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Chatham, Kent
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Chatham (/ˈtʃætəm/ CHAT-əm) is a town within the Medway unitary authority in the ceremonial county of Kent, England. The town forms a conurbation with neighbouring towns Gillingham, Rochester, Strood and Rainham. In 2020 it had a population of 80,596.
Key Information
The town developed around Chatham Dockyard and several barracks for the British Army and the Royal Navy, together with 19th-century forts which provided a defensive shield for Chatham Dockyard. The Corps of Royal Engineers is still based in Chatham at Brompton Barracks.
Chatham Dockyard closed on 31 March 1984, but the remaining naval buildings are an attraction for a flourishing tourist industry. Following closure, part of the site was developed as a commercial port, other parts were redeveloped for business and residential use, and part was used as the Chatham Historic Dockyard museum. Its attractions include the submarine HMS Ocelot.
The town has important road links and the railway and bus stations are the main interchanges for the area. It is the administrative headquarters of Medway Council. which is a Unitary Authority, as well as its principal retail and shopping location.
Toponymy
[edit]The name Chatham is first attested in a charter of 880 (surviving in a twelfth-century manuscript); it appears again in a charter of 975 as Cætham, and in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Ceteham. The first element of the name comes from the Common Brittonic word that survives in modern Welsh as coed ("woodland"). The second element is the Old English word hām ("settlement"). At the point when the current name was coined, then, it meant "settlement at Chat". The Old English term for the settlement's inhabitants is also reconstructable from a twelfth-century copy of a charter of 995, as *Cēthǣmas.[2][3][4][5]: 316
History
[edit]The A2 road passes by Chatham along the line of the ancient Celtic route which the Druids used for ceremonial purposes. It was paved by the Romans, and named Watling Street by the Anglo-Saxons. Among certain archaeological finds here have been the remains of a Roman-era cemetery.
Chatham was a long,[citation needed] small village on the banks of the River Medway. By the 16th century, warships were being moored at Jillingham Water (Gillingham), because of its strategic sheltered location between London and the European continent. It was established as a Royal Dockyard by Queen Elizabeth I in 1568, and most of Chatham Dockyard lies within Gillingham. Initially a refitting base, it became a shipbuilding yard; from then until the late 19th century, further expansion of the yard took place. In its time, many thousands of personnel in the Royal Navy were employed at Chatham Dockyard, and many hundreds of vessels were launched there, including HMS Victory, which was constructed from 23 July 1759 to 30 April 1762. After World War I ended on 11 November 1918 numerous submarines were also built in Chatham Dockyard.
In addition to Chatham Dockyard, defensive fortifications were built to protect it from attack. Upnor Castle had been built in 1567, but had proved ineffectual; the Dutch raid on the Medway from 19 June 1667 to 24 June 1667, during the Second Anglo-Dutch War, showed that more defences were required along the banks of the River Medway. The fortifications, which became more elaborate as the threat of invasion grew, were begun during 18 October 1756 as a complex across the neck of the Medway Peninsula formed by the bend in the River Medway, and included Fort Amherst. The threat of a land-based attack from the south during the 19th century led to the construction of more Napoleonic Forts.
The second phase of fortress-building happened from September 1806 to February 1819, and included Fort Pitt (later used as a hospital and the site of the initial Army Medical School). The 1859 Royal Commission on the Defence of the United Kingdom ordered, "Inter Alia" ("Among Other Things"), a third outer ring of Napoleonic Forts: these included Fort Luton,[6] Fort Bridgewoods, and Fort Borstal.[7]
These fortifications required military personnel to man them and Army Barracks to house those men. These included Kitchener Barracks (c 1750-80), the Royal Marine Barracks (c 1780), Brompton Artillery Barracks (1806)[8] and Melville Barracks (opened 1820 as a Naval Hospital, RM Barracks from 1905).[9] HMS Collingwood and HMS Pembroke were both Naval Barracks.
In response to the huge manpower needs, the village of Chatham and other nearby villages and towns grew commensurately. Trams, and later buses, linked those places to bring in the workforce.[10] The area between the High Street and Luton village illustrates part of that growth, with its many streets of Victorian terraces.
The importance of Chatham Dockyard gradually declined as the resources of the Royal Navy in the United Kingdom were reduced or moved to other locations, and eventually, on 31 March 1984, it shut. The buildings of Chatham Dockyard were preserved as the historic site Chatham Historic Dockyard (operated by Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust[11]), which was under consideration as a World Heritage Site[12][13] the site is being used for other purposes. Part of the St Mary's Island section is now used as a marina, and the remainder is being developed for housing, commercial and other uses, branded as "Chatham Maritime".[14]
Governance
[edit]

Chatham lost its independence as a borough under the Local Government Act 1972, by which, on 1 April 1974, it became part of the Borough of Medway, a non-metropolitan district of the county of Kent; under subsequent renaming the borough became the Borough of Rochester-upon-Medway (1979); and, from 1982, the City of Rochester-upon-Medway. Under the most recent change, in 1998, and with the addition of the Borough of Gillingham, the Borough of Medway became a unitary authority area, administratively separate from Kent.[15] It remains part of the county of Kent for ceremonial purposes.
Medway Council has recently moved its main administration building to Gun Wharf, the site of the earliest part of the dockyard,[16] a former Lloyd's office building.[17] It was built between 1976 and 1978 and is Grade II listed.[18]
Chatham is part of the parliamentary constituency of Chatham and Aylesford. Before 1997, Chatham had been included in the constituencies of Mid Kent, Rochester and Chatham and Chatham.
Chatham has proven to be a marginal parliamentary seat. Since 1945, the members of parliament for Chatham have been as follows:
Geography
[edit]




Chatham is situated where the lower part of the dip slope of the North Downs meets the River Medway which at this point is flowing in a south–north direction. This gives the right bank, where the town stands, considerable advantages from the point of view of river use. Compared with the opposite bank, the river is fast-flowing and deep; the illustration (1), an early print of the settlement, is taken from the point where Fort Pitt now stands. The town lies below at river level, curving round to occupy a south-easterly trending valley (The Brook), in which lies the High Street. Beyond the Chatham Dockyard was marshy land, now called St Mary's Island, and has several new developments of housing estates. The New Road crosses the scene below the vantage point of the illustration.
Illustration (2) is taken from the opposite side of the valley: the Pentagon Shopping Centre is to the right, with the building on the ridge left of centre, Fort Pitt and Rochester lies beyond that ridge; and Frindsbury is on the rising ground in the right distance.
The valley continues southeastwards as the Luton Valley, in which is the erstwhile village of that name; and Capstone Valley. The Darland Banks, the northern slopes of the Luton Valley above these valleys, are unimproved chalk grassland. The photograph (3), taken from the Banks and looking south, shows the village in the centre, with the rows of Victorian terraced housing, which unusually follow the contour lines. The opposite slopes are the ‘'Daisy Banks'’ and ‘'Coney Banks'’, along which some of the defensive forts were built (including Fort Luton, in the trees to the left)
Until the start of the 20th century, most of the south part of the borough was entirely rural, with a number of farms and large tracts of woodland. The beginning of what is now Walderslade was when a speculative builder began to build the core of the village in Walderslade Bottoms.[20]
Demography
[edit]Chatham became a market town in its own right in the 19th century, and a municipal borough in 1890. By 1831 its population had reached more than 16,000. By 1961 it had reached 48,800.[21]
Economy
[edit]The closure of the Royal Navy Dockyard on 31 March 1984 had the effect of changing the employment statistics of the town. About 7,000 people lost their jobs. The unemployment rate went up to 23.5%.[22] From early April 1984 to December 1985, and onwards, the Medway Towns began to have an increase in alcohol and drug-related, antisocial behaviour, which many residents then realized had largely been caused by the closure of the Royal Navy Dockyard on 31 March 1984, and the resulting mass redundancies. There has been a concerted effort to revitalise the Thames Gateway area and one of the largest employers in Chatham is now Vanquis Bank Ltd, a subsidiary of Vanquis Banking Group.[23]
Landmarks
[edit]The Chatham Naval Memorial commemorates the 18,500 officers, ranks and ratings of the Royal Navy who were lost or buried at sea in World War I and World War II. The Chatham Naval Memorial was constructed from March 1924 to October 1924. The addition of the obelisk and Portland stone plaque walls and surroundings were constructed between June 1952 to October 1952. It stands on the Great Lines, the escarpment ridge between Chatham and Gillingham.
The Grade II listed building Chatham Town Hall was built in January 1900;[24] it stands in The Brook opposite a former public house called Churchills, and is of a unique architectural design. With Chatham being part of the Medway Towns, it took on a new role as the Medway Arts Centre on 20 April 1987, with the promotional motto "Putting The Arts Back into The Medway". There were many events held within the Medway Arts Centre, including stage plays, craft fairs, snooker tournaments and party nights. Likewise during 12 May 1990, the Medway Arts Centre organised a large parade, composed of dancers, musicians, artists and sculptors, who stood upon theatrical lorry floats. The vehicles were initially parked up next to the entrance into the Theatre Royal Cafe, a popular restaurant in the Chatham Town Hall, on Whiffens Avenue, and then started to travel along Military Road in Chatham, and onward to Rochester, Strood and Frindsbury, where sweets, chocolate, posters, badges, plastic hats, leaflets, stickers and T-shirts were handed out to the crowds, to promote the Medway Arts Centre. On 28 April 1997, the Medway Arts Centre became The Brook Theatre.[25]
The Pentagon Shopping Centre stands in Chatham Town Centre and serviced the Pentagon Bus Station that was closed on 30 September 2011.[26] Chatham Waterfront bus station opened in October 2011. It replaced the previous Pentagon Bus Station in Chatham, which was opened during 16 October 1970, before the Pentagon Shopping Centre was opened on 30 June 1975, which by that time was considered an unwelcoming environment for passengers.
Transport
[edit]The Medway, apart from Chatham Dockyard, has always had an important role in communication: historically it provided a means for the transport of goods to and from the interior of Kent. Stone, timber and iron from the Weald for shipbuilding and agricultural produce were among the cargoes. Sun Pier in Chatham was one of many such along the river. By 1740, barges of forty tons could navigate as far upstream as Tonbridge.[21] Today its use is confined to tourist traffic; apart from the marina, there are many yacht moorings on the river itself.
The position of the road network in Chatham began with the building of the Roman Road (Watling Street, which passed through the town. Turnpike trusts were established locally, so that the length from Chatham to Canterbury was turnpiked in 1730; and the Chatham to Maidstone Road (now the A230) was also turnpiked before 1750. The High Street was bypassed in 1769, by the New Road (see illustration (1)) leading from the top of Star Hill Rochester, to the bottom of Chatham Hill at Luton Arches. This also became inadequate for the London cross-channel traffic and the Medway Towns Bypass, the M2 motorway, was constructed to divert through traffic south of the Medway Towns.
Chatham is the hub of the Medway Towns. This fact means that the existing roadway system has always proved inadequate for the amount of traffic it has to handle, and various schemes have been tried by Rochester-Upon-Medway City Council, to alleviate the congestion. The High Street itself is traffic free, so all traffic on Best Street and Railway Street has to skirt around it. The basic west–east routes are The Brook to the north and New Road to the south, but the additional problems caused by the situation of the Pentagon Bus Station meant that conflicting traffic flows were the result, from 1975 and onward. From April 1986 and onward until October 1987, the town centre remodelling of Chatham began, and Railway Street was realigned into becoming part of an inner ring road, that became a one-way system. This redevelopment included the demolition of the House of Holland department store in January 1987, and the construction of the Sir John Hawkins Flyover in Chatham, that was opened in February 1989, so the traffic could be carried from south to north over the High Street.
In September 2006, the one-way system was abandoned and two-way traffic reintroduced on most of the ring-road system.[27] Further work on the road system commenced early in 2009, and as of early 2010, the demolition of the Sir John Hawkins Flyover has been completed. It was replaced by a street-level, buses only, road coupled with repositioning of the bus station. The new Waterfront bus station opened in October 2011.[28]
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Chatham railway station, opened in 1858, serves both the North Kent and the Chatham Main Lines, and is the interchange between the two lines. It lies in the valley between the Fort Pitt and the Chatham Tunnels. There are three trains an hour to London Victoria, two trains an hour to London Charing Cross, two trains an hour to Luton (via London Bridge, St Pancras and Luton Airport Parkway) and two services an hour to St Pancras via High Speed 1. The former services run to Dover and Ramsgate; the Charing Cross services terminate at Gillingham and the High Speed services terminate at Faversham.
Part of the industrial railway in what is now Chatham Historic Dockyard is still in operation, run by the North Kent Industrial Locomotive Society for the Dockyard Trustees.[29]
Buses are operated by Arriva Southern Counties and Nu-Venture to various destinations. They serve other towns in Medway including Gillingham, Grain, Strood and Rochester and also to other towns in Kent including Maidstone, Gravesend, Blue Bell Hill and Sittingbourne. There is also an express bus via Strood and Rochester and A2 to Bluewater in Greenhithe.
Religion
[edit]In the 19th century the ecclesiastical parish of Chatham included Luton and Brompton and also Chatham Intra (land on the river that was administered by the City of Rochester).[30] Chatham's parish church, St Marys, which stood on Dock Road, was rebuilt in 1788. St John's was a Waterloo church built in 1821 by Robert Smirke, and restructured in 1869 by Gordon Macdonald Hills;[31] it ceased being an active church in 1964, and is currently used as an art project.[32] St Paul's New Road was built in 1854; declared redundant in 1974, it has been demolished. St Peter's Troy Town was built in 1860. Christchurch Luton was built in 1843, replaced in 1884. The Royal Dockyard Church (1806) was declared redundant in 1981.
St Michael's is a Roman Catholic Church, that was built in 1863. There is a Unitarian Chapel built in 1861.
Chatham is reputed to be the home of the first Baptist Chapel in North Kent, the Zion Baptist Chapel in Clover Street. The first known pastor was Edward Morecock who settled there in 1663. During the time of Oliver Cromwell Edward Morecock had been a sea-captain and had been injured in battle. His knowledge of the River Medway is reputed to have preserved him from persecution in the reign of King Charles II. A second Baptist chapel was founded about 1702. The Ebenezer Chapel dates from 1662.
Chatham Memorial Synagogue was built by Simon Magnus in 1867 on the Chatham end of Rochester High Street in Rochester.[33]
Education
[edit]For a full list of schools serving Chatham visit List of schools in Medway.
Sports
[edit]The town's Association Football club, Chatham Town F.C., plays in the Premier Division of the Isthmian League having gained two successive promotions in the 21/22[34] and 22/23[35] seasons. Lordswood F.C. plays in the Southern Counties East Football League. The defunct Chatham Excelsior F.C. were one of the early pioneers of football in Southern England.[36] Football league side Gillingham F.C. are seen to represent Medway as a whole.[citation needed] Holcombe Hockey Club is one of the largest in the country, and are based in Chatham. The men's 1st XI are part of the England Hockey League.[37]
Kite Flying is possible, especially power kiting on the Great Lines Heritage Park (between Gillingham and Chatham) and at Capstone Farm Country Park.[38]
Skiing is also possible near Capstone Farm Country Park at Capstone Ski Slope and Snowboard Centre.[39]
Popular culture
[edit]On a cultural level, Chatham gave birth to several creative movements in literature, art and music. In the period from October 1977 until March 1982 the Medway Delta Sound emerged. The term was coined as a joke by the Chatham-born writer, painter and musician Billy Childish after the Medway Towns-based record label of Russell Wilkins, Empire Records, used the phrase "From The Medway Delta". Several bands of the Medway Delta Sound gained international recognition, including The Milkshakes, The Prisoners (see also James Taylor Quartet) and The Dentists.[citation needed]
Out of the Kent Institute of Art & Design (KIAD), now the University for the Creative Arts (UCA) came the band known as Wang Chung. The vocalist and guitarist with Wang Chung, Jeremy Allan Ryder, who is better known as Jack Hues attended KIAD, as he musically helped to evolve Wang Chung with Nick Feldman. Alongside such individuals was Alan John Denman, who became a well established lecturer at KIAD, and who founded The Flying Circuits in April 1984, which became an urban theatre movement in Chatham and Gillingham in the Medway Towns, and within suburbs like Woolwich, Plumstead, Bexley and Orpington in Greater London. Many students from KIAD played various acting roles within The Flying Circuits, in the Medway Towns and Greater London. The scenes performed by The Flying Circuits were entirely based upon excerpts from the Electronic Town, a screenplay written by Alan Denman from January 1984 to October 1984, which concerned a futuristic science fiction dystopia. Alan Denman also helped to form The Medway Poets with Billy Childish, Robert Earl, Bill Lewis, Sexton Ming and Charles Thomson. The Medway Poets met regularly at the York Tavern & Railway Inn, in Ordnance Street, Chatham, from October 1974 to August 1985, near KIAD at Fort Pitt in Rochester, and Chatham railway station. Chatham has always had a strong musical and creative arts heritage that has remained centred on local groups, many of whom were also part of the KIAD. Charles Thomson and Billy Childish went on to create the artistic movement known as Stuckism in 1999.[40][41]
There was a resurgence in the live music scene in February 2001, with an initial focus on the Tap 'N' Tin venue at 24 Railway Street in Chatham. The essence of the original greatness of the Medway Delta Sound was revived by music and poetry evenings promoted by the Urban Fox Press of David Wise, which also published several books by poets and artists in the Medway Towns. In September 2008. the independent arts organisation Medway Eyes was founded, specialising in music and photography. It had promoted several arts exhibitions and gigs at The Barge, at 63 Layfield Road, in Gillingham (now closed) and the Nag's Head at 292 Rochester High Street, but disbanded in April 2013.[42]
The Medway Poets were formed in August 1975 and disbanded in March 1982 having performed at the Kent Literature Festival and many others in South East England and on TV and Radio. They became a significant influence to writers in Chatham and elsewhere in the Medway Towns. From the core of this group the anti conceptual/pro painting movement of Remodernism came into being.[43]
Recent Medway artists of note include Kid Harpoon, Crybaby Special and The Monsters, Red Light, Underground Heroes, Tyrannosaurus Alan,[44] Pete Molinari, Lupen Crook, Brigadier Ambrose, Stuart Turner and Theatre Royal.[45]
The term chav is sometimes falsely said to be a local one, meaning "Chatham Average", but the word derives from the Romany word for youngster. Before the Chatham Dockyard was closed down on 31 March 1984, the cultural idea of the chav did not exist in the Medway Towns.[46][47]
Many local residents used the cinema called the ABC Chatham that was located at 385 High Street, Chatham, Kent, ME4 4PG. The cinema was renamed the ABC on 30 October 1961. Then it was closed on 22 January 1972 so the building could be converted into a triple screen cinema. During 15 June 1972 the ABC reopened with a Screen 1 that had a seating capacity of 528, Screen 2 had 366 and Screen 3 had 172. During 20 March 1986 the Cannon Group bought the cinema. It then became the Cannon ABC. However, on 14 December 1987 a management buyout meant it reverted to its previous name. The ABC closed on 3 January 2002, and a couple of the last films showed there were Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers. During 9 April 2002, the former cinema was damaged by fires. Further damage was caused by fire on 18 September 2003. After this occurred the ABC was demolished in December 2003. Retail units and flats were then built on the site.
Local media
[edit]Newspapers
[edit]Local newspapers for Chatham include Medway News and Medway Standard, both published by Kent Regional News and Media; and the Medway Messenger, published by the KM Group, whose registered address is in New Barnet, in Hertfordshire. The town also has free newspapers such as the Medway Extra (KM Group) and Your Medway (KOS Media).
Radio
[edit]The local commercial radio station for Chatham is KMFM Medway, owned by the KM Group. The Medway Towns are also served by a community radio station Radio Sunlight based in the Sunlight Centre at 105 Richmond Road, in Gillingham, near the River Medway. The area can also receive the county wide stations BBC Radio Kent, Heart South and Gold, as well as many radio stations in Essex and Greater London.
Television
[edit]Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC South East and ITV Meridian from the Bluebell Hill TV transmitter, supplemented by a low power relay transmitter in Chatham Town Centre that has the National Grid Reference (NGR) of TQ767675.[48]
Notable people
[edit]
Charles Dickens lived in the town as a boy, both in 'The Brook, Chatham' and in Ordnance Terrace before Chatham railway station was built just opposite. He subsequently described it as the happiest period of his childhood, and eventually returned to the area in adulthood when he bought a house in nearby Gad's Hill. Medway features in his novels. He then moved to Rochester, a nearby town, also part of the Medway Towns.
Others who were born or who lived or live in Chatham:
- Sir Jacob Ackworth (1668–1748), shipbuilder.
- George Edward Bond (1853–1914), architect and surveyor.
- Asquith Xavier, ended a colour bar at British Railways in London by fighting to become the first non-white train guard at Euston railway station.
- Percy Whitlock, organist and post-romantic composer[49]
- Kid Harpoon, singer, songwriter, musician and record producer. Born and lived in Chatham. Working with award-winning artists including Jessie Ware, Shawn Mendes, Harry Styles, Florence & the Machine, Haim and Years & Years.
- Richard Dadd, Victorian era painter and patricide[50]
- William Coles Finch, author and historian, lived at Luton, Chatham.
- Elizabeth Benger, biographer, novelist and poet, was brought up here between 1782 and 1797.[51]
- Billy Childish, artist, poet, and musician.
- Tracey Emin, artist and member of the Young British Artists.
- Zandra Rhodes, designer.
- Bill Lewis, poet, painter, storyteller and mythographer
- William Ridsdel, The Salvation Army Commissioner, lived in the town from 1877 to 1878.
- William Cuffay, Chartist leader and tailor, born in Chatham in 1788[52]
- Gemma Lavender, astronomer, journalist and author, born in Chatham in 1986.
- Thomas Hodgskin, an early socialist, was born and raised in Chatham. His work would go on to influence Karl Marx.
- Joe Machine, artist and poet.
- Milo Yiannopoulos, author, speaker.
Entertainers
[edit]- Tommy Knight, actor.
- Stel Pavlou, author and screenwriter, attended the Chatham Grammar School for Boys.
- Lee Ryan, boy-band singer, also attended the Chatham Grammar School for Boys.
- Ben Mills, singer and X-Factor contestant.
- Anne Dudley, composer, pop musician and member of The Art of Noise.
- Kevin Eldon, stand-up comedian.
- Glenn Shorrock, entertainer, birthplace (Little River Band founder, lead singer).
- River Medway (drag queen), entertainer (RuPaul's Drag Race UK).
- Balvinder Sopal, actress (EastEnders).
Sportsmen
[edit]- Dave Whitcombe, twice BDO World Darts Championship Finalist.
- Kevin Hunt, former captain of the Bohemians, a League of Ireland club.
- Ashley Jackson, England international hockey player.
- Keith Donohue, Devon cricketer.
- Chris Smalling, England international footballer, attended Chatham Grammar School for Boys.
- Andrew Crofts, professional footballer, who played for Newport County.[53]
- Neil Shipperley, professional footballer, formerly of Crystal Palace FC and Wimbledon FC.
- George Boyd, professional footballer, who played for Peterborough United and was born in Chatham.
- Lee Minshull, professional footballer, AFC Wimbledon and was born in Chatham.
- Johnny Armour, professional boxer, British Commonwealth, European and World Boxing Union bantamweight champion was born and resides in Chatham.
- George Thorne, professional footballer, was born in Chatham.
- Ryan Richards, professional basketball player, drafted by the San Antonio Spurs in the 2010 NBA draft.
Twin towns
[edit]Chatham is twinned with Valenciennes, France.
See also
[edit]- Chatham, Massachusetts, a city often twinned with Chatham.
References
[edit]- ^ Population figures for all major UK towns and cities https://www.ons.gov.uk/aboutus/transparencyandgovernance/freedomofinformationfoi/populationfiguresforallmajoruktownsandcities
- ^ A. D. Mills, A Dictionary of British Place-Names, 2003, Oxford University Press (OUP). ISBN 0-19-852758-6
- ^ Judith Glover, The Place Names of Kent, 1976, Batsford. ISBN 0-905270-61-4
- ^ Watts, Victor, ed. (2004). The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Based on the Collections of the English Place-Name Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521168557., s.v. Chatham.
- ^ Coates, Richard; Breeze, Andrew (2000). Celtic Voices, English Places: Studies of the Celtic Impact on Place-Names in Britain. Stamford: Tyas. ISBN 1900289415..
- ^ Now a heritage site
- ^ "Fortified Places > Fortresses > Chatham". fortified-places.com. Archived from the original on 17 February 2007. Retrieved 4 January 2007.
- ^ Although the postal address of Brompton Barracks (now the headquarters of the Royal Engineers) indicates Chatham as its location, Brompton village lies in Gillingham
- ^ "Medway lines website". Archived from the original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
- ^ Harley, Robert J. (1994). Maidstone and Chatham Tramways. Middleton Press. ISBN 1-873793-40-5.
- ^ "The Historic Dockyard Chatham – Your Big Day Out in Kent". Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust. Archived from the original on 8 June 2010. Retrieved 12 December 2007.
- ^ "Chatham Naval Dockyard". UNESCO. Archived from the original on 12 September 2007. Retrieved 21 September 2007.
- ^ Masters, Sam (9 January 2014). "Chatham dockyard's bid for Unesco World Heritage Site status is blocked". The Independent. Archived from the original on 2 December 2014. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
- ^ "Chatham Maritime" Archived 26 November 2009 at the Wayback Machine article on SEEDA website. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
- ^ Rochester, The past 2000 years, Published Privately City of Rochester Society 1999.
- ^ "Character Area 5: Gun Wharf" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
- ^ "Medway Matters" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 November 2011. Retrieved 8 August 2011.
- ^ Historic England https://publicaccess1.medway.gov.uk/online-applications/files/40D3AE7DD53D70776D16D4C755389B05/pdf/MC_22_0605-HISTORIC_ENGLAND_COMMENTS-5994336.pdf[permanent dead link]
- ^ From W. H. Ireland's History of Kent
- ^ Walderslade Online: A Short History of Walderslade Village Archived 25 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Jessup, Frank W. (1966). Kent History Illustrated. Kent County Council.
- ^ "Can Sandwich learn from the Chatham Dockyard closure?". BBC News. 3 February 2011. Archived from the original on 6 August 2012. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
- ^ "Suspicious package containing white powder sent to Vanquis Bank call centre in Chatham Maritime". Kent Online. 13 March 2017. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
- ^ "Former Town Hall and Medway Arts Centre, Chatham". britishlistedbuildings.co.uk. 1 June 1990. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
- ^ Selby, Jade. "Medway theatres". medway.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 8 February 2008. Retrieved 16 February 2008.
- ^ "Pentagon Shopping Centre". Pentagon Shopping Centre. Archived from the original on 18 August 2020. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
- ^ "Chatham two way". BBC. 2006. Archived from the original on 13 November 2012. Retrieved 28 January 2009.
- ^ "Town flyover demolition next month". Medway Messenger. 2009. Retrieved 28 January 2009.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Chatham Historic Dockyard Railway". Archived from the original on 5 April 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
- ^ John Marius Wilson, Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870–72)
- ^ Macadam, Edwin and Sheila. "St John the Divine, Chatham, Kent – CHURCH FOR SALE". westgallerychurches.com. Archived from the original on 14 September 2008. Retrieved 30 October 2008.
- ^ "Church transformed into vineyard". BBC News. 25 October 2004. Archived from the original on 8 August 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
- ^ Rochester, The past 2000 years, (City of Rochester Society) 1999.
- ^ Cawdell, Luke (9 April 2022). "Chatham Town thrash Erith & Belvedere 10-1 to clinch promotion to the Isthmian League". Kent Online. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
- ^ Reeves, Thomas (17 April 2023). "Chats crowned Isthmian South East champions with sixth win in a row". Kent Online. Retrieved 16 June 2023.
- ^ "The Beautiful History of Club Crests, Club Colours & Nicknames". 9 January 2011. Archived from the original on 28 April 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
- ^ http://www.englandhockey.co.uk/fl/ehl/tables.asp?section=355 Archived 11 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine England Hockey League tables
- ^ "Powerkiting flying spots in and around Kent". Archived from the original on 25 July 2013. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
- ^ "Capstone Ski Slope and Snowboard Centre". Archived from the original on 24 December 2012. Retrieved 22 February 2013.
- ^ Stuckism. "Charles Thomson essay, A Stuckist on Stuckism". stuckism.com. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
- ^ Fitzgerald, Mary (December 2001). "Stuck like a Child". Fortnight (401): 27–28. JSTOR 25560476.
- ^ "Medway Eyes". wordpress.com. Archived from the original on 30 July 2018. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
- ^ ksinitskaia (17 November 2020). "What is Stuckism? A Remodernist Art Movement". Invaluable. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
- ^ "Tyrannosaurus Alan". guilfest.co.uk. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
- ^ "Theatre Royal Rochester, UK". bandcamp.com. Archived from the original on 10 July 2018. Retrieved 22 April 2018.
- ^ "Savvy Chavvy: social entrepreneurs engage gypsies". The Telegraph. London. 24 July 2008. Archived from the original on 26 January 2011. Retrieved 24 December 2008.
- ^ Quinion, Michael. "Chav". Archived from the original on 9 April 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2009.
- ^ "Chatham Town (Medway, England) Freeview Light transmitter". May 2004.
- ^ Riley, Malcolm (23 September 2004). "Whitlock, Percy William (1903–1946)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/55920. Retrieved 17 February 2019. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Allderidge, Patricia H. (23 September 2004). "Dadd, Richard (1817–1886)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/37337. Retrieved 18 February 2019. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Mitchell, Rosemary (2004). "Benger, Elizabeth Ogilvy (1777–1827), historian and novelist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2093. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 18 March 2022. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Fryer, Peter (23 September 2004). "Cuffay, William (bap. 1788, d. 1870), Chartist". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/71636. Retrieved 18 February 2019. (Subscription, Wikipedia Library access or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ "Andrew Crofts – Midfielder – First Team – Newport County". newport-county.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 February 2019. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
Bibliography
[edit]- Hughes, David (2004), Chatham Naval Dockyard and Barracks, The History Press ISBN 0-7524-3248-6
External links
[edit]
Media related to Chatham at Wikimedia Commons
Chatham travel guide from Wikivoyage- . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). 1911.
- Archive Images
- The Chatham News Index (1899–1965)
Chatham, Kent
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Origins and Evolution of the Name
The name Chatham originates from a compound of a pre-English British (Celtic) element cēd or cēte, denoting "wood" or "forest," and the Old English hām, meaning "homestead," "settlement," or "estate." This etymology reflects a wooded settlement, consistent with the area's ancient landscape along the River Medway, where early inhabitants likely cleared forests for habitation.[9][10] The earliest known record of the name appears in a charter dated 880 AD as Cetham. By the time of the Domesday Book in 1086, it is rendered as Ceteham, listing the settlement with 52 households under the hundred of Chatham in Kent.[11][10] Subsequent medieval documents show spelling variations such as Chetham, gradually standardizing to Chatham by the early modern period, preserving the core Anglo-Saxon structure amid the linguistic shifts following the Norman Conquest of 1066, which minimally altered place names rooted in pre-Conquest Saxon usage.[11]History
Prehistoric to Medieval Periods
Archaeological investigations in the Medway Valley, encompassing the area around Chatham, reveal significant prehistoric activity dating back to the Neolithic period, with chambered long barrows such as Addington Long Barrow and Coldrum Long Barrow constructed between approximately 3500 and 2500 BCE as burial monuments featuring earthen mounds and sarsen stone chambers.[12] Bronze Age round barrows, often 20-40 meters in diameter with causewayed entrances, are documented across north-east Kent, including sites near the Medway where artifacts indicate ceremonial and funerary use.[13] Iron Age enclosures and settlements appear in the landscape, evidenced by ditched structures and metalwork finds along the river, reflecting agricultural expansion and defensive needs in the late first millennium BCE.[14] Roman influence in the Chatham area derived primarily from the proximity of Watling Street, a major military road constructed post-AD 43 that routed through the locality, enabling troop movements and trade but with scant direct evidence of villas or urban settlements within Chatham itself—unlike the nearby Roman town at Rochester (Durobrivae). Sparse finds, such as pottery and coins recovered near the Medway, suggest occasional riverside activity rather than continuous occupation, consistent with the region's role as a transit corridor rather than a primary settlement zone.[15] Saxon-era settlement coalesced around early Christian sites, with St. Mary's Church originating as a wooden structure possibly by the 7th-9th centuries, later rebuilt in Norman style during the 12th century incorporating elements like a surviving doorway, serving as the focal point for the emerging parish.[16] By 1086, the Domesday survey recorded Chatham (Ceteham) as a modest rural holding in the hundred of Chatham with 52 households, 20 ploughlands, meadows, and woodland, held under the Bishop of Rochester, underscoring a landscape dominated by agrarian tenure.[11] Medieval development from the 12th to 15th centuries centered on manorial agriculture, with records from the 13th century detailing customary tenures, villein services, and crop rotations typical of Kentish open-field systems, where arable farming of wheat, barley, and legumes predominated alongside pastoral elements like sheep rearing for wool—a key regional export commodity shipped from nearby ports.[17][18] The parish of St. Mary the Virgin expanded modestly, managing tithes and glebe lands amid feudal obligations, but remained a peripheral village economy without significant non-agricultural trade until later naval influences.[19]Rise of the Naval Dockyard (16th-19th Centuries)
The Royal Dockyard at Chatham was established as a royal facility in 1567 under Queen Elizabeth I, leveraging its strategic position on the River Medway for naval operations.[20] Initial infrastructure included wharves and storehouses by 1570, supporting warship construction and maintenance amid Tudor naval expansions.[21] This development marked Chatham's shift from a minor settlement to a key node in England's maritime defense, with early royal visits underscoring its importance.[22] The dockyard expanded significantly during conflicts such as the Anglo-Dutch Wars (1652–1674), where its proximity to London and access to timber resources facilitated rapid ship repairs and builds, contributing to British naval dominance.[20] In the Napoleonic era (1799–1815), activity intensified, with employment reaching 1,500–2,000 workers focused on equipping fleets against French threats.[23] Notable vessels like HMS Victory, laid down in 1759 and launched in 1765, were constructed here, exemplifying the yard's role in producing first-rate ships of the line essential for imperial projection.[24] This growth drove urban expansion, with dockyard employment—estimated at around 1,000 men by 1701—spurring a population increase from approximately 3,000 in 1700 to over 30,000 by 1850, as workers and families settled nearby.[25] Economic records from wage ledgers and supply contracts reveal prosperity tied to naval output, funding local trade and infrastructure while bolstering Britain's sea power.[26] Defensive measures, including the Great Lines fortifications begun in 1755–1756 as earthwork defenses around the dockyard and barracks, protected against landward invasions during the Seven Years' War and later French incursions.[27] These elements causally linked the dockyard's operations to Chatham's transformation into a fortified industrial hub.[28]20th-Century Expansion and World Wars
During the First World War, Chatham Dockyard prioritized the repair of warships damaged in combat, facilitating their rapid redeployment to escort convoys transporting troops, food supplies, and munitions across the Atlantic and North Sea.[29] The facility's strategic location on the River Medway supported the Royal Navy's operational tempo, with extensive refits ensuring damaged vessels returned to service efficiently.[25] Chatham's Royal Naval Barracks, known as HMS Pembroke, functioned as a primary recruitment and training hub for naval personnel from the region, drawing local men into service amid widespread enlistment drives.[30] The area contributed significantly to manpower, with the barracks housing thousands of sailors preparing for deployment. On 3 September 1917, a German Gotha bomber raid targeted the barracks' drill hall, which was overcrowded with 698 resting sailors; the attack killed 98 and wounded over 100, marking one of the war's deadliest single strikes on British soil.[31] In the interwar period, Chatham experienced urban expansion driven by sustained dockyard employment, which attracted naval workers and their families, prompting residential development in peripheral areas such as Luton to accommodate growing populations. This housing boom reflected the dockyard's role as an economic anchor, with local authorities responding to influxes of personnel through new estates and infrastructure to support the community's needs. World War II saw Chatham Dockyard intensify shipbuilding and repair efforts, producing and maintaining vessels critical for Atlantic convoys combating U-boat threats, including refits for destroyers and support craft.[32] The site implemented air raid defenses, such as anti-aircraft batteries and barrage balloons, amid repeated Luftwaffe attacks. During the Blitz, Chatham endured over 130 raids, suffering 267 high-explosive bombs and 1,535 incendiaries, which damaged dockyard infrastructure like the fitted rigging house and locomotive shed, alongside civilian zones. Specific strikes on 5 October and 14 December 1940 devastated Ordnance Street, killing at least 24 residents and injuring dozens in residential collapses.[33] Despite disruptions, the dockyard's output persisted, underscoring its resilience in sustaining naval logistics. Post-1945, under continued Admiralty oversight transitioning to the Ministry of Defence, the dockyard achieved peak operations in the 1950s, employing approximately 13,000 workers focused on Cold War-era maintenance and construction, reflecting 20th-century expansion tied to persistent military demands.[34]Post-War Decline and Dockyard Closure
The closure of Chatham Dockyard was announced by Defence Secretary John Nott in 1981 as part of broader Royal Navy rationalization efforts, with the facility's main gates padlocked on 31 March 1984, marking the end of over 400 years of continuous naval operations.[35][36] This decision directly resulted in approximately 7,000 direct job losses within the dockyard, where civilian employment stood at around 6,500 immediately prior to the announcement, alongside an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 additional redundancies in supporting industries such as suppliers and local trades.[3][37][38] The economic fallout manifested in sharp GDP contraction for the Medway area, driven by the abrupt severance of high-skill, self-reliant naval employment that had anchored local prosperity, shifting reliance toward state benefits amid national deindustrialization trends.[36] Unemployment in the vicinity surged to 24% by the time of closure, exceeding Kent's county-wide averages during the 1980s recession, with Medway districts persistently registering 10-15% rates above regional norms through the 1990s due to the irreplaceable loss of specialized dockyard trades.[37] This transition fostered welfare dependencies, as former skilled workers—accustomed to disciplined, merit-based naval labor—faced barriers re-entering a service-oriented economy lacking equivalent structure or wages, per analyses of post-closure labor displacement.[35] Regeneration efforts yielded mixed outcomes, with the establishment of the Chatham Historic Dockyard Trust in 1984—bolstered by a £11.35 million government grant—proving a relative success through heritage preservation, tourism development, and adaptive reuse of the core 80-acre site into museums and educational facilities, attracting visitors and mitigating some cultural erosion.[39][40] In contrast, 1990s initiatives like retail park developments, including the Dockside Outlet Centre, encountered setbacks and failed to fully offset industrial voids, as commercial rezoning prioritized low-skill retail over skilled manufacturing revival, exacerbating socioeconomic stagnation.[41][42] The dockyard's demise eroded Chatham's ingrained naval culture of discipline and communal purpose, contributing to observable social decay, including diminished apprenticeships and vocational training pipelines that had sustained generational self-reliance, as documented in local accounts of community fragmentation post-1984.[36][39] This causal link underscores how the policy-driven prioritization of fiscal efficiency over strategic industrial retention amplified long-term dependencies, with empirical job loss data revealing the human cost of abstracted defense reforms detached from regional realities.[38][43]Governance
Administrative Structure and Medway Unitary Authority
Medway Council operates as a unitary authority encompassing the towns of Chatham, Rochester, and Gillingham, established on 1 April 1998 through the merger of Rochester-upon-Medway and Gillingham borough councils under local government reorganisation.[44][45] This structure provides a single tier of local governance independent of Kent County Council, handling both district-level and county-level functions across an area of approximately 190 square kilometres with a population exceeding 280,000 as of recent estimates.[46] The council exercises comprehensive powers including strategic planning, housing provision, waste management, education, social care, and public health services, as outlined in its constitution which mandates efficient, transparent decision-making processes.[46] Local choice functions encompass bylaw-making, promoting legislation, and policy formulation to address area-specific needs, with councillors serving as collective policymakers.[47] Chatham's representation occurs through wards such as Chatham Central and Brompton, which contribute to council composition via periodic elections, including boundary adjustments effective from May 2023 following review by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England.[48] Funding derives primarily from council tax, retained business rates, and central government grants, supporting an annual budget requirement of £438.569 million set for 2024/25, with a 4.99% council tax increase approved for 2025/26 to cover rising service costs.[49][50] Capital projects draw from borrowing, grants, and asset sales, totaling around £622 million in expenditures.[51] Council effectiveness is monitored through the One Medway Council Plan 2024/28, featuring 25 performance indicators per priority area, with quarterly reports tracking metrics like employment, education, or training rates (e.g., 54% for recent youth cohorts) and attainment scores showing Medway's 12-place rise in local authority rankings.[52][53][54] Ongoing devolution discussions, spurred by government invitations since 2024, propose potential reconfiguration into larger or additional unitary authorities across Kent and Medway to enhance efficiency and mayoral oversight, though Medway's existing unitary status positions it variably in four-authority split scenarios.[55][56][57]Local Politics and Representation
Chatham falls within the Rochester and Strood parliamentary constituency, represented since the 2024 general election by Lauren Edwards of the Labour Party, who secured 15,403 votes (36.2% share) against the incumbent Conservative Kelly Tolhurst's 12,473 votes (29.3% share).[58] [59] Prior to 2024, the seat had been held by Conservatives since its creation in 2010, reflecting a historical preference for centre-right representation in the area.[59] In the 2016 EU referendum, Medway recorded a 64.1% vote in favour of Leave, with turnout at approximately 72%, indicating strong local support for policies emphasizing national sovereignty and immigration controls.[60] [61] At the local level, Medway Council, the unitary authority encompassing Chatham, saw a shift to Labour control following the all-out elections on 4 May 2023, where Labour secured a majority of seats amid a national trend of Conservative losses.[62] [63] The council comprises 55 members across 18 wards, with Chatham's representation including wards such as Chatham Central and River, which feature a mix of Labour and Conservative councillors post-2023, though Labour holds overall dominance in urban Chatham areas.[64] Voter turnout in the 2023 local elections was around 30%, with key contests in Chatham wards highlighting divides over housing development and service provision.[65] Council performance metrics include council tax collection rates nearing 99% annually, supporting funding for essential services, though scrutiny has focused on allocation priorities.[66] The 2025/2026 budget, approved on 28 February 2025, allocates significant increases to social care—£6.8 million additional for adults and £4.6 million for children—while infrastructure spending faces criticism for underutilization, with approximately £19.5 million in developer contributions for public works remaining unspent as of April 2025.[67] [68] This emphasis on social services over physical infrastructure reflects policy outcomes under Labour-led administration, amid debates on balancing resident needs with long-term urban renewal in Chatham.[50]Geography
Location and Topography
Chatham is positioned on the southern bank of the River Medway in north Kent, England, approximately 48 kilometres east of central London as measured by air line distance.[69] The town occupies the confluence of the river valley with the lower dip slope of the North Downs, a chalk escarpment where the underlying geology dips gently northward before being overlain by younger deposits.[70] Topographically, Chatham features low-lying terrain along the Medway, with elevations typically ranging from 10 to 50 metres above sea level, rising gradually toward the encircling hills of the North Downs.[71] This configuration, including adjacent alluvial marshes, has imposed natural constraints on development by limiting expansion to higher, more stable ground and exposing lower areas to periodic inundation from river overflow.[72] The physical continuity of the river valley floor has facilitated urban coalescence, with Chatham's built environment merging seamlessly with the adjacent settlements of Rochester to the west and Gillingham to the east, forming an extended conurbation along the Medway corridor.[73] These topographic features historically dictated the siting of defensive structures, such as fortifications, which were positioned to exploit elevated vantage points while guarding against flood-vulnerable approaches from the river and marshes.[72]Environmental Features and Urban Development
The Medway Estuary bordering Chatham encompasses saltmarsh, mudflats, shingle beaches, and seagrass habitats that sustain diverse wildlife, including waders, wildfowl, and breeding birds.[74] This riverside area forms part of the Medway Marshes Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI), designated for its international significance as a wintering ground for migratory birds and national value for breeding populations.[75] Grazing marshes within the estuary provide high-tide roosts and spring nesting sites, contributing to the region's ecological resilience despite pressures from tidal dynamics and sea-level rise.[76] Chatham's urban green spaces, such as the Great Lines Heritage Park spanning approximately 70 hectares of chalk grassland, function as biodiversity corridors and recreational buffers against built-up areas.[77] These sites support habitat restoration efforts, including wildflower meadows and nature trails that enhance urban wildlife connectivity while preserving Napoleonic-era earthworks integrated into the landscape.[78] The park's role as a "green lung" mitigates urban heat and fragmentation, with ongoing initiatives focused on rehabilitating grasslands for native flora and fauna.[79] Post-industrial sites like the former Chatham Dockyard, closed in 1984, underwent contamination remediation to facilitate reuse, with investigations in the late 1990s and early 2000s identifying heavy but primarily shallow pollutants amenable to civil engineering interventions.[80] Air quality metrics in Medway, including nitrogen dioxide levels, have trended toward improvement since 2000, aligning with regional declines in emissions through targeted action plans and reduced industrial activity.[81][82] Urban development pressures in Chatham involve expanding residential and mixed-use projects on brownfield lands, necessitating balances between high-density approvals and safeguards for over 100 listed buildings tied to the dockyard's legacy.[83] Preservation strategies emphasize adaptive reuse of historic structures, such as mast houses and fortifications, amid growth demands that risk habitat loss and visual encroachment on the estuarine skyline.[84] Land use planning integrates sustainability metrics, like green infrastructure requirements, to offset intensification while maintaining ecological and architectural integrity.[40]Demographics
Population Growth and Trends
The population of Chatham reached a post-war peak of approximately 70,000 in the 1950s, fueled by employment at the Royal Naval Dockyard, which at its height supported thousands of jobs and attracted workers to the area.[85] Following the dockyard's closure in 1984, the town experienced population stagnation and relative decline through the late 20th century, as job losses prompted out-migration, particularly among skilled workers seeking opportunities elsewhere, outpacing local birth rates and natural increase.[25] By the 2011 Census, Chatham's built-up area population stood at around 73,000, reflecting this period of limited growth amid broader deindustrialization. The 2021 Census recorded 76,955 residents, a 5% increase over the decade, contrasting with slower growth in some comparable post-industrial UK towns.[86] This recent uptick is primarily driven by net inward migration, accounting for over 70% of population growth in the wider Medway area, with inflows from London commuters drawn by affordable housing and high-speed rail links to the capital, though partially offset by ongoing outflows of higher-skilled residents.[87] Natural population change, where births modestly exceed deaths, has provided secondary support, influenced by a younger median age profile among migrants compared to national averages.[88]Ethnic Composition and Socioeconomic Indicators
According to the 2021 Census, 84.3% of Medway residents (encompassing Chatham) identified their ethnic group as White, a decline from 89.6% in 2011, with the remainder comprising 5.9% Asian or Asian British, 5.6% Black, Black British, Caribbean or African, 2.8% mixed or multiple ethnic groups, and 1.4% other ethnic groups.[88] [89] Non-White ethnic minorities thus accounted for 15.7% of the population, up from approximately 10.4% in 2011, reflecting broader trends of increasing diversity in urban areas of southeast England.[88] This proportion is lower than the England and Wales average of 18.3%.[89]| Ethnic Group (2021) | Percentage of Medway Population |
|---|---|
| White | 84.3% |
| Asian/Asian British | 5.9% |
| Black/Black British | 5.6% |
| Mixed/Multiple | 2.8% |
| Other | 1.4% |
