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WITH MAP. LONDON: JOHN MUEEAY, ALBEMAELE STEEET. 1858. The right of Translation is reserved. LONDON : PKINTED BY W. CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET, AND CHARING CROSS. P R E F A C E. The Handbooks for the four Counties of Kent, Sussex, Surrey, and Hampshire, have been drawn up from a careful personal exploration of the country, and from the most recent in- formation that could be obtained. If, however, from the i-apidity of change in every part of Great Britain, or other causes, errors or omissions should occur, those who, from living on the spot, have facile means of detecting mistakes, are requested to aid in the object of obtaining a correct guide for all corners of Old England by sending notice of them to the Editor, care of Mr. Murray, 50 a, Albemarle Street. a 2 CONTENTS. Page Introduction v Sect. I.— KENT 1 Koutes ih. Sect. II.-SUSSEX 225 Routes ib- Index 355 INTKODUCTIOK KENT. Page Extent and History . . . . v Antiquities x Products and Manufactures xiii Geology and Traveller's View xvii SUSSEX. Page Extent and History . . . . xix Antiquities xxii Products AND Manufactures xxiv Geology and Traveller's View xxviii Skeleton Tours page xxxv KENT. Extent and Histoet. The couDty of Kent, the extreme soutli-eastern corner of England, contains 1557 square miles, or 996,480 acres. From east to west (from the Xorth Foreland to London) it " expatiateth itself," in Fuller's words, into 64 miles ; from north to south (Xorth Foreland to Dunge- ness) it " expandeth not above" 38 miles. Eight English counties exceed it in size. Kent, continues Fuller, " differeth not more from other shires than from itself, such the variety thereof. In some jjarts of it health and wealth are at many miles' distance, which in other parts are reconciled to live under the same roof — I mean, abide in one place together." The entire comity, the geological features of which are strongly marked, is divided, according to local experience, into three very distinct dis- tricts : — 1. That of " health without wealth," embracing the higher parts of the Downs, which stretch in a long line across the county and form what is called the "backbone of Kent:" 2. That of "wealth without health ;" this consists of parts of the tree-covered Weald, of Eonmey Marsh, and of the marshes along the Medway and the Swale, where the pasturage is deep and rich, but where ague and low fever are the common lot of the inhabitants : and 3. That in which "health and wealth are reconciled to live together," covering by far the greater part of the county, but best and richest in the valley of the Medway from Maid- stone to Tunbridge, and in parts of the country about Canterbury. Each of these districts assists in producing the diversified scenery and the varied riches that still justify the encomium pronounced on the county iu the ' Polyolbion ' of Michael Drayton : — "0 famous Keut ! What county liatb this isle that can compare with thee? That hath within thj'sclf as much as thou can'st wish : Thy ralibits, venison, fruits, thj' sorts of fowl and fish; As what with strength comports, thy hay, thy corn, thj' wood, — Nvi anything doth want that anywhere is good." vi Extent and History. Introd. Notwithstanding, however, the great beauty of its scenery, it may be said of Kent, as of Italy, that it is a country in which the memory and the imagination see far more than the eye. It has been the scene of some of the most important events in English history ; and if it be true that " to have seen the place where a great event happened — to have seen the picture, the statue, the tomb of an illustrious man, is the next thing to being present at the event in person — to seeing the scene with oiu" own eyes " {Stanley) — there is no part of Eng- land which will more richly repay the attention of the historian or the tourist. The position of Kent, at the narrowest part of the Channel, brought its inhabitants, from the earliest times, into closer connection with those on the opposite mainland, and made it the scene of three important landings, each of them a landmark in the history of Eng- land: that of Caesar (b.c. 55), which united the "remote Britain" with the great world of Kome and prepared it for the changes which were to fol- low; that of the first Saxons (generally dated A. D. 449), which introduced the Teutonic element, and laid the foundations of " this happj' breed of men, this earth, this England ;" and that of Augustine (a.d. 597), who brouglit with him Christianity, and from the results of whose mission "has, by degrees, arisen the whole constitution of Clmrch and State in Enaland which now binds together the whole British emi lire." The land- ing of Cajsar has usually been fixed at Deal (Rte. 10) ; and notwithstanding the interesting paper of Professor Airey (^Arcliaoloyia, xxxvi), who has endeavoured to support the claims of Pevensey in Sussex, it is probable that the Kentish coast between Walmer and Thanet will still be re- garded as the actual scene of the invasion. The historical character of the second landing — that of Hengist and Horsa, which, according to the Saxon Chronicle, took place in the year 449 at Yi^winc's fleot (no doubt Ebbsfleet, in T'hanet) — is considered as more than doubtful by Lappenberg (Anglo-Sax. Hist.), by Kemble (Saxons in England), and by Mr. Wright (Celt, Roman, and Saxon), but has found a champion of no ordinary ability in Dr. Guest, whose essay on the Early English Settlements in South Britain, published in the Proceedings of the Archceological Institute (Salisburj^ volume), is entitled to the fullest consideration. It is at least certain that some of the earliest settlements of the Saxons in Britain were made in the Isle of Thanet and on the adjacent mainland, although the exact period at which they occurred, and the manner in which they were efl'ected, must possibly be allowed to remain nndecided. Some of the most important Eoman remains in the island still attest the occupation of Kent by the " terrarum domini" during a period of four centuries (a.d. 1-400), but no historical events of consequence are recordetl as having occurred here, although it is probable that during the later years of Eoman rule, and especially under the famous Carausius (287-293), the coasts and strongholds of Kent were among the most frequented and important in Roman Britain. It was at this period that the great fortresses of the Saxon shore (Richborough, Rte. 10 ; Reculver, Rte. 9 ; Lymne, Rte. 7} were either first constructed or Kent. Extent and History. vii were materially strengthened, so as to afford some protection against the invading Saxons, whose ships were already hovering about the white cliffs and green marshes of " Kent-land." For elaborate discussions on the character of their early settlements, and of the religion they brought with them, traces of which may still be found throughout the county, the reader should have recourse to 'KcmbXe^s Saxons in En