Aylesham :1367 Elisham; 1405 Eylsham; 1418 Aylsham; 1445 Haylesham; 1604 Aylesham.

The name is said to derive from O.E. Aegeles ham; Aegel’s homestead. Aylesham now refers to the actual mining village, but before the village was built there were references to Aylesham, or variations thereof, corner, wood and farm.

Aylesham was part of the manor of Ackholt, but nothing is really known of its origins.  The earliest presently known reference to Aylesham is in a 1367 grant from “Thomas Peny of Welle (possibly connected to the present Well Wood in Womenswold parish, a half mile or so across the fields to the south) to Salomon Oxene (of Oxenden, a half a mile to the east) of 20s being the rent of a wood ect. at Elisham juxte Crudeswode (next to Curleswood Park, which is now almost covered by the present village of Aylesham, its boundary with Elisham probably followed the present Spinney Lane) in Welle”.  This was the wood recorded as Aylesham Wood on 19th century maps.

 

Aylesham Wood in the 1870′s. It directly bordered onto Curleswood Park, now largely covered by Aylesham village and industrial estate. The open ground between the wood and the junction of Spinney Lane and the B2046 was once poor quality agricultural land called Poor Start and Little Profit. It’s now over grown and has become part of the original Aylesham Wood.
Aylesham Wood in the 1870′s. It directly bordered onto Curleswood Park, now largely covered by Aylesham village and industrial estate. The open ground between the wood and the junction of Spinney Lane and the B2046 was once poor quality agricultural land called Poor Start and Little Profit. It’s now over grown and has become part of the original Aylesham Wood.

A few years later in 1418 a grant was made  by Henry Danyel of Sellynge (Selling, near Faversham), to John Fyneux, Thomas Marchaunt and John  Tooks of “lands in Aylsham including Croddyswood (Curleswood)”, and in 1445 a release was made by John Monyn and John Holte to Richard Sandys , Esq., and John Greneford “of the Manor of Acholt, with lands ect., at Haylesham  Nonyngton, and Wemynlyngs Welde (Womenswold) near Wingham”.This woodland environment appears to be confirmed in 1405 when a grant from “Matilda, widow of John Twytham, to Henry Danyel, of five pods of wood in a wood called Eylsham  abutting on the park called Cuddeswode (Curleswood)”.
A pod was probably equivalent to a cant, which is a block of woodland coppiced (harvested) on a regular basis. Woodland was economically very important in medieval Kent as it provided everything from building materials to fuel for cooking and industry.

Some 160 years later in 1604 “John Swanton of Aylesham [in Nonington], yeoman”, was elected as the Nonington parish constable, an important position in the community as he would have been responsible for upholding the law and apprehending lawbreakers within the parish and was answerable to the local magistrates. His description of “yeoman”  and his election as constable indicates he was a well-to-do farmer, either owning at least some of his own land,  or renting a fairly substantial farm. Parish constables were eventually replaced by the fore runner of the modern police in the early 1800’s.

The Aylesham Wood, now often referrred to as Spinney Wood, and Ackholt area just prior to the building of Aylesham village in the late 1920′s.
The Aylesham Wood, now called Spinney Wood, and Ackholt area just prior to the building of Aylesham village in the late 1920′s. Comparison with the 1870’s map shows how the wood had been allowed to spread out to the B2046 Wingham Road and also take over Poor Start and Little Profit to form the present Aylesham Wood.

The farm or small-holding may have been located at the southern end of the present Ackholt Wood. The 1839 Nonington parish tithe map has an Ackholt Wood House and some three and a half acres of land at the southern end of Ackholt Wood listed as belonging to Sir Brook William Bridges and occupied by William Gilham, but there is no record of the house or land on the 1859 parish tithe map. The location is now overgrown, but still discernible as the trees there are not as high or as mature as the rest of the wood.

The Aylesham Wood and Ackholt area in the 1940's after the begining of the building of Aylesham by Dorman and Long to house workers at the nearby Snowdown Colliery.
The Aylesham Wood and Ackholt area in the 1940’s after the begining of the building of Aylesham by Dorman and Long to house workers at the nearby Snowdown Colliery.

As a village, Aylesham, was established in 1926, having been designed by Dorman and Long. The village was initially drafted to provide housing for the newly sunk coal mine, located at nearby Snowdown Colliery. Miners from all parts of the UK (notably South Wales, Scotland and the Northeast) seeking better wages and safer conditions, travelled to the South East to work at Snowdown Colliery.