Pre-Conquest Strood was part of
Frindsbury until 1193. It was named
Strodes in the
Textus Roffensis, now kept in
Rochester Cathedral, though most early records use the spelling
Stroud. The
Old English name
Strōd refers to a "marshy land overgrown with brushwood". The Gloucestershire town of
Stroud has the same etymology. The
Roman Legions built a
stone bridge and laid a road on a causeway across the marshy ground. The foundations were about 8 ft below the level of the 1856 road. The road went up Strood Hill, and was called
Watling Street, as it still is today. This is the
A2 road. There is further evidence of a causeway-based road leading along the bank towards the Frindsbury Peninsula leading to a villa, was found on 24 March 1819. The present road and field pattern suggest that there was a substantial agricultural settlement of the
Roman Empire centred near Frindsbury. In 764 AD
Offa King of
Mercia and
Sigered King of Kent granted to Eardulph lands in Easlingham (Frindsbury). In 840 AD, 994 AD, and 998 AD Strood was pillaged by the
Danes. In 960 AD a
wooden bridge was built across the Medway.
Medieval A small wooden church was erected at Strood in 1122, as a
chapel of ease in the parish of Frindsbury. Land was granted in 1160 to the Knights Templar by
King Henry II. The
Manor House was used as a Lodging House. In 1193, Strood became a parish. It was run by the
Grey Friars or
Franciscans of Newark Hospital, and had its own burial grounds. In 1291 there was an affray at Newark Hospital between the Monks of Strood and the locals from Frindsbury. In 1264
Simon de Montfort laid siege to
Rochester Castle from the Strood Side. In the action the wooden bridge was destroyed by fire. After Simon's death a heavy fine was levied on Strood because he had stayed there during the siege. The Strood Quay and Strood Wharf had been constructed by Bishop Gilbert de Glanvill with rents going to Newark Hospital. In 1293 the Rochester Wharf was in such disrepair that ships had to use the Strood Wharf, however as
Rochester Bridge was out of use, ferries had to be used to cross the river. In 1309, a harsh winter, Rochester Bridge was damaged by ice. In 1312 the Knight's Templar were suppressed and the Manor of Strood passed into private hands briefly before being passed on to the Abbess and Sisters Minorites of St. Clare of Denney in Cambridgeshire. In 1387 a stone bridge was built by
John de Cobham and
Robert Knolles. In 1460
Edward IV appointed a mayor of Rochester with jurisdiction over Strood river frontage and the houses there.
Early Modern Strood was owned by the Rochester Monastery from the 18th year of
Edward III's reign until the
Dissolution of the Monasteries under
Henry VIII, after which time as part of the Hundred of Sharnel (Shamwell) which included
Cobham, it was passed to George Brooke, Lord Cobham. His grandson Henry Brooke lost his estates to
James I in 1603 through a false charge of
treason, although he escaped with his life. The Temple Manor thereafter was granted to
Sir Robert Cecil, the
Earl of Salisbury (son of William, Lord Burleigh), who later became Lord Treasurer of England under
Queen Elizabeth, and married Elizabeth, sister of Henry, Lord Cobham. In 1554
Thomas Wyatt of
Allington on hearing that
Mary I intended to
marry a Catholic gathered an army with the
intention of marching on London. He took Rochester Castle and the bridge. According to Marsh there was to have been a battle at Strood, but the Queen's men, stationed on Strood Hill, deserted. However, Coulson records that Wyatt defeated the Duke of Norfolk and seized six cannon. Wyatt then marched on
Cooling Castle. The rebellion fizzled out, and Wyatt was executed, along with the captain of the deserters. The parish accounts begin on 12 August 1555. Following the accession and marriage of
Queen Mary (known as "Bloody" Mary) the country reconverted to Roman Catholicism and a considerable sum was spent re-converting Strood Church. However just nine years later in 1565 a further five-year period of refurbishment was required to convert the church back to Protestant usage following the accession of Queen
Elizabeth I. The parish registers start from this date. Possibly mindful of the changes, the churchwardens waited until 1574 before going to St. Dunstan's Fair in Rochester to sell "a cross and other relics of Roman superstition, formerly used in Strood Church". In the 1672 the parishes of St. Margaret's, Rochester and St Nicholas, Strood jointly applied to the
Court of Chancery for a ruling which was decided in their favour to extend the area over which
Watts charities could operate. The parish of Strood utilised some of the money to provide a workhouse for the poor. Above the door was set a stone slab which is now displayed in the Guildhall Museum, Rochester. The text is reproduced alongside. In 1769, under authority of the Paving, Etc., of London Act 1768, a
tollgate was erected at The Angel Inn on North Street in Strood, to pay for improvements to the parish. Hasted, in his study of Kent (1778–99), said Strood's inhabitants were chiefly seafaring or fishermen, and engaged in dredging oysters. (the former workhouse) from St Nicholas churchyard, looking towards Gun Lane in Strood
Nineteenth century Between 1804 and 1824 the Thames and Medway canal was dug. See below, under
Transport for more details.
Twentieth century The ancient City of Rochester merged with the borough of
Chatham and part of the
Strood Rural District in 1974 to form the Borough of Medway, later renamed the City of Rochester-upon-Medway. In 1998 another merger with the rest of the Medway Towns created the Medway
unitary authority. ==Geography==