The Medway's 'marriage' to the
Thames is given extensive treatment by
Edmund Spenser's
The Faerie Queene in the 16th century (Book IV, Canto xi).
Joseph Conrad describes the view up the Medway from the
Thames Estuary in
The Mirror of the Sea (1906). For the 1999 film
The Mummy the river was filmed at
Chatham Dockyard, in an imitation of a "port at
Cairo". The scene is brief but involves the main protagonists departing on their mission to the city of the dead. The Maidstone River Festival, to celebrate the River Medway, running annually since 1980, is held on the last Saturday of July. It features events on and around the river and attracts thousands to Kent's county town. The festival was cancelled in 2012 due to the London Olympics, but returned in 2013. However, the 2013 event did not include a funfair or a fireworks display as in previous years, and lasted just one day instead of two.
Medway Flows Softly is a song by local man George Gilbert; it was written in the mid-1960s and is often played in local folk clubs and at festivals in Kent. The River Medway is featured at Maidstone in the studio backdrop of the ITV1 regional news programme
Meridian Tonight. At 7.15 p.m. on 1 May each year, local
Morris dancers Kettle Bridge Clogs dance across
Barming Bridge (otherwise known as the Kettle Bridge) to mark the start of their Morris dancing season. Recreationally the river is used by many. For example, individuals and many clubs have paddling trips along many different parts of the Medway (e.g. Bewl Canoe Club). Individuals and club members paddling on the Medway and most other rivers should be members of
British Canoeing.
"Kentish Men" and "Men of Kent" The Medway is said to divide the county of
Kent into two parts: this may allude to the two
dioceses into which Kent has been divided since the year 604: Canterbury and Rochester. The tradition has grown up, and is kept alive by the "Association of Men of Kent and Kentish Men", that those born in
West Kent – the area north of the river, but including Maidstone, Gillingham (other than Rainham), Rochester and Chatham – are labelled
Kentish Men (or
Maids); while those born in East Kent are
Men (or Maids) of Kent. This labelling applies equally to those born in those parts of the traditional county absorbed into London since the 1880s. ==Watermills==