Bean, Kent
Coordinates: 51°25′38″N 0°17′10″E / 51.4273°N 0.286°E
Bean is a village and civil parish in the borough of Dartford in Kent, England. It is located around three miles southeast of the town of Dartford.
The Area
The parish is bounded on the north by the A2 road (the Roman Watling Street), and on the other three sides by ancient woodlands. It is the most recently formed of Kent parishes, although the village itself has been recorded since at least the 13th Century. Bean was formerly part of the parish of Stone, but the boundary was such that it was connected to the rest of Stone by only a narrow neck of land at Watling Street (A2). In 1797 this part of the parish of Stone is described as having great tract of woodland which reached almost to Green Street Green, adjoining to Darenth parish. Along the northern boundary of these woods, runs the ancient Roman road to Rochester (now the A2) and not far from this road were the two small hamlets of Bean and Stonewood. On the hill above Green Street Green, among the woods, were the remains of a camp and fortifications, thrown up in ancient times, but then so overgrown with wood and rubbish, as to be impenetrable.[1]
Transport
Bean is served by Redroute bus services 474/475 to Greenhithe via Bluewater and to Longfield. The nearest rail link to Bean is at Greenhithe station.
Notes
- ↑ The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent: Volume 2 (1797),by Edward Hasted. See section on the parish of Stone under Axstane Hundred
External links
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