Westgate-on-sea
Westgate-on-Sea is a seaside town as well as civil parish in northeast Kent, England, with a population of 6,996 at the 2011 Census. It is within the Thanet local government district and surrounds the larger seaside resort of Margate. Its 2 sandy coastlines have stayed a popular visitor attraction given that the town's development in the 1860s from a little farming area. The town is remarkable for once being the area of a Royal Naval Air Service seaplane base at St Mildred's Bay, which defended the Thames Estuary coastal communities throughout World War I. The town is the topic of Sir John Betjeman's poem, Westgate-on-Sea. Residents have consisted of the 19th-century doctor Sir Erasmus Wilson and also former Archbishop of Canterbury William Temple. The musician Sir William Quiller Orchardson repainted numerous of his best-known pictures while living in Westgate-on-Sea. The British author Arnold Cooke went to the town's Streete Preparatory School in the very early 20th century, and also Eton headmaster Anthony Chenevix-Trench spent the earliest few years of his education and learning in the town.