Explore Oare, Kent Plaques in Blue Plaque, English Heritage, National Trust & local plaque schemes
Explore Oare, Kent plaques & local Oare, Kent history / heritage content through street plaque schemes (including Blue plaques, English Heritage & National Trust) plus Walkfo’s millions of audio plaques in Walkfo’s Audio Travel Guide to Oare, Kent.
About Oare, Kent
Oare is a village and civil parish north of Davington, Faversham in southeast England. It was once anciently recorded as ‘Ore’, meaning fenny or marshy place in Saxon language. The manor of Oare belonged to Odo, Earl of Kent (as the Bishop of Bayeux) and was noted so in the Domesday book. Historically, Oare was the southern terminus of the Harty Ferry which ran across the Swale channel between the then Isle of Harty and the mainland.
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plaques Walkfo has converted physical plaques into audio files triggered by GPS on a phone when you pass close by on foot, bike, bus or car. You hear Oare, Kent history information & more at the places where they happened, with up-to-date content created by our AI, sourced from trusted history resources such as Wikipedia, local Oare, Kent plaque schemes, English Heritage & National Trust. Walkfo improves on existing Oare, Kent’s physical Oare, Kent plaque schemes with additional, more detailed information than the writing on the physical plaque. With millions of audio places / virtual plaques created across the whole of the UK, you can explore Oare, Kent the same way you might explore a museum or art gallery with information audio headset.
Oare, Kent plaques & short history overview