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Friday, 11 June 2021

Latest POLICE.UK Crime Data for the Area - April 2021



Hartlip, Newington and Upchurch

A brief summary of crime information for the past 2 months.

33 crimes are shown on the map in April 2021 including:

11 Anti-social Behaviour
1 Burglary
1 Criminal Damage and Arson
3 Other Theft
2 Public Order
11 Violence and Sexual Offences
4 Other Crime

42 crimes were shown on the map in March 2021.

Not all crime that occurs is shown on the map.

Please visit: www.police.uk for more information including outcomes for these crimes and contact information for your local policing team.




Lower Halstow and Iwade

A brief summary of crime information for the past 2 months.

25 crimes are shown on the map in April 2021 including:

6 Anti-social Behaviour
1 Burglary
4 Criminal Damage and Arson
1 Drugs
1 Other Theft
2 Public Order
2 Vehicle Crime
8 Violence and Sexual Offences

20 crimes were shown on the map in March 2021.

Not all crime that occurs is shown on the map.

Please visit: www.police.uk for more information including outcomes for these crimes and contact information for your local policing team.

Upchurch Matters

Door Damaged - Newington

Hartlip, Newington & Upchurch Ward

Crime Number: 46/99052/21

On Monday the 7th of June between 16:00 and 19:00, somebody damaged the door of a residential property and pushed various items of rubbish through the letterbox.

The police are continuing their enquiries.

If you have any information that could help investigators please contact Kent Police on telephone number 101 and quote the relevant crime number above.

For more information on crime prevention visit: www.kent.police.uk

Kent Community Messaging

Thursday, 10 June 2021

Medway Council - Time to Get Inky at Medway Print Festival



Time to get inky at Medway Print Festival this June.

Medway Council is supporting the Medway Print Festival (MPF21) which takes place throughout June.

The festival features 27 events including workshops and exhibitions showcasing local artists’ work. Residents can also take part in online activities and live exhibitions until Wednesday, 30th June.

Medway’s Print Festival, now in its sixth year, showcases a number of exhibitions including ‘Jane Furst’ at INTRA, an Open Call, The Halpern Galleries and POP exhibition by Neil Mattingly at Nucleus Chatham and Rochester. The festival is also releasing the long awaited ‘Last Dream of my Soul’ Dickens 150 Print exhibition at Rochester Art Gallery. The Dickens exhibition brings together work from nearly 50 printmakers from across the country, and abroad, and explores death in Dickens’ life and novels, and his long association with Medway.

Cllr Howard Doe, Medway Council’s Portfolio Holder for Community Services, said:

“I am pleased that residents can visit and enjoy art and culture exhibitions in person, once again. Exhibitions not only bring the community together, they also celebrate local creatives and we have fantastic talent here in Medway. This summer’s events programme will shine a light on Medway’s creative spirit as it prepares to bid for UK City of Culture 2025.”

Children and young people are also invited to get involved in the festival, the free ‘Reasons to be Cheerful’ exhibit at Café Nucleus, Rochester features Disney inspired art. This supports Medway’s aspiration to become a Child-Friendly City.

Organiser Allison Young said:

“We are delighted that MPF21 can go ahead and that it includes some much needed real life events too. We are very grateful to Medway Council for their support and all the printmakers and venues that have made this possible in an uncertain year”.

To find out more about Medway Print Festival, visit: www.medwayprintfestival.com

Medway Council

Thank You from Foodbank Co-ordinator Gill Gay and Swale Foodbank


Thank you, Upchurch, you are amazing!

When we got to Swale Foodbank Warehouse, we filled five trolleys with your wonderful generosity (this shows just two of them).

Here are two of the lovely volunteers who sort the food for those families who are struggling.

And now their struggle is lessened by your heartfelt gifts.

May God bless you all as you share your blessings with others.

Ron and I will be collecting again at the bus stop opposite the Church in Horsham Lane on Wednesday the 7th of July between 10:30am and 11:30am.

Thank you ❤️

Gill & Ron Gay

Gill Gay - Foodbank Co-ordinator

Wednesday, 9 June 2021

Plague, Disease and Infections in Upchurch through the Ages by David Wood













Nasty diseases and infections have periodically affected village residents for centuries, causing suffering and death.

The first recorded serious outbreak of plague occurred in 1348 when bubonic plague known as the ‘Black Death’ broke out and became a pandemic in which 20 million people in Europe died. Approximately 4 million people died in Britain but records of death rates in Upchurch do not appear to exist, so the extent of the plague and the numbers of deaths in the village cannot be given. At least Upchurch survived as a village while some other Kent villages such as Dode near Luddesdown and Midley and Eastbridge on Romney Marsh completely disappeared after the populations had been wiped out by the plague. Other villages were burnt to the ground to prevent the infections from spreading.

People, farm animals and chickens caught the plague, people infected were dead within ten days and suffered from headaches, weakness, swellings, cramp and sometimes gangrene. Treatments such as blood-letting or boil-lancing proved useless, so without adequate cures lots of people turned to religion. In Kent, they flocked to the shrine of Thomas Becket in Canterbury to pray for protection. People regarded the plague as God’s punishment for man’s sins.

The next serious plague occurred in 1665 with the outbreak of the Great Plague. Parish records show that 6 Upchurch residents died of plague in 1665 while 14 died in 1666. Some of these included Elizabeth Foreman, John Lille, Richard Barnett, Thomas and Richard Emerson.

The overseers of Upchurch would have followed the guidelines of the time. These included keeping domestic and farm animals off the streets, preventing gatherings of more than 38 people with the exception of prayer meetings, those infected were quarantined in their homes for 40 days and a red cross painted on the front door of infected houses to warn others.

People infected with the plague displayed visible symptoms such as armpit swellings, skin blotches and sneezing. People carried posies in their pocket to ward off the plague but little else was available to cure those infected. The dead were buried in a mass grave in a separate part of the churchyard and were covered in lime.

During the plague, Stangate Creek became a base for ships to moor while the crews quarantined. This was done because people believed that the plague had entered the country from abroad.

Outbreaks of plague broke out in other years that also proved fatal. In 1634 there were 24 deaths from plague recorded in Upchurch. In 1638 59 residents died and in 1688 27 died. The outbreak was described at the time as ‘a malignant fever that hit Kent and Essex.’

The most long term ailment to affect Upchurch was a form of marsh malaria known as ague, carried by mosquitoes that affected low lying areas of Southern England. Residents of Upchurch, Lower Halstow and Lower Rainham suffered.

Bouts of ague affected residents in Upchurch from the 16th to the 20th century and it thrived in marshy areas, particularly in shallow pools of stagnant water. People affected had symptoms such as fever, sweating and shivering.

Edward Hasted wrote about the effects of ague on victims in his 1789 ‘Topographical Survey of the County of Kent,’

The severe agues which the inhabitants are very rarely without, whose complexions become of a dingy yellow and if they survive, are generally afflicted with this till summer, and again for several years, so it is not unusual to see a poor man, his wife and whole family of five or six children hovering around a fire in their hovel, shaking with ague all at the same time.

A cure for ague did not appear until the late 19th century when quinine was used to cure the problem. Although medicines were already in use these were generally inadequate. Reverend John Woodruff provided medicine for ague and distributed it to residents affected. According to the 1856 Upchurch alms book, Reverend Woodruff distributed bottles of ague medicine to Sarah Boakes, Mr Seager, John Boakes and his family and to Mrs Smith’s children. He also gave 53 bottles of ague medicine to villagers in 1857.



















Reverend John Woodruff, a section of an old map showing Stangate Creek and
Keycol Hill Hospital and Sanatorium Shelters.
Click image to enlage.

Six Upchurch children were admitted to Keycol Hospital with smallpox in 1893. An outbreak of diphtheria occurred at Ham Green in 1894 and during the same period, an outbreak of typhoid occurred because of infected drinking water in wells. The construction of a new waterworks at Yelsted virtually ended the problem of typhoid in Upchurch in 1898.

Holywell School had to close periodically and classrooms disinfected after pupils were sent home suffering from measles or scarlet fever. According to the Holywell daily record book the school had to close for about a week in January 1896 due to an outbreak of measles and the problem periodically reoccurred well into the 20th century.

Life threatening disease was less prevalent due to advances in medicine during the 20th century, so only outbreaks of flu, measles and scarlet fever were periodically recorded, usually amongst pupils at the Infant’s School or at Holywell. However, a few residents died of influenza during the national epidemic of 1918, but Upchurch escaped lightly compared to neighbouring villages such as Rainham where much higher death rates and infections were recorded.

A very serious epidemic known as Coronavirus broke out nationwide in 2020. This quickly affected the whole country and a national lockdown took place with hand washing, social distancing, shut downs and self isolation. After two lockdowns a vaccination programme was introduced and this reduced the death and infection rates. In Upchurch numerous residents caught Coronavirus and some died. The lockdown was eased in April 2021 with further easing in May mainly as a result of an efficient large scale vaccination programme.

Even with advances in medicine, the recent pandemic demonstrated that we are not immune from the effects of nasty ailments that periodically appear.

David Wood


About David

David Wood was born, raised and still lives in Upchurch today. He is able to write from personal experience about village life and the changes that have taken place over the years, making ‘Memories of Upchurch’ a very readable and detailed historical study of the village.

David's book is available from David at david3702001@yahoo.co.uk or from us here at Upchurch Matters. Price £12 + postage and packing.

Developer Writes to Residents About Piling Works at Otterham Quay Lane



Persimmon Homes South East has written to neighbouring residents addressing their concerns and outlining piling works underway at their Otterham Park development in Otterham Quay Lane, Rainham.

Residents living in both Rainham and Upchurch have expressed their displeasure recently over the level of noise coming from the former orchard site where construction has begun on 300 new homes.

The housing estate will be the largest development in neighbouring Rainham North Ward for many years, located close to the boundary with Swale.

The developer wrote:

“Dear Resident,

PILING AT OTTERHAM

On Wednesday, May 19, Persimmon held a meeting with Rainham North Councillor Martin Potter and members of Medway Council's Environmental and Planning departments to discuss ongoing issues about our development at Otterham Quay Lane.

Previously, noise and vibration from construction piling had been highlighted as intrusive, and enquiries made as to whether this could be reduced. 

As such, we reduced working hours from 8am - 6pm to 8am - 12 noon and 12.30pm - 5pm with no weekend working. It was also agreed to delay Phase 2 of the piling from July / August, until after the summer holidays. 

We were asked if any further reductions could be made, whether a programme of piling works could be distributed, and why this method of piling was necessary.

Following a ground investigation report by an engineering company, driven piling was identified as the only viable method for this development.

Persimmon also employed an acoustic company to install sound and vibration monitoring stations in key locations around the site in order to record levels throughout the day. Unfortunately, it was concluded that acoustic barriers were not a solution on this site, as they could not be constructed sufficiently tall enough to be effective. A second report is currently being prepared in conjunction with the acoustic company, looking at how levels can be reduced further.

The programme for piling works is as follows:

Phase 1: March - June. The area is mostly the Northern section but there will be a week or so in the Southern section where the permanent site compound will be erected.

Phase 2: September for 10 - 12 weeks. Again, mostly the Northern section of the site.

Phase 3: Estimated July / August 2023 for 10 - 12 weeks.

Prior to the start of Phases, 2 and 3 residents will be updated on the programme of works.

During the construction of the site, we will also continue to work closely with councillors and representatives of the planning and environmental department in order to ensure that disruption to residents' daily lives Is kept to an absolute minimum.

Yours faithfully
Persimmon Homes South East”

Upchurch Matters

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