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Sheerness is a town on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent, England. It is the largest town on the island with a population of about 20,000.
History
Sheerness was the focus of an attack by the Dutch navy in June 1667, when 72 hostile ships compelled the little "sandspit fort", to surrender and landed a force which for a short while occupied the town. Pepys at Gravesend remarked in his diary "we do plainly at this time hear the guns play" and in fear departed to Brampton in Huntingdonshire.
Sheerness was also the site of a Royal Dockyard which, although not as large as those at Chatham and Deptford was still of some importance in Tudor and Stuart England.
Railways
In 1860 the town was linked to mainland by a branch railway line from Sittingbourne; at the same time the Kingsferry bridge gave better communications with the island, succeeding the ferries which had at one time been the only connection. The line opened on 19 Jul 1860. A branch to a pier a Queenborough served a steamer service to Flushing in Holland for many years. The Sheppey Light Railway, opened in 1901, also provided services to the opposite end of the island from the town, opened in 1901, it is now closed completely.
Sheerness Docks
The dockyard - now Sheerness Docks - is a significant feature of the Isle of Sheppey's economy, which includes the extensive export-import of cars, and a major steel works, with extensive railway fixtures.
Population
Population of Sheerness and Minster :
- 1801 5,600
- 1861 16,000
- 1921 22,200
- 1961 21,600 (the closure of the Dockyard accounts for the fall in population)
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