Milton-next-Gravesend


Milton-next-Gravesend is an ecclesiastical parish in the north-west of Kent, England.

History

Feudal ownership of land in the parish was the subject of a legal action of 1076, Abbot Scotland v Hamo the Sherrif , seeing St Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury take back its stake in ownership.
Neighbouring Gravesend became a town under Royal Charter in the 13th century including Milton. The Church of England's founding was heralded by Henry VIII's split with Rome and the Dissolution of the Monasteries by which all of the abbots were retired and their institutions' endowments such as in this parish were confiscated from them.
Much of the population was, until about the 1840s scattered in rural farmhouses, country houses and cottages or those living along the east side of the High Street so not in Gravesend parish. The boundary between the two parishes is centred up Gravesend town High Street then Windmill Street and Singlewell Road. Just as Northfleet developed to the west of Gravesend so decennial censuses record this parish saw an almost fourfold increase in population between 1831 and 1901. In the next ten year census the number of houses slightly increased and occupation rates; the population next stood at 14,994.
Employers and Professionals108
Middling Sorts287
Labourers and Servants511
Others96

Churches

Two churches co-exist: the ancient parish church, dedicated to St Peter and Paul at the heart of the old settlement; and Christ Church at the western end of the parish built in 1856 when the town of Gravesend began to grow eastwards. In other faith centres, the parish has the more protestant place of worship St Paul's United Reformed Church and two small independent churches/chapels.
St Peter and St Paul saw five of its bells cast in 1656 by John Hodson, a treble was added in 1810 and the ring was augmented to 8 by two new trebles in 1930. The tenor is just under, tuned to F#.

Notable people