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Composite Front Doors Milstead

Professional Composite Front Installers

Transform The Entrance To Your Home With One Of Kentish Door’s Composite Front Doors

Kentish Doors are highly skilled Composite Front Doors installers based in Kent. We have an incredible range of entrance door colours, styles and features to enable you to create the perfect door for your home. Our doors are made to last, combining strong, state of the art energy efficient materials which reduce drafts, outside noise and also increase your thermal efficiency. All doors come with complex security systems, providing your home with added security which can lead to lower home insurance costs. Our doors are made and fitted to the highest standards. Using our free online composite door designer tool, you can design your door yourself. If you would like assistance creating the door, or have some questions we are happy to help you. To provide you with a quote we would require a site visit to ensure all measurements are correct before fabrication of the door begins. To arrange a free measure and quote please call us today on 01634 321202 or message us via our online contact form.
front doors kent
composite front doors kent

Choose your door from our gallery & design your perfect door online

 

Click below to design your perfect door online. Choose from hundreds of options to design your door in minutes.

Suited Hardware & Furniture

We offer a stunning range of suited furniture to match any home, from traditional hardware to contemporary stainless steel options.

13 Stunning Door Colours

Availble internal and external, we have colours to suit any home, be it traditional, contemporary or modern. We have something for everyone.

Locking and security

You can have any locking system with any furniture suite – so it’s even easier to get the lock and security you need with the furniture you want.

Glass and Glazing options

Our unique and patented glazing cassette can be removed from the inside to let you simply change the glass and reuse the cassette.

Milstead is a village and civil parish in the borough of Swale in Kent, England. It is surrounded by the villages of Frinsted, Wichling, Doddington and Lynsted in Kent, England. It is the southernmost parish in the Sittingbourne area, it is approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) from Sittingbourne town centre. Just past the M2 motorway.

According to Edward Hasted in 1798, the parish is but small, containing about 800 acres (320 ha) of land, of which about 50 acres (20 ha) acres are woodland. He also refers to it as ‘Milsted’.

The parish was under the dominion of the Manor of Milton Regis in the reign of Edward I.

In 1870-72, according to John Marius Wilson’s Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales, the parish comprised 1,216 acres (492 ha). Its population was 245 and it had 43 houses.

Within the village is the Grade II listed Church of St Mary and the Holy Cross, within the diocese of Canterbury, and deanery of Sittingborne.

It also contains around 80 houses and cottages of which nine are listed buildings. Including ‘Milstead Manor’,

On 27 September 1940 at 12.25pm, during the Battle of Britain, a Hawker Hurricane, from 242 Squadron RAF, piloted by Flying Officer Michael Homer, crashed into a thatch cottage in the village. The aircraft had been badly damaged by a Messerschmitt Bf 109. Flying Officer Homer flew with 242 Squadron based at RAF Duxford, commanded by Douglas Bader. His body was taken from the wreck and buried in Godlingston Cemetery, Swanage, Dorset. His family planted a tree and mounted a plaque in his memory at the crash site. A memorial near Simel House, Minching Wood, which was unveiled in November 2007, is included as part of annual Remembrance Day services in the village.

The village has a reasonably large village hall which holds many clubs such as woodturning, yoga and even a monthly market. The village also has a village pub (the Red Lion) and also a village school ‘Milstead and Frinsted Church of England Primary School’. Once the village had a small post office but has been a house for many years now.

Media related to Milstead at Wikimedia Commons