During the
Industrial Revolution,
barges were used to move many raw materials and finished goods, which were produced in Kent, into the
River Thames and on to
London and beyond.
Paper mills and
brickfield in the local area, were fed by the barges that brought in sand, mud and household waste such as
cinders for
brick making, and took away the newly constructed bricks. The yellow
stock bricks from Conyer were used to create the giant railway
viaduct running from
London Bridge to
Greenwich. Conyer was ideally suited for this purpose (due its closeness to the Thames, via The Swale) and then a successful barge-building industry developed. A small railway was built from the main
London - Sittingbourne line to Conyer, to transfer materials to the brickfields. All traces of this line have been removed, after its use during
World War II. Some of the line is now a footpath from Barrow Green, Teynham to Conyer. The brickworks closed in the 1980s, the site since, has been cleared. Part of the site has a planning application for development (for 24 dwellings) after a lengthy planning application process. The rest of the site will be left as a
Nature Reserve. ==Barge building==