New Hythe

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New Hythe is a village in mid-Kent, England on the banks of the River Medway approximately 5 miles northwest of the county town of Maidstone. It derives its name from the Old English word Hythe, meaning haven or landing place.

During the 20th century it held a relatively prominent position in the local economy due to the large paper mill based there, now one of Europe's largest (although this is now due to close shortly)[1] and having its own railway station.

It was also the home to Meridian's newsroom and studio for the south eastern television region until 2004 when the station relocated its Kent operations to the Maidstone Studios in Vinters Park, Maidstone, the former home of the previous southern ITV franchise holder TVS.[2]

Once distinct and visibly separate from its surrounding villages, the large scale development of neighbouring Larkfield from the 1960s onwards, the building of Lunsford Park in the 1970s and 1980s, and most recently the development of the Leybourne Lakes area, has seen New Hythe become effectively subsumed into the general Larkfield conurbation.

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External links

Media related to New Hythe at Wikimedia Commons

Coordinates: 51°18′36″N 0°26′53″E / 51.31000°N 0.44806°E / 51.31000; 0.44806


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