Birchington-on-Sea

Birchington-on-Sea is a village in northeast Kent, England, with a population of around 10,000. It lies on the coast facing the North Sea, east of the Thames Estuary, between the seaside resorts of Herne Bay and Margate. Its parish church, All Saints’, dates to the 13th century and its churchyard is the burial place of the 19th-century Pre-Raphaelite artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti.

About Birchington-on-Sea in brief

Summary Birchington-on-SeaBirchington-on-Sea is a village in northeast Kent, England, with a population of around 10,000. It lies on the coast facing the North Sea, east of the Thames Estuary, between the seaside resorts of Herne Bay and Margate. Its parish church, All Saints’, dates to the 13th century and its churchyard is the burial place of the 19th-century Pre-Raphaelite artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Quex Park, a local 19th century manor house, is home to the Powell-Cotton Museum and a twelve-bell tower built for change ringing. The village was first recorded in 1240 as Birchenton, a name derived from the Old English words ‘bircen tun’, meaning a farm where birch trees grow. The area was inhabited before the existence of the village: Roman and prehistoric artefacts have been discovered in the area, and Minnis Bay was once the site of an Iron Age settlement. In the late 17th century, the house was visited by King William III. Birchington railway station opened in 1863 and the Railway Hotel, now the Sea View Hotel pub, was opened in 1865. A sea wall stretches along the foot of the cliffs to prevent further erosion. The geology of Thanet consists of mainly chalk, mainly deposited below the sea, when the area was part of the channel and is now low-lying marshland. The land rises, forming chalk cliffs and cliff stacks around the beaches at Grenham Bay, Beresford Gap and bpple Epple Bay.

The small town of Westgate-on the Sea lies between Birchington andMargate. The Village is built beside four partly sandy, partly rocky beaches; MinnisBay to the west, Grenham. Bay to the east and Bepple. Gap to the centre of the bay to the south. The beach at Minnis. Bay is a family beach with attractions such as sailing, windsurfing, a paddling pool and coastal walking routes. Its three smaller beaches are surrounded by chalk cliffs, cliff stacks and caves. In 1818, the Waterloo Tower was built by the owner of Quex. Park, John Powell Powell, who had an interest in change ringing, and was the first twelve- bell tower in Kent. In 1565, a report by the commissioners of Queen Elizabeth I stated that Birchington had 42 houses and did not have an active port. The 1801 census recorded the village’s population as 537 and the 1818 census recorded it as 538 and 541. The island of Thanets was a separate island from Kent until around two hundred years ago, when it became silted up. The Isle of Thanett became a separate mainland island from the mainland until around around two centuries ago. The name of the island is still used to refer to the channel between the mainland and the channel in which the village is situated. It was once part of. the channel.