15 Churchfields

Nickname

Do you have any photos of this property you can share?

We'd love to hear from you…

Submit a photo

Property Timeline

1865

Estimated year property was built

1871

1871 Census - Occupants

George Costello – 38 – Head
Coach Painter born Cork, Ireland

Mary A Costello – 26 – Wife
Born Cork, Ireland

George S Costello – 2 – Son
Born West Malling, Kent

Elizabeth M Costello – 7m – Daughter
Born West Malling, Kent

1881

1881 Census - Occupants

George Harryman – 43 – Head
Plumber born West Malling, Kent

Mary A Harryman – 32 – Wife
Born West Malling, Kent

Alice Harryman – 7 – Daughter
Scholar, born West Malling, Kent

Kate Harryman – 5 – Daughter
Scholar, born West Malling, Kent

George F Harryman – 3 – Son
Scholar, born West Malling, Kent

John Turner – 29 – Visitor
Valet, born West Malling, Kent

1891

1891 Census

Joseph Smallwood – 75 – Head
Tailor born in West Malling

Mary Manning – 42 – Daughter
Assistant Mistress National School born in West Malling

Alice M Smallwood – 10 Daughter
Scholar born in Marlow, Buckinghamshire

1901

1901 Census

Harry Waymark – 33 – Head
Postman born in Eastbourne, Sussex

Eliza Waymark – 28 – Wife
Born in Scotland

Violet Waymark – 5 – Daughter
Born in Hellingly, Sussex

Harry G Waymark – 3 – Son
Born in West Malling

Jessie K Waymark – 1 – Son
Born in West Malling

1911

1911 Census

Charles Henry Gardner – 31 – Head
Postman born in Malling

Ada Violet Gardner – 29 – Wife
Born in Offham

Winifred Violet Gardner – 7 – Daughter
Born in Malling

Laura Ellen Gardner – 3 – Daughter
Born in Malling

1939

1939 Register

Charles H Gardner – 60 – Head
Postman

Violet A Gardner – 58 – Wife
Unpaid Domestic Duties

1954

1954 Kelly Directory

Mrs Gardner

Dummy desktop image
Dummy mobile image

You can add a caption here and a link

Heading Two

Heading Three

The following excerpts have been taken from the Historic England listing for 65 & 67 High Street, click here to view the full listing:

Shops and storeroom, possibly originally priest’s house to nunnery, other building in monastic ownership or merchant’s house, later inn and jail.

The Ancient House is circa 1160-80, with some possible C14 alterations…

The Ancient House was originally a chamber block above undercroft with external staircase…and possibly part of a larger structure.

Deeds of 1681 show that at least part of the property was known as “the Angel, formerly the Bull” and an inn called the Bull was mentioned as being well established by 1442. Use as an inn would explain why grand heated chambers were being created in two parts of the property in the mid C15.

Domestic buildings of the C12 are very rare in the south east and rare nationally.

Further reading

Click here for full details of property listing on the National Heritage List for England

Click here for information about something else

Dummy desktop image
Dummy mobile image

Headline with no subtitle

Vero et doluptate voluptatus reprorum veriatum volest et ent aliquia sum, omnihil lendae iumque int. Imporeribus dentinv ellicit adis eossunt reperro quatur, sintia proratum laut optatium nonsed ut ut utet, ut et volestrum utem aut faceribus, es evelenditis volo inullorum et excerumque ipsaessit accate ipit ipsapis alit, consece peritas re net quiatecus re as alicius quatio il ipsam renis aut molupta tiorati con perum volorent qui blacimosam sequia nonsedi aut lacestrum vendit pliquam, sintion rem hicitatquia dolorro cuptatibus non perio. Otatum vellibusam audisquaturi ulliant.

ATTEMPTED BURGLARY
Kent and Sussex Oracle
March 11, 1872.
On Saturday night, the 2nd last, the offices of H.D.Wildes, Esq., magistrates clerk, were broken into. An entrance was effected at a back window by taking out a pane of glass. All the cupboards and drawers were opened in professional style, and ransacked. Search was also dilligently made among all the papers incidental to a solicitor’s office, but we have not heard that anything was taken. On the same night, Mr. Hoad, watchmaker and jeweller, who lives in the adjoining house, was awoke between one and two by hearing strange noises. Thinking they might be made by his children, he struck a light, and called out, but finding all quiet, went down stairs and looked about.

Lorest, sit alis sum re nis sed qui quidit ullupti optat estio. Itaquiatem re nis dolupta nam Quidem. Et vel int ea quodit aborum rest, comnim ut quibus quis utem et ut voluptat.

“Sit alis sum re nis sed qui quidit ullupti optat estio. Itaquiatem re nis dolupta nam arisqui dolent adistium aut qui rem eatus sed quae laute dipsant rehende moluptur? Quidem. Et vel int ea quodit aborum rest, comnim ut quibus ad ut magnimod quis utem et ut voluptat.”1

Penelope Smythe, Memories of Malling
Dummy desktop image
Dummy mobile image

Johnathan Oliver. Photograph kindly supplied by James Cooper. © James Cooper

Olivers Pharmacist

Chemist, Druggist, Bookseller and Stationer

Vero et doluptate voluptatus reprorum veriatum volest et ent aliquia sum, omnihil lendae iumque int. Imporeribus dentinv ellicit adis eossunt reperro quatur, sintia proratum laut optatium nonsed ut ut utet, ut et volestrum utem aut faceribus, es evelenditis volo inullorum et excerumque ipsaessit accate ipit ipsapis alit, consece peritas re net quiatecus re as alicius quatio il ipsam renis aut molupta tiorati con perum volorent qui blacimosam sequia nonsedi aut lacestrum vendit pliquam, sintion rem hicitatquia dolorro cuptatibus non perio. Otatum vellibusam audisquaturi ulliant.

“Sit alis sum re nis sed qui quidit ullupti optat estio. Itaquiatem re nis dolupta nam arisqui dolent adistium aut qui rem eatus sed quae laute dipsant rehende moluptur? Quidem. Et vel int ea quodit aborum rest, comnim ut quibus ad ut magnimod quis utem et ut voluptat.”

Lorest, sit alis sum re nis sed qui quidit ullupti optat estio. Itaquiatem re nis dolupta nam arisqui dolent adistium aut qui rem eatus sed quae laute dipsant rehende moluptur? Quidem. Et vel int ea quodit aborum rest, comnim ut quibus ad ut magnimod quis utem et ut voluptat.

Notes

1. Iquideli tatur, aut quam, iligend ebitias debitem olectot aquatur erorion sequae doluptas rerum fuga. Nemporepedit rest hilloreped molorum vit officiet quasped ut harum qui sequidelest, sam dipsunt, nusdaep taectectur?

2. Uptam, consequ atibuscit faceatis asit acepelesent est eat repudis ped quam, et pellande sus nonse precae de volor am niet molorae audant, sit assit dolorit laborio eatem auta verspide que dolum ullit arum nobit lab invendit, ullab inimaxim derum facilibus.

3. Magnihil molorature vent, sunt vendi velliqui dolupta ssequi dolestios qui di temostiisti aliquaectum velecum, sus, con pre explabo reroriorro voluptur? Ceptatur, imus.

Site partially funded by the Welcome Back Fund