Dover District

Dover District

Dover is a local government district in Kent, England. Dover is its administrative centre. It was formed on 1 April 1974 by the merger of the boroughs of Deal, Dover, and Sandwich along with Dover Rural District and most of Eastry Rural District. There are three towns within the district: Dover, Deal and Sandwich; and the parishes below:

  • Alkham
  • Ash
  • Aylesham
  • Capel-le-Ferne
  • Denton with Wootton
  • Eastry
  • Eythorne
  • Goodnestone
  • Great Mongeham
  • Guston
  • Hougham without
  • Langdon
  • Lydden
  • Nonington
  • Northbourne
  • Preston
  • Ringwould with Kingsdown
  • Ripple
  • River
  • Shepherdswell with Coldred
  • Sholden
  • St Margaret-at-Cliffe
  • Staple
  • Stourmouth
  • Sutton by Dover
  • Temple Ewell
  • Tilmanstone
  • Walmer
  • Whitfield
  • Wingham
  • Woodnesborough
  • Worth

The northern boundary of the district is the River Stour; on its western side is the district of Canterbury; to the south the parish of Capel-le-Ferne; and to the east the Straits of Dover. The southern part of the latter is the point where the North Downs meets the sea, at the so-called ‘White cliffs of Dover’. Further north along the coast, from Deal onwards, the land is at sea level, where the River Stour enters the sea by a circuitous route. It is here, on the sand-dunes, that the Royal St George's Golf Club, founded in 1887, and of international repute, is situated.

In the district are industrial remains of the erstwhile Kent coalfield, situated around Tilmanstone and Betteshanger. Technically speaking, half of the underwater section of the Channel Tunnel is under British Sovereignty and thus part of the district.

Read more about Dover District:  Communications

Famous quotes containing the word district:

    Most works of art, like most wines, ought to be consumed in the district of their fabrication.
    Rebecca West (1892–1983)