AYLESHAM & SNOWDOWN WELFARE BOWLS CLUB

About Us

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The Aylesham & Snowdown Welfare Bowls Club is a well established and Friendly club, we have at present in excess of 100 members all enjoying the competitive spirit and the friendly game of bowls.

We have a full programme of National, County and Club competitions throughout the summer, as well as a full fixture list of matches against local and touring sides.

With so much going on out on the green it is sometimes hard to believe that we also have a very active social side to the club with Quizzes and cabaret evenings as well as chilling in our very own bar.

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Leon King served as President for 2006/07 of the Kent County Bowling Association.
Leon started bowling in June 1964 at a club called Three Mile Cross in Berkshire. He qualified for his county badge around 1969 and during his time in Berkshire he won the county pairs and was twice semi finalist in the triples.
Leon played Home Counties League and Middleton Cup for the county. During his 30 years at Three Mile Cross he variously served as President, Chairman, Treasurer, Secretary, and Captain. Throughout this time he was also actively involved in looking after the green.

Leon moved to Kent in 1993 due to a job change and joined Aylesham & Snowdown.
The new job was demanding and limited the time which he could devote to bowls. Leon retired in 2001 and this allowed him the luxury of putting more time into the game. Leon therefore decided that having derived a lot of pleasure from county bowls, that he would put something back in return. Leon has deservedly been elected as County Selector and in 2007 as County President, and is now the County Senior team manager. This is a tremendous honour because kent is undoubtedly one of the premier counties in English Bowls. 

Please click on the link below to request a Club Membership Application Form

Membership Application

Click on this link to view Bowls Club Photos

Sunset Over Water

Click on this link to see pictures of the part of England that we are lucky enough to live in.

Here at Aylesham & Snowdown we also have a friendly social scene outside of the bowls club with many of our members going as groups on bowling and fun holidays, next year we have groups from the club going together as friends to Potters Leasure Centre, Benidorm and  Cyprus these tours are so popular that many bowlers from other clubs join us on these holidays.

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Roy Cornelius, Bob Jarvie and Jean Price are waiting to serve you in our very own bar.

 

An article that appeared in the World Bowls magazine
in 1986.

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A little bit of the History of the Villages of Aylesham & Snowdown

It is common knowledge that Aylesham was built to house the miners and the families of the miners that would work down Snowdown Colliery .It is also well known that Abercrombie designed Aylesham in the shape of a pit head, what is not so well known or appreciated is the social upheaval that was caused by dropping a large mining village down in the heart of the Kent’s peaceful countryside.

Aylesham was built in a very short space of time, a branch line from the railway being run into the heart of the village in order to supply the vast amount of materials needed.

The greatest influx of miners were economic migrants as they were unemployed, many through being militant during the general strike and not being taken back. Some were lured by the prospect of living in a house with electricity, hot water on tap, an inside bathroom and open countryside around them. Before then there had been a mainly intransient population.

Miners came from every industrialised area of Britain, they got here every way they could, most walked, from Scotland, Wales, Yorkshire, Northumberland, Lancashire and many other areas where there were mines, most left their families behind to be sent for later if they got a job and a house (which were not guaranteed). The stories of these journeys alone would fill a book.

With a high percentage of unaccompanied men in Aylesham who worked hard in atrocious and dangerous conditions all week and at weekends with money in their pockets and no one to restrain them they drank, gambled and fought. Aylesham was like a frontier town. You can imagine what the clash of cultures and customs caused between our newly formed society and the indigenous population.

This changed as more families arrived; sharp tongues started to rein the men in, as the working conditions improved many of the men and their families started to settle down.

The way the cultures and customs have merged to make a very sociable and friendly society is very interesting. Working men’s clubs were built, churches were built,( more churches than clubs) a choir, band, football and rugby clubs were formed. With typical miners practicality the best of the different cultures and customs were adopted There are still letters, film, photos, audio and video tapes stored in peoples attics and cupboards dating back to the first bricks being laid. We believe if we don’t gather this history now it may be thrown away as the old people pass away and the young do not understand the value of such items.

This has been a very condensed version of our history; it does not show the characters, events stories or photos of our very colourful past.

Aylesham has gone through a depressed time socially since the closure of the pit.

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Snowdown Colliery

Work began at the Snowdown colliery site in 1907. The first shaft hit water at 260 ft, flooded and 22 men were drowned. The shaft site was moved and started producing coal in 1912.

In 1921 Snowdown miners went on strike over their pay being reduced. Snowdown was closed in 1922 but the pumps were kept working to keep it workable.

It was bought by Pearson and Dorman Long in 1924 who had started Betteshanger at that time.

Pearson and Dorman Long modernised Snowdown pit and had Aylesham built to house 650 families. Before then most Snowdown miners had lived in Dover.

Snowdown at 3000 ft (915metres) deep was the deepest pit in Kent and the most humid ( some said in Britain) and was given the name of ‘Dante’s Inferno’ by the miners. Snowdown closed in 1987.

G.Horsfall

Chairman

Aylesham Heritage Centre Committee

Click on link below to email George Horsfall

Aylesham Heritage Centre

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Paul Sharp & Son
Aylesham Family Butchers
All your family food catered for
 B B Qs to Banquets
Telephone:01304 841464
 
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Just U   Aylesham
Clothing, Footwear, Wool& Haberdashery,
Dry Cleaning & Alterations
Telephone:01304 840048
 
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D B Racing
Turf Accountants
Cornwallis Avenue Aylesham
Telephone:01304 841845
 
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Ovendens Tipper Services
Aylesham Industrial Estate
Telephone:01304 841841
 
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Autocare
Accident Repair Centre
Covert Road
Aylesham Industrial Estate
Telephone:01304 842525 / 07971893548
Fax:01304 842842
 
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Aylesham Sports Club
Watch your favourite sports on the wide screen T.V. and enjoy a drink in pleasant company
Telephone:01304 840234
 
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Others to follow
 
 

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