Kingsheadwye

Walking to Hubert Fountain from The King’s Head — 4.2-Mile Circular via Non Civil Parish

Hubert Fountain — a Grade II* listed building 4.2 miles from The King's Head, Wye.

straighten4.2 miles timer168 min round trip
Kent Downs landscape above Wye

Hubert Fountain is a Grade II* in Non Civil Parish, 4.2 miles from The King’s Head. Historic England listed it in 1976.

Walking to Hubert Fountain — 4.2 miles from Wye

straighten

Distance
4.2 miles

timer

Duration
2 hr 48 min

terrain

Terrain
Footpath, chalk downland

trending_up

Elevation
140m ascent

directions_walk

Difficulty
Challenging

Start & finish: The King’s Head, Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA

Elevation profile
0 mi 2.1 mi 4.2 mi Peak ~140m
Surface: Footpath, chalk downland
Landscape zone: Crundale and the Western Ridge

Rated Challenging at 4.2 miles with about 140m of ascent. Allow around 168 minutes at a steady 3 mph pace; add 15–20 minutes for photographs at the building and a pause at a viewpoint.

Why Hubert Fountain is Grade II* listed — the 1976 designation

The building or site itself may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.

Grade:
II*
Listed:
1976
Last amended:
2016
Parish:
Non Civil Parish
District:
Ashford
Statutory address:
Jemmett Road, Victoria Park, Ashford, Kent, Tn23 4Dq
NHLE entry:
1071019 ↗

Fountain of c 1862 in the Ecole des Beaux Arts style, cast in France by the foundry of M. Barbezat and Co. at the Val d’Osne and exhibited at the International Exhibition (or Great London Exposition) of 1862 as the Hubert Fountain. It was installed in Victoria Park in July 1912 and the outer pool walls are of that date. MATERIALS: painted cast iron sculpture set in a pool with concrete walls. PLAN: a three tier fountain with a circular base. DESCRIPTION: a monumental fountain of cast iron, with painted figures. Its topmost finial emerges from a vase and the wide circular basin below is supported by four putti representing different continents standing on a moulded plinth decorated by the masks of ancients and bearing decorative panels with the names of continents. The plinth supports four flat circular bowls supported by two seated atlantes and two seated caryatids with attendant cupids with conches and cornucopia. At their sides quadrant-shaped pierced bowls shoot jets and, from the circular base below, grotesque mask waterspouts under acroteria eject water into the basin. The basin is of 1912, circular, and of concrete. A bronze plaque on the wall of the basin records ‘ON JULY 23 1912./THIS FOUNTAIN WAS PRESENTED TO/THE TOWN OF ASHFORD BY MR. GEO. HARPER/25 YEARS A MEMBER OF THE URBAN DISTRICT COUNCIL. CHAIRMAN 1907-10./IT WAS SHOWN AT THE EXHIBITION OF 1862 AS THE HUBERT FOUNTAIN’.

Listing metadata — from the National Heritage List for England
NHLE entry number:
1071019
Heritage Category / Grade:
Listed Building, Grade II*
First listed:
1976
Last amended:
2016
Capture scale:
1:1250
Grid reference (NGR):
TR0053442259
BNG Easting / Northing:
600,534 E / 142,259 N
Coordinates (WGS84):
51.144464°N, 0.865582°E
Parish:
Non Civil Parish
District:
Ashford
Kent Downs landscape zone:
Crundale and the Western Ridge
Distance to North Downs Way:
3.45 miles
Distance from The King's Head:
4.21 miles
Walk duration (round trip):
168 minutes
Elevation gain:
140 m
Difficulty rating:
Challenging

Listing history of Hubert Fountain

  1. 1976 · first listed

    Added to the National Heritage List for England at Grade II*.

  2. 2016 · designation amended

    The listing record was revised 40 years after the original designation.

Other Grade II* walks in Non Civil Parish

The landscape around Hubert Fountain — Crundale and the Western Ridge

West of Wye the dip-slope climbs towards Crundale, Godmersham and the high ground above the Great Stour. This is wooded downland — pockets of beech hanger and coppice hazel survive on the steeper flanks, interleaved with sheep pasture and long-fallow headlands managed for wild flowers. Country houses of the 17th and 18th centuries (Godmersham Park among them) sit in mature parkland where the hedgerow oaks are old enough to have been saplings when the house was built. Footpaths here are sunken lanes and green roads — often the North Downs Way itself, which threads along the scarp-top before dropping back towards the village.

Plan your visit

Every walk on this site starts and finishes at The King’s Head — Bridge Street, Wye, TN25 5EA.

Reserve a Table

Frequently asked about Hubert Fountain

How far is Hubert Fountain from The King's Head?
4.2 miles one-way, roughly 4.2 miles round-trip. Expect about 168 minutes on foot at a steady pace.
When did Historic England last amend the Hubert Fountain listing?
It was first listed in 1976 and the designation was amended in 2016 — 40 years later.
Which other Grade II* walks are in Non Civil Parish?
See the table above under “Other Grade II* walks in Non Civil Parish” — they are listed by distance from the pub.

Heritage data © Historic England NHLE · Trail & landscape data © Natural England (Open Government Licence) · Pub locations published under the Open Government Licence.