Travel to Iden Green Map

Iden Green tourist guide map of landmarks & destinations by Walkfo


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Travel to Iden GreenWhen travelling to Iden Green, Walkfo’s has created a travel guide & Iden Green overview of Iden Green’s hotels & accommodation, Iden Green’s weather through the seasons & travel destinations / landmarks in Iden Green. Experience a unique Iden Green when you travel with Walkfo as your tour guide to Iden Green map.


Iden Green history


The discovery of various fragments of Iron Age pottery, struck flint flakes and iron slag, indicate that some areas of the parish were settled during the Iron Age, perhaps as early as 1500 BC. Iden Green’s main street, Mill Street, was a Roman Road that connected Hastings to Maidstone, so the village began its main growth along a ‘Roman thoroughfare’ centred around the existing farmsteads of Eaglesden, Iden Green Farm and Yew Tree Farm; which had organically nestled themselves into the Wealden landscape with their far reaching views of the rolling valleys. However, the village expanded to its greatest extent during the 16th century, as part of Cranbrook’s thriving Wealden cloth industry, as is clearly evidenced by the numerous workmen’s cottages that sprung up in the village during that time, many of which still exist today. The manor of Benenden, which included Iden Green, was given by William the Conqueror to his brother Odo the Bishop of Baieux in 1067 and the manor is one of the few parish’s in the Weald included in the Doomsday Book of 1086, by name. A paved ford built in Roman times still exists in Iden Green, having been discovered during excavations in 1935. It was common around AD43 for the Romans to pave fords in Britain to allow easy access by pedestrians, horses and carts. The Paved Ford in Iden Green is protected by the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 as being of national and historic importance. The first Ordnance Survey map of the area, surveyed 1870–1871 and published in 1887, details that the village centred around four main farms; the largest being Eaglesden manor, its oast, workers cottages and its farm, in the south of the village, in addition to Iden Green Farm to the east (along Weavers Lane), Yew Tree Farm which occupied the centre of the current village and Framefarm in the northern area. Other houses mentioned in this first Ordnance Survey of the area include Thorne Charity House (near the site of the current tennis club), Smithey (near the site of the monument on the corner of Standen Street) and Albion Cottage (opposite Mr Noah’s Nursery). Hemsted Park was granted to the Guldefords in 1388 and the family became a large part of the history of the parish for over 300 years. Richard Guldeford’s official title was ‘Richard Guildford of Hemsted in Benenden and Halden in Rolvenden’ and he fought alongside Henry VII when he gained the Crown at Bosworth Field in 1485. Hemsted became a great house with a hunting park and was visited by Queen Elizabeth I, hosting her for over 3 nights in 1573. In 1702, Hemsted was sold to the Admiral of the Fleet, Sir John (Foulweather Jack) Norris. The house itself was modernised during and after Sir John’s ownership. His grandson, John Norris, came to live there with his wife, Kitty Fisher. She is famed in a nursery rhyme as the one who found Lucy Locket’s pocket (she lived at Babb’s Farm) and was ‘buried in her best ball-gown’ in Benenden churchyard. Commemorative wells were built in the parish to celebrate Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee in 1887 in Benenden, and the Diamond Jubilee in 1897 in Iden Green. Lord Rothermere bought Hemsted in 1912 and during 1923-24 the estate was dispersed. Benenden School bought Hemsted House and park and the farms were sold at auction in Maidstone. Symbolic of the end of an era was the felling of the great Hemsted Oak in New Pond Road, ‘probably the finest specimen of an oak in the South of England’. The trunk, weighing eight tons, went to the Wembley Exhibition of 1924. Lord Rothermere became a great benefactor to the parish of Benenden and Iden Green, giving to Benenden, the St George’s Club, War Memorial, and recreation ground (where the village hall now stands) and giving to Iden Green, two allotment fields and the Iden Green recreation ground and Pavilion. In addition, he set up a trust fund for their maintenance which still exists today, almost 100 years later. The current Lord Rothermere, Jonathan Harmsworth – the 4th Viscount Rothermere, is the owner of Associated Newspapers, publishers of the Daily Mail, Mail On Sunday and Metro. On 6 March 2016, HRH Princess Anne The Princess Royal, an ex-pupil of Benenden School for Girls, visited Iden Green to open six new homes on Standen Street as part of Kent’s affordable housing scheme. This was in addition to the six houses built in 1994. The land had been gifted to the Tunbridge Wells Borough Council by Viscount Rothermere.

  

Iden Green map & travel guide with history & landmarks to explore


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With 15 travel places to explore on our Iden Green travel map, Walkfo is a personalised tour guide to tell you about the places in Iden Green as you travel by foot, bike, car or bus. No need for a physical travel guide book or distractions by phone screens, as our geo-cached travel content is automatically triggered on our Iden Green map when you get close to a travel location (or for more detailed Iden Green history from Walkfo).


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