Cray Wanderers FC St Mary Cray was the original home of Cray Wanderers FC, claimed to have been having been formed in 1860, which may be the oldest football club in London.
The Romany St Mary Cray has the largest settled
Romani groups community in the UK. In the past, hop and soft fruit farms in the area employed large numbers of itinerant workers.
Battle of St Mary Cray On Saturday 24 April 1954 a clash between
Teddy Boys or Edwardians, as they were then known, attracted attention. The
Orpington & Kentish Times had the headline: "Gang Battle" at Railway Station: Edwardian Youths in Half-Hour Fight: Wooden Stakes, Sand-Filled Socks as Weapons". The two gangs were from
Downham and
St Paul's Cray, and sported stovepipe trousers, crepe shoes and drape jackets. Trouble had started earlier in the evening when a "rowdy" party of youths and a few girls from
Downham Estate, Bromley, arrived at St Paul's Cray Community Centre, where a dance was being held. The paper reported "a knife was drawn when a member of the band objected to being jostled", and "a man had a glass of orange juice thrown in his face during an exchange of words." The MC, George Couchman said: "I warned the crowd police were standing by and also took the precaution of the band playing calming music – no quicksteps." The crowd dispersed at 11 o'clock, but a fight broke out at the local station, and 40 youths were held over night.
Local government St Mary Cray was an ancient parish in the county of
Kent. It formed part of the
Bromley Rural District from 1894 and was absorbed by the
Orpington Urban District in 1934. The Orpington Urban District was abolished in 1965 and the area became part of the
London Borough of Bromley in
Greater London. St Mary Cray is represented by the
St Mary Cray ward which elects three councillors to
Bromley London Borough Council. ==Retail==