Willesborough


Willesborough is a village, now in effect a residential suburb, on the eastern side of Ashford, Kent, England.

The area

The South Willesborough Dykes area, on the west bank of the River East Stour, is an area of sheep fields drained by dykes. The area is designated as the South Willesborough Dykes Site of Nature Conservation Interest. The dykes continue on the east side of the River East Stour and among the residential areas, and a tributary stream runs between Newtown and South Willesborough and into the East Stour. The smallest ditches dry up completely in summer.
The South Willesborough Dykes are important in terms of the geology of the area, being in the river floodplain and in supporting neutral, wet grassland species, along with Willesborough's Aylesford Green and Boys Hall forming part of the Ashford Green Corridor, although public access is otherwise limited.
Ashford Borough Council has a project to create the Willesborough Dykes Country Park.
There are a number of schools in and around the Willesborough area.
Willesborough is bordered by Ashford to the west and north-west, the M20 to the north, and Sevington and the new village of Finberry to the south-east.

History

In 1184 Pope Lucius III wrote to the abbot of St. Augustine, Canterbury, suggesting that the parson of Willesborough retired and passed the benefice to his son who could then be free to pursue his studies.
The town is known for its 1869 windmill near Hythe Road, and on Church Road, which has one of the oldest ringing bells in Kent.
Former English international cricketers Mark Ealham and Richard Ellison were born in Willesborough.

Commerce

William Harvey Hospital

The William Harvey Hospital, a major hospital providing services for east Kent, is in Willesborough, and is named after the discoverer of the blood circulatory system. of William Harvey at the hospital, and an older, damaged, statue of him, formerly the hospital, in the garden at the William Harvey Public House on Church Road in Willesborough.

Industry

was a bicycle, autocycle, moped and motorbike manufacturer based in Ashford. The Norman Cycles Club is based at Willesborough Windmill and the Norman Museum is located in the windmill's barn, where mopeds and bicycles are on display.

Ashford Steam Centre

Between 1968 and 1976, Ashford Steam Centre operated at the former engine shed that served Ashford railway station.