden is located in Kent
Chattenden
Chattenden
 Chattenden shown within Kent
OS grid reference TQ758722
Civil parish Hoo
Unitary authority Medway
Ceremonial county Kent
Region South East
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town ROCHESTER
Postcode district ME3
Dialling code 01634
Police Kent
Fire Kent
Ambulance South East Coast
EU Parliament South East England
UK Parliament Medway to be replaced 2007 by Rochester and Strood
List of places
UK
England
Kent

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Chattenden is a small village in Hoo Parish, in the unitary authority of Medway in South East England. It was, until 1998,[1] part of Kent and is still ceremonially associated via the Lieutenancies Act.[2] It lies to the north of the A228 and the village of Wainscott, at the top of Four Elms Hill.

Origins

Chattenden means 'Forest Settlement' from the elements ceto and ham dun. It is recorded in 1100 as Chetindunam, and Chatindone in 1281.[3]

Geography and ecology

Turning left on the A228 on the brow of Four Elms Hill, leads onto Kitchener Road, that eventually leads itself to the Great Chattenden Woods, designated as an SSSI, due to the diversity of insects, birds, plants and trees found there. To the south of Chattenden is Towerhill Wood, also known as Coxham Wood, with has Public Footpaths that lead into Lower Upnor, where the Arethusa Venture Centre and the Medway Yacht Club (MYC) are located. Along the A228, (which becomes the Ratcliffe Highway in Chattenden), was once a pub known as 'The Old George'.

Military history

After 1667 gunpowder began to be stored in Upnor Castle on the north/west bank of the River Medway. During the Napoleonic Wars a gunpowder magazine was built alongside the castle designed to store a further 10,000 barrels of gunpowder, followed in the 1850s by another series of buildings along the riverside designed for filling and storing explosive shells - all for use in Her Majesty's Ships and in the extensive fortifications surrounding Chatham and Sheerness Naval Dockyards.

When it was realised that there was no room for further expansion of the storage facilities at Upnor, a nearby site inland at Chattenden was purchased, and in 1875 five magazines were built on a hillside (the contours of which helped provide a natural traverse for security and protection). Between them, the magazines were designed to hold 40,000 barrels of gunpowder (with space for more in times of war). A barracks was also built, a little to the south, to accommodate the eight officers and 120 men detailed to guard the site. The magazine compound and barracks were linked to Upnor by a narrow-gauge railway.[4]

File:YORKSHIRE B.jpg
Narrow-gauge locomotive in front of Chattenden barracks

From 1899 the storage facility was expanded with the development of the adjacent Lodge Hill site, which provided space for a further dozen small magazines for storing cordite, dry guncotton and other highly-explosive materials. Each magazine was surrounded by an earth mound (traverse) and all the individual buildings were linked by a tramway connected to the railway line. For safety the structures were set apart from one another, and the intervening space was planted with dense woodland.

As early as 1912 it was realised that the Lodge Hill and Chattenden Magazines were vulnerable to air attack. A surviving First World War anti-aircraft emplacement on Chatterden Ridge is of historic importance: it may have been the first anti-aircraft emplacement in the world, and was almost certainly the first in Britain.[5] Nevertheless, Chattenden and Lodge Hill continued to be used for ammunition storage through both World Wars, until 1961. Thereafter, the site was used as extensive barracks and training facilities for the Royal School of Military Engineering.

The 1872 Barracks quadrangle, with its central clock tower, was vacated in the 1980s and demolished.[6] The 1870s magazines at Chattenden remain in situ (though vulnerable to subsidence - a problem first identified soon after their completion) together with a pair of contemporary terraces which once housed the on-site police force. Several structures also survive at Lodge Hill, which continued to be used as a training ground for the Joint Services Bomb Disposal School in the 21st century, preparing personnel for active service in Iraq and Afghanistan.[4]

In 2007 the MoD Military Land was designated in 2007 as a brownfield area for redevelopment for residential and light industrial use. A plan had been worked up for 5000 houses in a ₤1bn scheme. The Lodge Hill camp however is home to 85 singing male nightingales, which is over 1% of the entire UK population which stands at 6000. Natural England have declared this a SSSI.[lower-alpha 1] Nightingales do a several thousand mile migration to West Africa and then return to the same tree making biodiversity offsetting[lower-alpha 2] inappropriate for the species.[7]

See also

Chattenden and Upnor Railway

Notes

  1. Owen Sweeney of the Medway Countryside Forum said "... the blackthorn and bramble scrub, as well as the coppiced ancient woodland, was a wonderful habitat for the extremely shy bird, which spends 12 weeks or so on the 815-acre site before wintering in west Africa. "These are the remaining green lungs amid the sprawling development around: Medway is full,..."
  2. A scheme where sensitive land is developed in exchange for the provision of similar piece of habitat in the region

References

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  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. The Place Names Of Kent, Judith Glover, 1976, Batsford. ISBN 0-905270-61-4
  4. 4.0 4.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. Local authority site survey
  6. Brian Matthews, The History Of Strood Rural District, 1971, Strood Rural District Council
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links