Rainham
Rainham is a part of the Medway Towns urban sprawl its population typically consisted of under Gillingham in the unitary authority of Medway, in South East England, and part of the ritualistic region of Kent. Historically, Rainham was a separate town up until, in 1928, it was included in the Metropolitan Borough of Gillingham, which was originally produced in 1903 and was grouped right into the latter's built-up area in analysis of the 2011 census by the Office for National Statistics. It entered into the Medway authority when Gillingham was incorporated with the other towns to develop Medway Unitary Authority in 1998. It has its very own recreation as well as retail center and unlike Gillingham has a conventional area extensively to the south as well as which since the late 20th century is greatly property real estate. Rainham was initially a linear settlement along the main road. The population in 1801 was 422; two centuries later on it is more than 6 thousand. Part of the reason for this huge development can be credited to the railway. When the train was available in 1858 it brought a practically instant increase in the size of the village; when the Chatham Main Line was electrified in 1959, as with all the places served by it, town development began again. Among the outcomes was the building of Parkwood estate.