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POSTCARD FROM KENT
Best of British
|November 2024
Bob Barton investigates a network of caves, takes a ride on a thriving heritage railway, and marvels at the beauty of the garden of England
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Though I was born 10 years after the end of World War Two, I have an enduring childhood memory of clambering around a disused air raid shelter. It was reached, after negotiating clumps of stinging nettles, in an area we called the dump, near where we lived. Inside, it was pitch black and cavernous, with several underground chambers. My intrepid pals and I would explore without the benefit of a light - not even a match.
These days, it would be securely cordoned off, but not then.
Those memories came flooding back when I took a tour of one of the largest public wartime shelters in the country. I'm not referring to a bunker in a city centre but a network of caves in deepest Kent. Chislehurst Caves (020 8467 3264, chislehurst-caves. co.uk) were quickly (and unofficially) used as a shelter when the bombing of London started in 1940. Soon, people thronged there by the thousands each evening. The caverns grew into an underground city of sorts.

The caves aren't a natural feature but entirely man-made. Technically, they are mines as they were hacked out of the ground by Romans, Saxons and their successors. Men dug for chalk and flint. During World War One, the space provided a ready-made ammunition depot.
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