Harrietsham owes its existence to the
series of springs at the foot of the Downs, some of which now
feed the lakes in Woodlands Walk. Others simply feed streams such
as that at Goddington. Water was a pre-requisite for human settlement,
and an attraction to wildlife and game for the pot. Immediately
to the east of the Woodlands Walk lakes there have been important
archaeological finds from the Bronze Age, Iron Age and from Roman
and Saxon settlement. A Roman dwelling lies partly under the Rectory
garden and nearby Harrison Drive. Saxon burial urns have been
found on the Glebe Field and in the churchyard. These earliest
areas of settlement were subsequently abandoned, but for what
reason? This left the ancient Parish Church of Saxon origin, detached
from its village.

The original written name ·Heriagierdeshamme·
clearly signifies the importance of water to the permanent settlement.
The name means ·Heriagierde·s water meadow·.
The meadows were probably in the area of the ·Osier Beds·
(willow trees), which now lie beneath the M20 and CTRL to the
south of the Alms Houses. The whole area would have been well
watered by the River Len, which rises in nearby Lenham and joins
the Medway at Maidstone.Several areas in the parish were prominent
enough to be mentioned in the Domesday Book · Marley, Polhill,
Fairbourne (East and West) and Harrietsham itself, given to Robert
de Crevecouer by Duke William. The waterways running through the
parish were sufficient to operate grinding mills at Fairbourne
(·fair stream·), Selesburne (·holy stream·)
and at Polhill. In mediaeval times the beech woodlands of the
North Downs and the oaks of the Kingswood were abundant in food
for the pigs of the community. Track-ways ran northwards up Stede
Hill and southwards up Fairbourne Lane and then on into the ·dens·
of the Weald.The village envelope of today is has been shaped
over the centuries by the influence of the several route-ways
that pass through the area from east to west. The Pilgrims Way
(North Downs Way) was the mediaeval equivalent of a motorway,
linking as it did the great cities of Winchester and Canterbury,
with a spur off to the port of Dover. A subsequent road ran from
Maidstone to Ashford via West Street and East Street until the
Turnpike Road gave quicker access to Lenham. In the 1880·s
the London to Ashford railway line was built, further determining
the east-west layout of the community. In the 1930·s West
Street was by-passed, by an improvement to the A20 running south
of the main street. Until the completion of the M20 in the 1990·s,
A20 remained a very important trunk road to the Channel ports.
Most recently the final addition to the ·transport corridor·
the Channel Tunnel Rail Link was added to our collection of routes

The oldest houses in the community,
mostly Tudor, are to be found at East Street (The Old House),
Polhill, Deans Farm and Lake Cottage beside Woodlands Walk. This
latter, built of brick, is likely to have served as a Hospice
for weary travellers on the Pilgrims Way, or on the lower track
(The Greenway) from Hollingbourne. Historically this house was
known as ·The Little Brickhouse· and it was upon
·The Little Brickhouse Field· that the village school
was built in 1844.Other Georgian and Stuart houses line both West
Street and East Street, which formed the spine of the community
for centuries. Prominent amongst these are the Quested Almshouses
in East Street. Twelve linked cottages built in 1642 at the instigation
of Mark Quested ·a native of this place·, who had
left rural Kent to become a successful Fishmonger in London.

Those familiar with the film ·Kind
Hearts and Coronets· will have seen the hero of the piece
cycle past on his way to commit murder at Leeds castle. Also in
East Street is Bell House, formerly one of the six village public
houses that the community once managed to support. Opposite is
Dial House the home of the Bottle family, which over the generations
built and repaired many of the older houses. The sundial high
on the wall still works.West Street boasts The Roebuck once a
coaching inn and later a stopping off point for the charabancs
(motor-coaches) on their way from London to Margate and Ramsgate.
Today it is the only remaining pub in the village. ·The
Bank House· and ·The Blacksmith·s Arms·
are now both private houses. The latter was originally built as
the village Poor House in 1779. In those days a wheelwright had
a workshop to one side of the Poor House and the blacksmith operated
from a forge on the other side. Both trades are still remembered
by street names · ·The Wheelwrights· and
·Forge MeadowThe West Street during the 20th Century once
boasted a shop selling wool, a sweet shop, Suttons General Stores,
a newspaper shop, a clockmakers· shop and a saddle-makers,
not to mention its own petrol station · all of which have
disappeared.
The more modern developments in the village have been small industrial
areas at the Station Yard, the former Council Depot (off Station
Road), and Tenacre Court (Oast Houses on A20). This latter was
built on land once owned by the Parish Council, who sold it to
fund the Medical Centre and provide funds for the Community Centre.
Housing developments have largely been as ·infilling·
within the village envelope. The first major developments were
in the 1960·s · Mercer Drive, Lakelands, Quested
and Ivens Way. These were followed by Cricketers Close, Pilgrims
Lakes, Chippendayle Drive. Harrison Drive, Cutbush Close and Downlands
were then added to the housing stock.To keep pace with this expansion
in population, the Medical Centre and Community Centre were created
at the instigation of the Parish Council, as was the open space
of Woodlands Walk. Harrietsham village is a viable and pleasant
place in which to live.
}