Online Encyclopedia

FOLKESTONE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 600 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FOLKESTONE  , a municipal

borough, seaport and watering-place of Kent, England, within the
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parliamentary borough of
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Hythe, 71 M . S.E. by E. of
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London by the South-Eastern & Chatham railway . Pop . (1891) 23,905; (1901) 30,650 . This is one of the
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principal ports in
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cross-Channel communications, the steamers serving Boulogne, 30 M. distant . The older
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part of Folkestone lies in a small valley which here opens upon the
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shore between steep hills . The more
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modern portions extend up the hills on either hand . To the north the
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town is sheltered by hills rising sharply to heights of 400 to 500 ft., on several of which, such as Sugarloaf and Castle Hills, are ancient earth-
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works . Above the cliff west of the old town is a broad
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promenade called the Lees, commanding a notable view of the channel and connected by lifts with the shore below . On this cliff also stands the parish church of St Mary and St Eanswith, a cruciform
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building of much
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interest, with central tower . It is mainly Early
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English, but the
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original church, attached to a
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Benedictine priory, was founded in 1095 on the site of a convent establishedby Eanswith, daughter of Eadbald, king of Kent in 63o . The site of this foundation, however, became endangered by encroachments of the sea .

The monastery was destroyed at the

dissolution of religious houses by Henry VIII . Folkestone inner harbour is dry at low
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water, but there is a deep water pier for use at low tide by the Channel steamers, by which not only the passenger
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traffic, but also a large general trade are carried on . The
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fisheries are important . Among institutions may be mentioned the grammar school, founded in 1674, the public library and museum, and a number of hospitals and sanatoria . The discontinued Harveian Institution for young men was named after William Harvey, discoverer of the circulation of the
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blood, a native of Folkestone (1578), who is also commemorated by a tercentenary memorial on the Lees . Folkestone is a member of the Cinque
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Port of Dover . It is governed by a mayor, 7 aldermen and 21 councillors .
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Area, 2522 acres . To the west of Folkestone, close to
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Shorncliffe camp, is the populous suburb of Cheriton (an urban
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district, pop . 7091) . Folkestone (Folcestan) was among the possessions of
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Earl Godwine and was called upon to supply him with
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ships when he was exiled from England; at the time of the Domesday Survey it belonged to
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Odo, bishop of
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Bayeux . From early times it was a member of the Cinque Port of Dover, and had to find one out of the twenty-one ships furnished by that port for the royal service .

It shared the privileges of the Cinque Ports, whose liberties were exemplified at the

request of the barons of Folkestone by
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Edward III. in 1330 . The corporation, which was prescriptive, was entitled the mayor, jurats and commonalty of Folkestone . The
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history of Folkestone is a record of its struggle against the sea, which was constantly encroaching upon the town . In 1629 the inhabitants, impoverished by their losses, obtained licence to erect a port . By the end of the 18th century the town had become prosperous by the increase of its fishing and
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shipping trades, and by the
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middle of the 19th century one of the chief
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health and pleasure resorts of the south coast .

End of Article: FOLKESTONE
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