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Old October 1st 03, 05:25 PM posted to uk.sci.weather
Dave Ludlow Dave Ludlow is offline
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First recorded activity by Weather-Banter: Sep 2003
Posts: 442
Default Watch the house prices rise in ... Brogdale??

On Wed, 1 Oct 2003 16:18:50 +0100, "Philip Eden"
philipATweatherHYPHENukDOTcom wrote:

Can we decide to call it 'Faversham' please, rather than Brogdale, or
Bogdale as I'm sure some will accidentally write/say? Brogdale
does not appear on my 1:50000 OS map for a start. It may well
be that it's a commercial name rather than a historic/geographic one
(can anyone who lives locally confirm?).


It's a historic site, Philip, appearing on Victorian mapping.
http://www.old-maps.co.uk/ (do an address search there, for the
postcode ME13 8XZ ) or, on currrent mapping, http://tinyurl.com/pbw5

Brogdale seems to be a former privately owned estate but now it's
owned (or run) by the Brogdale Horticultural Trust. It seems to be of
National importance horticulturally, being the home of the National
Fruit Collections. Here's another link covering this aspect (I posted
the Trust's own website address in my previous message):
http://www.foodloversbritain.com/org...ation-560.html

And the station is a darn
site nearer to Faversham than Gravesend is to Gravesend,
if you see what I mean. And it was always called "Faversham" in the
good old days when all these stations appeared in the Monthly Weather
Report. And, and, and ....

Hehe, try telling that to the BBC Weather presenters, who were saying
"Brogdale in North Kent" this afternoon on News 24 (no mention of
Faversham at all). Brogdale is a mere 1.2 miles SSW of Faversham Town
Hall (albeit in open country) but in view of the site's apparent
National importance, it's possible that both names will be used in the
media. Faversham Brogdale? I'll go with the flow...

--
Dave