Crockham Hill is a village in the Sevenoaks district of Kent, England. It is about 3 miles (5 km) south of Westerham, and Chartwell is nearby. The village has a population of around 270 people.[1] It contains a 19th-century pub, the Royal Oak, and Holy Trinity church.
Etymology
Crockham Hill comes from the Old English 'crundel' meaning a 'chalk-pit, quarry' with 'ham' as a 'village, homestead' and 'hyll' for 'hill'; therefore, the 'quarry village on the hill'.[2]
Initially a cider house and inn, the buildings of the Royal Oak pub are thought to be at least 500 years old. The Inn had a 35-foot well, which was used by pilgrims on their way to Archbishop of Canterbury Thomas Becket's tomb in Canterbury and, in the 1950s, was recorded as a possible safe supply of drinking water in the event of atomic warfare.[4]
Crockham Hill Church of England Primary School was built below Holy Trinity Church in 1867 at a cost of £1,252. The school was enlarged and modernised after the First World War, and again in 1922 when a new classroom and cloakroom were added.[6]
Crockham-Hill, a chapelry in Westerham parish, Kent: at the boundary with Surrey, 2 miles N of Eden-bridge r. station, and 2¼ S of Westerham. It was constituted in 1842. Post town, Edenbridge. Rated property, £1, 930. Pop., 542. Houses, 108. The property is subdivided. A hill which gives name to the chapelry commands an extensive panoramic view. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Canterbury. Value, £105.* Patron, Mrs. W. St. John Mildmay. The church is good.[7]
Notable residents
Octavia Hill, a social reformer, philanthropist, artist, writer and co-founder of the National Trust, lived in the village. Her remains are buried in the churchyard of the village church, Holy Trinity,[8] and there is a memorial sarcophagus inside the church.[9]
Composer Pamela Harrison and her husband, the conductor Harvey Phillips, lived at "The Cearne", Crockham Hill from the late 1940s into the 1960s. Gordon Jacob's Sinfonietta No 2 (The Cearne) of 1954, written specifically for the Harvey Phillips String Orchestra, was named after the house.[11]
Eric M. Rogers, author and physics educator, grew up in Crockham Hill.[12]
^"Church of Holy Trinity". National Heritage List for England. Historic England. Archived from the original on 27 February 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
^Fuller, Keith (1994). "Eric Rogers 1902–1990". In Jennison, Brenda; Ogborn, Jon (eds.). Wonder and Delight: Essays in Science Education in honour of the life and work of Eric Rogers 1902–1990. Bristol and Philadelphia: Institute of Physics. p. 203.
^Reynolds, Kev (August 2015). "Edward Garnett (1868 - 1937)"(PDF). Holy Trinity Church. Archived(PDF) from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
^Reynolds, Kev (August 2015). "EDWARD GARNETT (1868-1937)"(PDF). Holy Trinity Church. Archived(PDF) from the original on 29 October 2020. Retrieved 29 October 2020.