The tusk and teeth of a mammoth were excavated in Peters Pit and displayed in
Rochester Guildhall Museum. In 1982, the skull of an 18-year-old teenager was excavated, dated as 1500 BC. Oral history suggests that the village was occupied when the Romans arrived, and that they constructed a ford across the Medway. The site of a temple dedicated to Mithras has been excavated and occurs on old maps. On the Wouldham Marshes is
Starkey House built in 1483: a now restored
Grade I listed medieval manor house called Starkey Castle. In the churchyard, is the grave of
Walter Burke, who was present on board at the
battle of Trafalgar and the man who held
Nelson in his arms as he died. Wouldham primary school celebrates this connection in several ways, with its four sports teams being named after ships at the Battle of Trafalgar (
Victory, ,
Sovereign, ), students being assigned into a house named after one of four famous figures at Trafalgar, and by holding an annual event at the nearby church to commemorate Walter Burke. A
narwhal was discovered in the 1940s washed up on the bank of the river, and is documented in the
Natural History Museum, London. Until 1963 there was a
ferry crossing over the Medway to
Halling on the opposite bank. File:Wouldham5520.JPG| File:Wouldham5526.JPG| File:Wouldham5525.JPG| File:Starkey Castle from Footpath - geograph.org.uk - 1062154.jpg| ==Industry==