Acol was recorded in 1270 under the name Acholt, meaning Oak Wood. The conditions for
labourers throughout Kent at the end of the Napoleonic Wars deteriorated to the point where unrest brought about the start of the
Swing Riots in 1833–4. At the same time, many labourers left Kent, often with the grateful assistance of their
parish councils who did not want to keep supporting them, to take up new lives in the colonies in
North America and particularly
Australia and
New Zealand. About 1880, Henry Perry Cotton, of
Quex Park north of Acol, developed land in
Kilburn, London, naming one street Acol Road; there in the 1930s Acol Bridge Club members developed the
Acol bidding system, formerly used by most British
contract bridge players. ==St Mildred's Church==