PAT ROSS FAVERSHAM SOCIETY newsletter February 2015 Walkers set off from Market Place for the Boxing Day walk See page 6 610 Chairman’s comments Michael frohnsdorff Diary Ends 2 February Jack Salmon – Illustrations and Pictures from the Family Collection, Fleur gallery. 1 and 22 February Stream clean by Friends of the Westbrook, 11am. Email [email protected] for details of where to meet 7 February Magna Carta quiz night, Alexander Centre, 7.30pm. Tickets £40 for a table of eight from sally.wookey@ favershamtc.co.uk Above: Plans are in hand to renovate and move Faversham war memorial in time for Remembrance Sunday, 2018 See page 7 I would first like to wish all members of the Faversham Society the best wishes of the board of trustees for a happy and successful 2015. Last year came to a very sad close with the deaths of two of our founders, Arthur Percival and Peter Hutley-Bull, and earlier in the year we also lost Jack Salmon. All of them represent a very great loss to the society, their families and Faversham. Tributes have been paid in the newsletter, and an exhibition is being held in Jack Salmon’s honour. We are still discussing ways in which their contribution to the society can best be celebrated. The memorial service for Arthur Percival in a packed parish church on 9 December was a magnificent and moving occasion and was featured in last month’s issue. The first annual Arthur Percival lecture on Lunar Mission 1 is described elsewhere in this issue (See page 5). Not only was it a splendid memorial for Arthur, the first of many such lectures we Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015 hope, but it also placed Faversham in the forefront of future discovery and exploration, an exceptional honour for a town that for so many centuries has been known for its hardy seafarers, adventurers and travellers. This was the first public launch in this country for this project of immense significance, which, it is hoped, will arouse interest and financial support all over the world. Much more will become known about the Moon as a result, and in the process Faversham and the society should benefit from their involvement, especially in terms of the educational and scientific feedback we expect to see throughout the years of the development of the project. The deepest thanks of the society go to David Iron for explaining the project to us and giving us the opportunity to become involved, and to our president, Richard Oldfield, and our member of parliament, Sir Hugh Robertson, for attending. Mrs Anni Bales, one of our trustees, undertook the organisation of this event. It took 1 Who’s Who at the Fleur: Anne Salmon brian wintle-smith This month, we feature Anne Salmon, who chairs the Faversham Society’s planning committee. Anne’s father Peter served as vice-chairman of the society and also chaired the planning committee. He was a town and borough councillor, Mayor of Faversham and Mayor of Swale. Anne has always lived in Faversham since being born in Herne Bay. She attended Faversham district school until 1974 when she began her secondary education at Queen Elizabeth’s Grammar School. Leaving QE in 1981 with eight GCE O-level and four A-levels, Anne moved on to Queen Mary University of London (as it is now known) leaving there with a BA in geography and politics. Having studied further at the University of Liverpool between 1985 and 1987, she became a master of civic design. Anne’s training for her current society role was as a planning officer with Thanet District Council in 1988 and 1989 and as a senior planning officer with the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea from 1989 to 2012. Fully sunripened fruits, berries & vegetables in daily capsules can transform your health, energy, sleep, fitness and immunity. Many satisfied customers. Ask me for details. Griselda Mussett 01795 538821 [email protected] 2 Fully sunripened Anne now works as a planner with a development company based in Croydon. While Anne has certainly followed in her father’s footsteps she has also clearly marked out her own. She is also minute secretary to the Faversham Historians and a founder member of the Creek Consortium. She is secretary to and founder member the Faversham branch of the Association of Men of Kent and Kentish Men, minute secretary of Faversham Constituency Labour Party and also its campaign coordinator. Anne also serves on the Creek Neighbourhood Plan Steering Group and with the drafting group for the Neighbourhood Plan. In 1993 she published A Sideways Launch, the authoritative technical and social history of the Faversham shipbuilding and engineering company, James Pollock, from 1875 to 1970. In addition to all of these activities Anne also finds time for her interests and pastimes which include photography, townscape, historic buildings, natural history, art, folk and classical music and touring holidays in Europe. an enormous amount of planning, time and effort, and she rose superbly to the occasion, admirably supported by her husband Michael. They deserve both our thanks and congratulations, as do the staff of the Alexander Centre for their organisational skills, help and forbearance. Our volunteers from the VIC did a marvellous task dealing with more than 200 tickets, publicity for the event and with the many inquiries. They also reproduced many of Arthur’s publications for display and sale at the event and more membership forms. Christine Smith and Jean Duchin did a marvellous job in representing the society, as did Ian Balding with a display of photographs and help with membership inquiries. Special thanks also go to the skills of our IT technicians, Graham Robinson and Chris Wootton, who spent much time in improving the sound presentation. Museum matters clive foreman Those of you who have visited the museum in the past few weeks will have seen the villages display, which expands the scope of the museum by including potted histories of several of the villages surrounding the town. Space is limited, but we will develop ways in which more of these outlying settlements can be included, for their own sake and for their contribution to the history of the larger area. Just before writing this I have been looking at contemporary accounts of the riots of 1380-81, and it is surprising how many of these settlements witnessed the serious events of the period. The exhibition of Jack Salmon’s work is now in the exhibition gallery until 2 February. Most of the work on display will be new to visitors, as it is mostly from the private family collection. The oil painting of the view over Stonebridge Pond allotments is attracting a lot of admiration, and is well worth seeing. There is a Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015 degree of artistic licence in what you see in the painting, but it does capture the essence of the landscape when it was painted. My wife and I have been to see the Germany, Memories of a Nation exhibition at the British Museum which was interesting from a display point of view as well as for the content. Presentation was simple, rather like our own museum, with no modern gimmicks. The exhibition was supported by a series of 30 radio broadcasts and a 563-page hardback book, which makes me wonder if we should think of exhibitions in that way too. One idea might be to examine how Faversham changed during the reign of Queen Victoria and compare it with the changes that have taken place during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, who is due break her great-great grandmother’s record in September. We have a tea towel in the collection, dating from the 1890s, which illustrates the first aspect, and maybe could design one to illustrate the second. Would any reader like to develop this idea further? Archaeology update PAT REID This month I want to pay tribute to the contribution Arthur Percival made to the Faversham Society Archaeological Research Group (FSARG) project over the past 10 years. Without his support and advice (which goes right back to the naming of the group in the first place) I doubt whether we would have reached the high standards now demonstrated in everything we do. Arthur understood, as few do, the necessary partnership between archaeological and historical research if a place like Faversham is to be understood. FSARG’s first two years, 2005-6, were spent looking for Saxon settlement in the Tanners Street and Lower West Street area. At the time, I knew quite a lot about Saxons and about tanning and Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015 Family history research JOHN BREEZE The photograph in our collection records that the lady seated on the left was Miss Ellen Housden, who married Edward Aylett and lived at 91 Upper Brents. Can anyone identify the other three and explain what their “tickling sticks” might have been used for? They are wearing On War Service badges and factory clothing. Ellen Gertrude Housden was baptised at Faversham Parish Church on 3 August, 1900, the daughter of Alfred Thomas, labourer, and Ellen Annie Maria of Luddenham. She married Edward Charles Aylett, millman, on 27 December, 1920, when they both lived in Canute Road. The 1891 census records Alfred, aged 14, as a pusher-out in the brickfields and four sisters, Charlotte, 20, and Ada 18, both gun cotton factory hands, and Florrie 11, Rose seven, scholars. Charlotte Eliza Housdean was baptised at Preston Church on 9 April, 1871. Ada Elizabeth married George Edward Hunt on 2 April, 1893. Flossie Jane, baptised 30 May, 1880, married Charles Sidders on 13 August, 1898. Rose May, baptised 4 July, 1883, married William James Austin on 7 April, 1912. Alfred, of 4 Lower Brents, died on 16 January, 1893, aged 49, and was buried at Faversham on 21 January. His loss was recorded regularly in in memoriam notices. Notes and photographs of any of these families would be accepted gratefully. Please send them to me c/o the Faversham Society in Preston Street. 3 Society’s creek letter to Swale I have sent this letter on behalf of the Faversham Society to the planning policy manager of Swale Borough Council with reference to public consultation over the Neighbourhood Plan proposal for Faversham Creek. The Faversham Society’s board of trustees has considered the above plan and comment as follows that in its opinion the Faversham Creek Neighbourhood Plan (FCNP) fails to meet the basic conditions inasmuch as: n It is not in accordance with European law in respect of the Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) directive; n It is not in accordance with UK and European law and guidance on the process of consultation; n English Heritage has not provided any input. The board further considered that as there has been continuous use of the creek as a waterway since Roman times that an objective of the Neighbourhood Plan should include: n Ensuring that before any development involving work on wharves around the creek there is an archaeological investigation and that no michael frohnsdorff significant remains are destroyed by development. Concerning site specific amendments, the society feels that with regard to Ordnance Wharf it should object on the grounds that three storeys would obstruct significant views and be out of keeping with Faversham’s historic townscape and undermine the heritage value of the conservation area. The society feels that any development at Standard Quay should ensure the integrity of the conservation area and the maintenance of positive public space. The society acknowledges that the consultant has made significant improvements to the plan which now focuses upon the historic importance of the creek. This area is of enormous importance to the heritage of the town and we urge the examiner to look closely at the views we have expressed. We are neither opposing nor endorsing the plan at this time we are simply seeking to strengthen the protection of heritage in the plan and of course the society will take a view on the final version of the plan at the appropriate time. Did you know there’s a comfortable, well-equipped venue, with room for up to 80 people in the middle of town? And not only is an overhead or slide projector and stand available at this venue, but there’s also a kitchen with crockery, electric kettles and a refrigerator. The Fleur hall is on the first floor but the toilets, including one for disabled people, are on the ground floor and an electrically operated wheelchair lift is available. For hire fees, conditions and available dates contact Linda Ireland on 01795 531135 4 shoes but not a lot about Faversham. Arthur gave unstintingly of his knowledge of the gunpowder and other industries, full access to local house deeds and other documentary information. This kind of support continued throughout our work in Faversham. His map of the Hill Works was indispensable in 2012 when we were investigating the Brent Hill area. I have used his map of the extraction areas for the brick industry etc in the Faversham area over and over again. The Faversham Papers commissioned by him on, for example, Tanners Street and Abbey Street, have been much consulted. Very recently we were thinking about doing some work at Uplees, and he supplied us with landowner names, sources of documentary material and so on. Then there have been many unique photographs, such as the ones of houses in Flood Lane on the brink of demolition in the early 1960s. All this has been essential but even more important to me personally was his comradeship, encouragement and interest in the archaeology. Over the 10 years of FSARG’s existence, the Faversham Society has been very involved in large-scale funded projects and the enormous bureaucratic task of gaining accreditation, so it is perhaps understandable that the archaeology in spite of its considerable amounts of outreach work (lectures, exhibitions, gettogethers, displays, family hands on sessions, public digs) has been diminished at best and mostly ignored. The terrific support from the Faversham community, the Faversham Historians and friends elsewhere largely made up for this (and a sense of humour helps) but Arthur’s unflagging interest and appreciation was fundamental to the survival of the group at several points. What really makes this tribute essential, however, is that I know Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015 that what he did for us in FSARG he did for others as well, pretty much non-stop. It is very easy to damage and undermine people’s morale and creativity through petty spite but a great deal more challenging and exhausting to nurse along infant aspirations and dreams, as Arthur did all of the time. We are going to miss him dreadfully. Calendar record-breaker MARY RANSOM I should like to thank everyone who bought one (or more) of our calendars. More than 500 were sold – a record I think! Special thanks go to Jean Yeomans for her help in the production work and decisionmaking on which pictures to include – always a difficult choice. It is now already time to start thinking of next year’s calendar and we need your photographs. If you have any recent photos of Faversham or the immediate surrounding area and would like a chance to show them, then we would love to see them. The images need to show Faversham at its best. We can’t pay you for your photos but if one of your images is selected your name will get a mention and you will also be entitled to a free calendar. To be in with a chance, all you need to do is submit one bestquality jpeg landscape image per email to [email protected], heading your email “Faversham Society Calendar”. You may send as many images as you like during the year but only one per email, please. Include your full contact details, where the image was taken and the date it was taken. Also state whether you are a society member or not. Images need to be received by the middle of July at the latest to allow us time to have the calendar printed and out for sale at the Hop Festival in September. Thank you for your support in helping to raise vital funds for the society. A trip to the Moon michael frohnsdorff The Lunar Mission 1 project announced by David Iron on at the Alexander Centre 9 January during the first annual Arthur Percival lecture is a 10-year project to send a lunar probe to the south pole of the Moon, an area reconnoitred as to possible drilling sites. He described the make-up of the drill to conform to possible obstacles up to a depth of 300ft. It is hoped to be able to extract samples of minerals and rocks for further analysis, from which much more information about the Moon, Earth and the solar system may be gleaned. Within the probe there will be time capsules containing a variety of objects to represent our time and civilisation for future discoverers, and as these are likely to be alien to us, some guide to allow them to understand what they all mean. As an investment in the project, payment will be made by members of the public for the inclusion of such objects. The most commonly item mentioned in the newspapers is a human hair! A project launch recently in New Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015 York produced slightly more than the initial target figure of £500,000. The project, of course, will actually cost hundreds of millions during the next decade. Coincidentally on 13 December, a time capsule from 1795 was opened in the foundations of Boston State House, Massachusetts. It contained articles from the American War of Independence and had been buried by Samuel Adams and Paul Revere. It appears, therefore, that our time capsule is a very timely proposition, especially as the founders of Lunar Probe 1 are hoping to draw 52% of the investors from the United States! Open House 2015 Moyra Harding Open House is the annual opportunity to view properties of considerable historical and architectural interest. The scheme is in its 46th year and offers a unique insight into Faversham’s built environment and heritage that you shouldn’t miss! About 30 properties will be opening their doors on 4, 11 and Dennis Severs’s House 18 FEBRUARY, 2015 £69 per person Dennis Severs’s House is a time capsule attraction in which visitors are immersed in a unique form of theatre. The 10 rooms of this original Huguenot house have been decked out to re-create snapshots of life in Spitalfields between 1724 and 1914. An escorted tour, conducted in silence, through the compelling “still-life drama”, takes you through the cellar, kitchen, dining room, smoking room and upstairs to Personal travel experiences Dennis Severs’s House 18 FEBRUARY, 2015 the bedrooms. With hearth and candles burning, smells lingering and objects scattered apparently haphazardly, it feels as though the inhabitants had deserted the rooms only moments before. The price includes lunch at The Water Poet, a traditional pub serving traditional pub food. 07808 068468 / 01795 590008 114 West Street, Faversham www.awaydays.biz 5 18 July. Handbooks are £8.50 each. For groups of two or more people, admission to properties will be £8.50 for the first member of the group (to include one handbook) and then £5 for any additional member of the group (programme only, no handbook). Handbooks will be on sale from the Visitors’ Information Centre, Preston Street, Faversham, from 1 June or can be ordered on 01795 534542 or by post for £10.58, cheque made out to the Faversham Society. Tribute from Australia of the dear old streets and in and out of the alleys. I’m so grateful to people like Arthur who have kept that lovely little town just the same as it was when I was a girl … it’s probably better as I know a lot of restoration work has gone on. The Clares Colin parry In No 3 in our series of Magna Carta heraldry, we look at Richard de Clare who sealed the great charter on 15 June, 1215, at Runnyede. He was the son of Roger de Clare, Earl of Hertford (more frequently known as Earl of Clare) who died in 1173 when Richard inherited the lands and title. Richard was present at Dutch visitor to mills ROD MORLEY Just after the Christmas break Margreth Steenberg form Alkmaar in Holland called in at the Fleur asking about our Chart Gunpowder Mills. She had arrived in Faversham by boat and because she was a miller back home, wanted to compare our mill with hers. A phone call to volunteer Tony Golding, who lives nearby and has a set of keys, did the trick and so we explained the route she should take to find him. Tony later reported that she was full of enthusiasm and both enjoyed an hour at the mill. She was extremely grateful, left a large donation and bought several relevant publications. Another satisfied customer! Betty Malkin Arthur Percival was one of the first people I contacted many years ago when I first discovered that the Faversham Society existed. We had shared a fair bit of correspondence from half way across the world … first about my great grandfather, Henry Bassant, who built the Queen’s Parade shops and also my favourite house, Rose Bank, 11 Newton Road, which was occupied first by him and then by my beloved grandparents and after their deaths, my parents (by then I had been in Australia for some years). My parents sold Rose Bank in the mid 1970s and recently I’ve discovered someone has given my dearest house a beautiful clean-up and it is has been sold once more. I have a copy of the brochure in my computer somewhere. My second lot of letters to Arthur were all about Macknade, Queensland. Macknade is a little “sugar town” about a hundred miles north of my home town of Townsville. It was founded by Arthur Neame of the brewery family (I think his name was Arthur) who hacked a sugar plantation out of the rainforest, built the sugar mill and named the area after Macknade Manor in Faversham. I visited Macknade Mill after contacting them, and also the school in Macknade, hoping to find out more information. I finished up by calling in at the 6 the coronation of King Richard I at Westminster in 1189, and at that of King John in 1199. He played a leading part in the negotiations for Magna Carta and was one of the 25 barons named as guardians thereof. He was one of the barons excommunicated by Pope Innocent III in 1216. He died the following year. His arms may be blazoned as Or, three chevrons gules. Volunteers needed Christine Smith library in the nearest larger town and the helpful librarian dug out a typewritten copy of Arthur Neame’s diary. I asked if it could be photocopied and sent it to the other Arthur. I visited Faversham for the last time in 2000. I called in to the information centre and had lunch with one of the members (the name escapes me, I fear, but I am 85!). I spent two days walking around all the places my siblings and I used to visit when we stayed with Grandma for holidays. The Rec, the creek, a walk past Davington pond, up and down all Have you made plans for the new year? Can you spare a few hours a week to help in the Visitor Information Centre? We are in urgent need of volunteers on Mondays, Tuesday mornings, Saturday afternoons and some Wednesday afternoons. No experience is necessary but if you are interested in helping please give me a call on 01795 534542 or 591287. Boxing Day walk Pat Ross We had a lovely walk on Boxing Day. If you can remember back, the weather was quite pleasant, which makes such a difference. We walked from Market Place to Ospringe, and up the small hill behind the church. Then we walked into Painters Forstal and down through Lorenden Park, returning to Faversham via Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015 Brogdale and the Abbey School. Paul had been busy at the Fleur hall heating up the home-made soup prepared by Carolynne, and Sue made the sandwiches. We had a quiz entitled “scrambled carols,” followed by a raffle – when everyone was trying to avoid winning some of the prizes! (Who would not want a loaf ? Or a 2015 calendar of Prince George baby pictures? Or even a DVD entitled the 12 Dogs of Christmas?) We made a profit of just over £50 for the society. One person we missed was Eileen, who has helped at all our Boxing Day walk lunches since their inception. Unfortunately she has not been very well and we send her our best wishes for a speedy recovery. A Tic or a Vic? CHRIS OSWALD-JONES All tourists entering our premises may be visitors; but not all visitors are tourists. We seem to have quietly morphed into a Visitor Information Centre. That, in my opinion, is a sensible transition. But we need to be consistent. I do not recall any formal decision-making explanation, nor any announcement to our members. The bulletin to Fleur volunteers still talks of TIC. Some signage and Swale Council use VIC. Our front elevation still depicts multiple TICs. Christine Smith, volunteer manager of the Visitor Information Centre writes: The new title fits in with the national trend to be more embracing of all visitors and comes at the request of Swale Borough Council with whom we have a contract to run the Centre. When funds allow I am sure all signage will conform. Planning committee ANNE SALMON Thirty-nine applications were discussed in detail this month and all were accepted except: 14/506085, 56 Preston Street, Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015 The war memorial project A group was formed in 2014 to undertake the refurbishment of Faversham War Memorial, the adjoining garden and gates. The memorial was constructed on the present site in 1923 to replace a temporary wooden monument on what had been the Cottage Hospital’s vegetable garden and previously part of a brickfield. At that time, many memorials were being constructed across Britain and Faversham’s memorial is typical. (A similar memorial may be seen in Ospringe churchyard.) The adjoining garden was laid out at that time and the fencing put up, together with the gate that came from the demolished house on what is now the Stonebridge estate. Over the years there has been considerable research about Faversham’s part in the Great War. Peter Stevens and Arthur Percival have been especially helpful in assisting with the names of those servicemen killed and their parish locations across Faversham. The aim of the project is to restore the memorial, move it to the centre of the garden and improve the original fencing, some of which has been replaced over the years. A public consultation was undertaken, and the majority of those responding thought that a “square on” cross together with tablets setting down the names of all service personnel killed in all conflicts since 1914, together with references to those others killed or who died as a result of conflict, such as the gunpowder explosion of 1916, would be a fitting tribute. As commemorations for the Great War are planned until 2018, it has been agreed that the project should be Mike Cosgrove completed in time for Remembrance Sunday in November of that year. This will enable the refurbishment to be undertaken in stages so that the site is left in good order for each November. Compiling names of servicemen killed has been challenging. We are grateful that Peter Stevens’s work and booklet and the Rev Simon Rowland’s help in compiling an accurate number for the Great War has put this on a firm footing. We are agreed that 624 servicemen were killed or died of wounds and serious illness during the conflict. There may, however, be a few that we do not know about, for example someone who emigrated, but died of wounds shortly afterwards. The group has many useful and hard-working members including a representative from the garden volunteers, often Dorothy Percival, the British Legion, councillors Tom Gates, Anita Walker and David Simmons, who is the project’s vice-chairman. It is supported by Faversham Town Council and Jackie Westlake is the clerk. We have a project manager, Peter Binnie, and officers from Swale Council who provide advice. Mark Gardner gives first-rate excellent press liaison support. A number of local and regional organisations have offered support and help, as has Sir Hugh Robertson MP, and we are hopeful of grant applications. All local schools have been informed. If you have any information that may be helpful, or would like to offer support, please contact me, the project chairman, at mike_cos@hotmail. com or call 01795 537159. 7 FAVERSHAM SOCIETY NEWSLETTER The Faversham Society Newsletter is edited by Stephen Rayner. Contributions are welcomed, and should be received by midday on the 15th of the month before publication, preferably by email to favnewsletter@ gmail.com or at the Fleur de Lis, 10-13 Preston Street, Faversham, Kent ME13 8NS, marked for newsletter editor. Clubs, societies, organisations and businesses can advertise in the newsletter. The minimum boxed ad measures 57mm x 60mm (or equivalent) and costs £5. If interested, please email the editor. Cheques should be made payable to the Faversham Society and sent to Jan West at the address above. Views expressed are not necessarily those of the Faversham Society or of the editor. The editor’s decision is final. Web edition If you wish to receive notification of when the new web edition of the newsletter is online, contact the membership secretary, Ian Balding, at favsocmembership@hotmail. co.uk. All content © the Faversham Society. Reproduction permitted only with the written permission of the editor The Faversham Society is Registered Charity No 1135262. www.faversham.org/society 8 timber and double-glazed conservatory and listed building consent. This application should be refused because the scale of the extension is inappropriate to the scale of the main rear elevation. The design of the extension appears to represent a late Victorian orangery. The building dates from the 18th century, so the design would not fit with the age or character of the building. The extension would also be visible from Forbes Road car park, and would be harmful to the appearance of the group of buildings and the character and appearance of the conservation area. New members IAN BALDING We welcome the following new members to the Faversham Society: Mr K Tory, Ms B Chester, Professor S Newman, Mr W and Mrs J Robinson, Mrs E Musson, Mrs M Kemp and Deborah Foord, all from Faversham; and Ms M Shoard from Strood. Email it, please THE EDITOR I work full-time, so my hours editing the newsletter are limited. There are, however, a number of ways in which newsletter correspondents may assist. When you are sending items for publication, please do not send anything other than conventional Microsoft Word documents or plain text. If in doubt, just paste the text into an email. As for pictures, they should be highresolution JPGs. I can no longer accept typed (or handwritten) manuscripts, which I would have to re-key. Please get them typed or scanned into text – volunteers at the Fleur should be able to show you how – and emailed to me from there. If in doubt, ask me. I am also offering to give a chat to newsletter correspondents about writing, presentation and basic computer and email skills. Anybody interested? FAVERSHAM SOCIETY OPENING The Fleur de Lis museum and gallery, 10-13 Preston Street, Faversham ME13 8NS, is open 10am-4pm Monday to Saturday (last entry 3.15pm) and Sunday 10am-1pm (last entry 12.15pm). 01795 590726 [email protected] The Fleur de Lis visitor information centre and book and gift shop are open 10am-4pm Monday to Saturday and Sunday 10am-1pm. 01795 534542 [email protected] The Fleur de Lis secondhand bookshop at 1a Gatefield Lane is open 10am-3.30pm, Monday to Saturday. 01795 590621 Chart Gunpowder Mills in Nobel Close, off South Road, is open 2pm-5pm Saturday, Sunday and bank holidays from Easter to end of October, at other times by arrangement. [email protected] Maison Dieu museum in Ospringe Street is open the same days and times as the Chart Mills, but until 2 November [email protected] Faversham Society Newsletter, February 2015
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