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To prevent confusion.

The Peking, was for a time H.M.S. Pekin note the spelling difference.

ClemRutter 11:09, 19 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Chat up lines

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At grid reference TQ755720 there is a roundabout and beside this roundabout stands a memorial stone with the following inscription:

The Upchat Road built by Royal Engineer units under the direction of the Royal School of Military Engineering, 52 Field Squadron (Airfields) RE, Eastern Command Plant Troop RE. 1965-1967

-- RHaworth 15:52, 8 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Stones

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See London Stones. I reckon that:

  • the City of London purchased the rights to the Medway as well as the Thames from Richard Gare de Lyon circa 1197
  • it was not so much charter rights of London fishermen but a tax upon local fishermen
  • the London Stones in Upnor mark the downstream limit of the City's rights. But how far upstream did those rights go?

Can anyone clarify? -- RHaworth 03:46, 14 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Upnor not Upper Upnor

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It grates to hear Upnor Village referred to as Upper Upnor see Popular Map Edition. Where this originated is difficult to say Brian Matthews in 1971 used this term- but in 1991 anyone referring to Upper Upnor in Council would be corrected by the rural members. Barnard is more circumspect, and it could be that the term Upper Upnor comes from the Military Railway, which had an Upper Upnor Section (p.113 I think). The Village Sign says Upnor.

As a convention I think we should certainly refer to the village as Upnor when the context is pre 1950- but I am unsure whether, but would prefer, we should use Upnor after that date.

Anyway in the local dialect, saying U[!]uh U[!]na (where [!] is a glottal stop) is really ugly.

ClemRutter 09:58, 4 July 2007 (UTC) .That is Clem R[!]uh![reply]