Kent Trad update, May 2026

The Kent Trad website was launched in February 2025. At that point the focus was very much on singers whose songs had been noted down on paper (rather than recorded to tape); which in practice meant up to the early 1950s. The one real exception was that I’d included an article on Albert Beale, for the simple reason that it made no sense to exclude him, when I’d written articles on his father James and sister Alice, who had sung for Cecil Sharp in 1908 and 1913 respectively.

Since that time, I’ve added transcriptions of the half dozen songs which Peter Kennedy and Maud Karpeles recorded from Albert Beale in 1954. These were fairly simple to transcribe, but making transcriptions from sound recordings is a trickier and much lengthier process than transcribing songs noted down by earlier collectors such as Sharp and Francis Collinson (and also potentially quite subjective). So currently my focus is less on providing the musical notation of songs, and more on writing biographical articles of singers, from the 1950s onwards, of whom sound recordings were made, by collectors including Peter Kennedy, Ken Stubbs and Mike Yates. I’ve published articles on Charlie Bridger, who I was lucky enough to get to know in the 1980s, and Jack Goodban, from whom Mike Yates recorded a couple of songs in the 1970s. Jack Goodban had learned his songs from his father Tom. Building on research by George Frampton, I’ve been able to write short articles on some of Tom’s contemporaries who sang in rural pubs near Dover before the Second World War.

Many of the singers recorded in Kent in the second half of the twentieth century were travellers, and there are now articles on some of the more prominent of these singers. By far the longest article on the website covers the Romany Gypsy siblings Minty, Levy and Jasper Smith. Their life stories were very much intertwined, so they are all covered on the same web page. The length of this article is explained largely by the variety of sources available – not least a really informative interview with Jasper Smith made by John Brune in the mid-1960s. Also, the Smiths crop up very frequently in local newspaper reports. Most of those reports cover their appearances in court, and I’ve included lengthy extracts from many of them. Some readers will find this unnecessarily repetitious, but I found that reading through these accounts of travellers being summonsed over and over again for camping on the highway and/or causing an obstruction (Levy seems to have been up in court on an almost monthly basis in 1967) really brought home to me the extent to which they were targeted by the authorities – at a time when, increasingly, they had nowhere else to go.

Finally, you’ll find articles on the wonderful Gypsy singer Phoebe Smith, and her brother Charlie Scamp. Phoebe was recorded at her post-war home in Suffolk, but she had been born in Faversham, and belonged to the very large Scamp family of travellers, based predominantly in East Kent. Although we have no recordings of their songs, I’ve also provided information on other members of Phoebe and Charlie’s family – the uncles from whom Phoebe learned songs, and others of her own generation who are known to have been singers.

Needless to say, if you spot any errors, or can provide me with additional information about any of the singers covered, please do get in touch via info@kenttrad.org

Andy Turner
19th May 2026

Cecil Sharp in Kent

Here’s a recording of a presentation I gave recently at the July meeting of the Traditional Song Forum, Cecil Sharp in Kent.

This covers all of the collecting carried out by Cecil Sharp in the county

  • July 1908 – children’s singing games, Trosley
  • September 1908 – song collecting in Hamstreet, Ruckinge and Warehorne
  • October 1911 – Christmas carols, Hamstreet
  • September 1914 – sea shanties, Belvedere

but with a particular focus on his collecting in the Hamstreet area.

As a postscript, I look at the version of ‘Polly Vaughan’ (Roud 166) which he didn’t actually collect in Kent, but which had been learned from an old man at Homestall near Doddington.

Kent Trad presentation at the Traditional Song Forum

Here’s a recording of a presentation made by Andy Turner to the June meeting of the Traditional Song Forum (TSF). The presentation covers the background to the Kent Trad project, what you can find in the various sections of the site, and what’s going to be coming in future.

Kent Trad is now launched

It is intended that the Kent Trad website will become a comprehensive resource for songs and singers from Kent. It has been inspired by similar sites for other counties, such as GlosTrad and Sussex Traditions. Far fewer songs have been collected in Kent than in either Gloucestershire or Sussex – in particular, the early 20th century collectors such as Cecil Sharp spent far less time in Kent than some other counties – so the chances are that the songs we do know about are but a very small sample of the songs that were sung in the past by Kentish people. Nevertheless, it’s worth celebrating the songs which have been collected, and making them more widely available. Some of the songs presented on this website may be of largely historical interest, but there’s plenty more that are well worth singing and which, if revived, can bring joy to singers and listeners alike. This isn’t a hypothetical thought – I’m speaking from personal experience, having enjoyed singing folk songs from Kent for many years.

Phase 1 of the Kent Trad project, which is very nearly completed, is concerned with songs noted on paper, rather than recorded onto tape. This covers the collecting activities of the Rev. Philip Parsons, who collected ballads from his Wye parishioners in the 1760s; through to Ralph Vaughan Williams, Cecil Sharp and their contemporaries (who generally seem to have made one collecting trip to Kent and never returned!); through to Francis Collinson of BBC ‘Country Magazine’ fame, who noted down a considerable number of songs in Kent in the 1940s and early 1950s. The site provides a transcription of each song, with biographical details of the singers.

Inevitably, such a project is never actually finished – new information is constantly coming to light. Just today, I’ve got hold of the latest version of the Roud Index, and found a reference to a song and a singer of whom I was previously completely unaware, so details of those will be added to the website in the coming days.

I welcome any information that can be shed on the singers featured on this site. Maybe you’re a descendent of one of the singers, and have anecdotal information about their life, or even some old photographs? If so, do please get in touch with me, via info@kenttrad.org

I’ve received help and advice from a number of people in the course of setting up this website, and over the previous 40 years of taking an interest in songs collected in my native county. I’ve listed some of these people under Thanks and Acknowledgments but I must make a special mention of George Frampton, who has been incredibly generous in sharing the fruits of his research over many years, and even this week was happy to double check his notes, and online genealogical sources, in response to a few queries I sent his way. Of course, any errors on the website are entirely my responsibility – do please get in touch if you spot any.

I hope you enjoy using this site. With any luck you’ll discover at least one thing you didn’t know before!

Andy Turner
1st February 2025

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