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St Martin's Black Mill, a smock mill that was marked on the 1819-43 Ordnance Survey map and demolished in 1868. The sails and major machinery being installed in New Mill, Blean. [4] The mill had a three storey smock on a two storey base, with a stage at first floor level. There was one pair of shuttered sails and one pair of common sails.
Hackington, Canterbury: Almshouse: 1570: 3 December 1949: 1374126: Manwood's Hospital: Number 77 (part of the Rose and Crown Inn), Nos 78 & 79, St Dunstans St Canterbury: House: 16th century: 3 December 1949
At the age of nine Wright began work as a "piecer" in a local cotton mill. [4] At the age of 15 he became a spinner and rose to become manager of the mill in 1830. [1] In 1841 he became manager of Ormerod and Hardcastles Mill in Bolton. [5] In 1845 he established his own cotton-spinning business in Tyldesley in partnership with Henry Barton.
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A wedding chapel is a building or room, other than a legal court, where marriages are regularly performed. Usually wedding chapels are for-profit venues to host weddings in resort areas to encourage hotel room stays, catering and gambling by the guests. The buildings are generally religiously themed and imitate church architecture. In some ...
St Martins Mill is a four-storey brick tower mill, rendered with cement. It had a Kentish-style cap, four single patent sails and was winded by a fantail. [4] There was a stage at first-floor level. [3] The windshaft is of cast iron. The brake wheel and wallower survive, as does the drive to the sack hoist. The mill drove three pairs of stones. [2]
Canterbury Heritage Museum; Canterbury West railway station; Old Synagogue, Canterbury; Carlton Cinema, Westgate-on-Sea; Charing Windmill; Chatham and Clarendon Grammar School; Chatham House Grammar School; Chatham Town Hall; Chislet Windmill; Clock Tower, Herne Bay; College of All Saints, Maidstone; Corn Exchange, Rochester; Corn Exchange ...
Blackfriars, Canterbury was a priory of the Dominican Order in Kent, England. Founded in 1237 it lay either side of the River Stour in the west of the city, adjacent to where the Marlowe Theatre now stands.