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Wednesday 9 March 2022

Latest POLICE.UK Crime Data for the Area - January 2022


Hartlip, Newington and Upchurch

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

39 crimes are shown on the map in January 2022 including:

3 Anti-social Behaviour
2 Burglary
1 Criminal Damage and Arson
6 Other Theft
1 Public Order
1 Shoplifting
1 Vehicle Crime
24 Violence and Sexual Offences

32 crimes were shown on the map in December 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.

19 crimes are shown on the map in January 2022 including:

6 Anti-social Behaviour
2 Burglary
1 Criminal Damage and Arson
2 Public order
7 Violence and Sexual Offences
1 Other Crime

34 crimes were shown on the map in December 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

Tuesday 8 March 2022

Residential Property Broken Into - Newington



Hartlip, Newington & Upchurch Ward

Crime Number: 46/41110/22

Between 21:00 on Monday the 28th of February and 14:00 on Tuesday the 1st of March, somebody broke into a residential property in Station Road, Newington.

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

Sunday 6 March 2022

Gill Gay will be Collecting for Swale Foodbank Again












Hi everyone,

Thank you all for the tremendous support we have received on behalf of Swale Foodbank so far.

We will be collecting again, next time on the front terrace at 14 Oak Lane, Upchurch on Wednesday the 9th of March between 10:30am and 11:30am.

Please come along with your donations (in carrier bags would be helpful) and put them into our open car boot.

We will then deliver your donations to the Swale Foodbank Warehouse, part of the Trussell Trust.

All donations are helpful providing, the food is long life and well within date.

Swale Foodbank is currently most in need of:

■ UHT Milk
■ Cereals
■ Tins of Meat, such as Chicken in Sauce, Chilli, Hot Dogs
■ Tins of Spaghetti in Tomato Sauce
■ Tins of Potatoes / Packets of Mash Potato
■ Bottles of Squash

Thank you for every single donation - we are very grateful 
♥️

Gill Gay - Foodbank Co-ordinator
Email: gilliangay99@yahoo.co.uk

Saturday 5 March 2022

Surgery Patient Participation Group - Upchurch & Rainham

The Surgery Patient Participation Group Committee met on Thursday 10th February 2022.

Personnel Changes

Bonnie Olsen attended the meeting for the first time as the new partner in the practice. Her role will be dealing with patients' minor ailments.

The group were informed that the practice has a new manager, Francesca Scarrott.

Covid Vaccinations

Covid vaccinations are now being carried out at Maidstone Road in respect of the 3rd (booster jab) and the 4th jab if you were on the original 'shielded' list.

(However, since the meeting, it has been announced that everyone over the age of 75 years will be invited to have a 4th Jab and all vulnerable patients over the age of 12 years during the Spring).

There is NO NEED to contact the surgery as you will be contacted directly by telephone or letter to make an appointment.

Vascular Services

Vascular Services are changing and a consultation period is running until Tuesday 15th March 2022. More details at: https://jointheconversation.scwcsu.nhs.uk/vascular-services

In future, Medway Hospital will be providing diagnostic and day surgery facilities but if major surgery is required or an overnight stay in hospital, then patients will be transferred to Kent and Canterbury Hospital in Canterbury.

Missed Appointments

Patients have begun to miss appointments, that they have made, again!

If for any reason patients need to cancel then please inform the surgery by telephone or online - thank you.

Diabetic and Medication Consultations

Over the coming months, the practice will be carrying out routine diabetic and medication consultations. This may be in person with a Diabetic Nurse or Doctor as required or by telephone.

Committee Minutes and CCG Bulletins

Copies of committee minutes can be seen at the surgery and links to the latest NHS Kent and Medway CCG Community Bulletins are posted regularly to Upchurch Matters Facebook and Twitter

If anyone requires a copy to be sent to them directly by Email, please contact Ray Kemsley: raykemsley@btinternet.com

Ray Kemsley
Chair - Surgery Patient Participation Group - Upchurch & Rainham

Thursday 3 March 2022

Upchurch and the Age of Fire by David Wood













At the turn of the 19th century and into the opening years of the 20th century fires became a regular problem in Upchurch and some of these devastated several well-known village features.

It all began in June 1892 when three young boys were taken to court for setting fire to a hedge and forty fruit trees at Gore Farm causing £50 worth of damage. In court, the boys named James Tabrett aged seven, Ernest Tabrett aged six and James Huggins aged five also admitted setting two large haystacks alight previously. The boys’ parents had to pay the fine and the boys were given a warning.

The next serious fire in Upchurch took place in 1900 when a row of Wakeley Brothers thatched cottages known as White Huts Cottages at Otterham Quay burnt down when a spark from one of the chimneys set the thatch alight. The horse drawn Rainham fire engine took about 45 minutes to reach the blaze.

Resident James Robinson saw the fire begin and with his father and some brickfield workers they were able to save the furniture in one of the burning cottages and rescue some livestock grazing nearby. The fire brigade arrived too late to extinguish the fire, so the cottages were burnt to the ground.

Later in September 1900, a fire broke out in farmer George Clark’s fruit store at Ham Green Farm. The fire completely destroyed the fruit store causing about £200 worth of damage. This led to villagers calling for a solution to the recurring problem of fires. This resulted in the parish council deciding to have fire hydrants placed in different parts of the parish.

Towards the end of 1900 fire hydrants were placed between the Three Sisters and the Lord Stanley inns at Otterham Quay, between Anne’s Cottages in Forge Lane and Holywell Lane, at the top of Windmill Hill and at the top of Forge Lane. More hydrants were later placed opposite Otterham Cottages in Horsham Lane, at Holywell and at Gore Bank.

Upchurch Fire Brigade was formed in March 1903 with a crew of volunteer firemen led by George Capeling from Gore Bank to combat fires in the parish. The brigade was to be funded by the parish council but after arguments about storage of equipment and funding, the brigade only lasted for a few months then all the firemen resigned and the brigade ended in January 1904. The job of firefighting then returned to Rainham Fire Brigade.

Serious fires continued to take place in the parish with a hayrick blaze on Greenborough Island on land owned by Mr Lumley-Webb and another at Bayford on land owned by Wakeley Brothers during the summer of 1904.




Wakeley Mill - Windmill Hill, destroyed by fire in September 1910.

The biggest fire disaster occurred in September 1910 when the windmill on Windmill Hill, a well-known village feature for about 100 years and owned by Wakeley Brothers caught fire and had almost burnt to the ground before the fire engine arrived from Rainham.

Because of its age and because much of it was made of wood the windmill was highly inflammable and had already had a lucky escape when lightning had struck it but had failed to set it alight years earlier.

Although crowds of people came to watch the fire which could be observed from afar due to its location at the top of Windmill Hill, nobody could get near it because of the intense heat. However, police constable Jenner and police sergeant Ashton from Rainham were able to save some pigs located in a sty close to the blaze.

The fire engine arrived from Rainham but because of the intensity of the heat from the fire and the low pressure of the water from the hydrant at the top of Windmill Hill, the firemen were unable to extinguish the fire, so the windmill was completely destroyed, trees in an adjoining orchard were badly scorched and the store next to the windmill containing a collection of baskets, wheat and grain were also badly damaged. Overall, the damage cost Wakeley Brothers £250 and damage to farmer Sam Stokes’s fruit store cost about £100. The windmill which had been such a well-known feature on the landscape disappeared forever and only a few photos of it have survived.

Perhaps the most notable fire to occur in the parish in the years soon after the windmill fire occurred in 1912 when a monoplane being flown by a French pilot named Jules Nardini from France crash-landed in a field at Gore Farm. The plane had successfully completed a crossing of the English Channel to Dover. While flying the plane onto Hendon, engine problems developed, so the pilot crash landed the plane.

When a large crowd of villagers congregated at the site somebody dropped a lighted match on the ground which ignited petrol escaping from the plane’s fuel tank and created a blaze that destroyed the plane and burnt a large area of wheat being grown in the field owned by farmer Tom Crawford. The fire caused £50 worth of damage to the wheat field, while the monoplane was completely destroyed.

Although a few minor fires occurred in the parish in the immediate years after this there were no more serious blazes in the parish until after the Great War of 1914-1918.

David Wood


About David

David was born and raised at Ham Green and still lives there today. He writes from personal experience about Upchurch village life and the changes that have taken place over the years.

David's book, Memories of Upchurch, is a very readable and detailed historical study of the village and is available direct from David at: david3702001@yahoo.co.uk price £12 + postage and packing.

The Church Clock at St Mary's, Upchurch















As many residents are aware, Storm Eunice knocked out the village power supply, including to the Church Clock.

The clock is on a battery system which is continually recharged by the mains electricity supply, so like a laptop, it continues working when the power supply is interrupted.

The battery has about 6 hours running time in it, although it depends on the time of the day because the power drives three motors, the main clock, the strike (the hours) and the chimes (the quarter 'Westminster' chimes). The chimes draw the most power and depending on the time of the day can run the battery down faster with the highest drain being during the day and together with the strike late morning, when the clock strikes 10, 11 and 12...

The battery maintained the clock for about six hours, which was unfortunately about 20 minutes less than the duration of the power cut for the supply, so when the power was restored the clock restarted, showing the time 20 minutes late.

The second issue is that the computer can only adjust the minutes, not the hour and can only do so to plus or minus five minutes in any hour, so it can not 'catch up' the missing 20 minutes, Upchurch Parish Council is grateful to the residents who pointed out the clock was wrong. 

Finally, the radio signal that keeps the clock in check is susceptible to poor weather conditions and by definition, a named storm is a poor weather condition, and to complete the 'perfect' storm (pardon the pun) regarding the impact on the clock, the high winds in the clock tower knocked the radio receiver from its position, and it was unable to receive the signal when it recovered.

These faults are all remedied, and the clock should be fine until it is next serviced, which will include an adjustment to the computer's internal clocks as a standard part of the service.

The Council hopes this helps residents understand the reasons for the clock's inaccuracy for a few days after the storm.

Upchurch Parish Council

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