A
Roman grave and artefacts have been found at the north end of the village. The priory dedicated to
St. Mary was built on land granted to Mary, daughter of King
Stephen. In 1148, the nuns of St Sulphice-la-Foret, Brittany, moved to Higham. Higham Priory was also known as Lillechurch. On 6 July 1227, King
Henry III confirmed the royal grant to the abbey of St. Mary and St. Sulpice of Lillechurch. The original
parish church, the
Church of St Mary, was built in the 13th and 14th centuries and stands to the north of the present village, in the
hamlet of Church Street. Redundant since the early 1980s, it is in the care of the
Churches Conservation Trust, and is open to visitors daily. It contains much medieval woodwork, and its pulpit is one of the oldest in Kent, dating from the 14th century. Charles Dickens' daughter
Kate was married here in 1860. The Higham Village History Group, founded in 1997, is devoted to assembling the history of the village. ==Parts of Higham==