This park is situated on the site of a former spoil tip of the former Betteshanger Colliery, one of the largest collieries in Kent. The colliery opened in 1924–30 and closed in 1989. The spoil tip was located to the north east of the former colliery. The original area was known as Foulmead Marsh and the community chose the name of the new park to be Fowlmead. In May 2015, it was announced that the Hadlow Group had acquired Fowlmead and would be rebranding the park as Betteshanger Country Park, as part of the wider Betteshanger Sustainable Parks regeneration program. As of 2017 the organisation's website gives the name of the park as Betteshanger Park. Fowlmead Country Park and Nature Reserve was initially developed under the management of the South East England Development Agency with £18.8 million funding from English Partnerships, as part of the National Coalfields Programme. It was opened in May 2007 by Sir David Bellamy, in association with Sport England. The existing visitor centre was part-funded by SEEDA and Sport England. The surface material of the entire park was mixed with recycled green waste and fertiliser to create a rich topsoil and 130,000 shrubs and trees were planted. There is already an abundance of wildlife, which can be seen within the park's developing natural habitat, including a lake.
Activities
The park provides many activities including walking, cycling, fossil hunting, duathlon, orienteering and geocaching. Families can also enjoy the play area. The park has a smooth 3.5 km tarmac road race/time trial cycle circuit which can be divided into a 1.5 km circuit, a two kilometre circuit or the full 3.5 km circuit. The circuit is six metres wide and eight metres wide on its finishing straight. British Cycling, the UK's national governing body for cycling have described the circuit as among the best outdoor tarmac road cycle circuits in the UK. There is also a long mountain biking track around the park. Various cycling and running competitions are held at the Country Park including a Guinness Book of Records record attempt twenty-four-hour Mobility Scooter Endurance Challenge by the Red Wheelies. They completed 77 laps, smashing the previous record of 88 miles.
Waiting Miner Campaign
The park also became a major battle scene over a statue of a miner. The "Waiting Miner" statue was commissioned by the Central Electricity Generating Board and was moved from its original site when the coal-fired plant was decommissioned. Each of Kent’s mining communities, each had their own recommendations for a new site for the statue, but these were ignored and eventually it was resited outside the National Coal Board’s office in Dover, which is where it has remained ever since. The Coal Board Offices eventually closed down in 1987, leaving the Statue isolated on the seafront in Dover. In 2001, Dover District Council launched the Coalfields Heritage Initiative Kent project. Which was to record and preserve the Mining Heritage of Kent. Which included the creation of the Miner's Way Trail In September 2006, the Move The Miner Campaign was started. The campaign committee then decided between Aylesham Village Square or on the A258 at the entrance to Betteshanger Park. The Country Park on the coal field spoil heap was chosen as the winner. The next stage was to obtain planning permission and persuade everyone to agree to the new site. On Thursday 29 July 2010 saw the statue move. The campaign group then were granted £5000 funding from The Coalfields Regeneration Trust for seating, information boards and the plinth around the statue. The park then held the Kent Miners Festival, which took place over the Sunday and Monday of the bank holiday weekend, 29–30 August 2010. The event was so popular that it has become an annual event with the venue changing from year-to-year. The 2015 Festival returned to Betteshanger.
Location
Situated from along the A258 between Deal and Sandwich.