The nearby
Eccles Roman Villa and pottery kiln were excavated between 1962 and 1976. The villa was occupied soon after the
Roman invasion of Britain until they
departed. It underwent at least four phases of construction, latterly comprised at least 37 rooms and may have had workshops, stores and
wharves along the River Medway. Beneath the villa complex are traces of an
Iron Age farmstead. A
Saxon cemetery was discovered at the villa containing at least 200 graves aligned east–west, some with a likely mid-seventh century date. Several skeletons had fatal weapon injuries, possibly from a single hostile event. Signs of reuse during the medieval period include
cesspits and areas of rough
cobblestones. There is reference to a Common Park at Aylesford, dating to 1597, which has been interpreted as a
deer park, although it could refer to
common land. The park lay to the South of Eccles village, west of Bull Lane, and in 1805 was about . Eccles was mostly farmland until
Thomas Cubitt bought two farms near the river and built a
steam powered brickyard and cement works. It could produce up to 30 million bricks a year. Buildings were positioned along
tramway track on the gently sloping site so that material moved by gravity, with each stage of manufacture, closer to the
quayside. Three miles of tram and
railway connected the works buildings with the extraction pits and the wharf. Piped water was provided from a large reservoir. By 1900 the business had merged with others and was producing
Blue Circle branded cement. At its peak, almost a thousand men and boys were employed making
portland cement and Burham bricks from the
Gault clay, but the site closed in 1941. Local farmer Thomas Abbot built a terrace of 22 cottages on Bull Lane to house some of these workers, and the population soon increased to 300. One account traces the settlement's present name back to 1208 and suggests that it derived from the 10th-century 'Aecclesse', meaning the 'meadow of the oak'. The
Domesday Book of 1086 records Eccles as ‘Aiglessa’. At that time, it had a population of 22 households, putting it in the largest 40% of recorded settlements. It has also been suggested that the name 'Eccles' comes from the Latin word 'ecclesia' meaning 'church', implying that a post-Roman Christian community existed in the area, although there is no evidence for this. In 1798, Eccles was a manor of the parish of Aylesford, "which was of some note in the time of the Conqueror, being then part of the possessions of
Odo, bishop of Baieux, the king's half brother, under the general title of whose lands it is thus entered in the book of Domesday". The site of the original manor of Eccles was lost to public knowledge by the 18th century, but it was surmised to be somewhere at the eastern extremity of the parish, near Boxley Hill. ==Amenities==