The Kent coastal town of Folkestone lies at the foot of the North Downs,
with France visible across the Strait of Dover. The town developed
around the harbour built in the nineteenth century, both as a resort and
a port for cross-Channel ferries. Hotels, theatres and a pier were built
in this era to attract fashionable visitors, but in the twentieth
century a wider range of incomers settled in the town. Folkestone was at
the front line in two world wars and today its links with London and
Continental Europe, via the M20 motorway, fast rail links and the
Channel Tunnel, have seen further massive changes in the town. Lost
Folkestone presents a portrait of a town from Victorian times to recent
decades that has radically changed or disappeared today, showing not
only the industries and buildings that have gone but also the people and
street scenes, many popular places of entertainment and much more. This
fascinating photographic history of lost Folkestone will appeal to all
those who live in the town or know it well, as well as those who
remember it from previous decades.