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The 18th-century houses at 180-188 Rectory Lane, Foots Cray The Seven Stars, a Grade II-listed pub in Foots Cray, part of which is 16th-century William Walsingham (died 1534), of Foots Cray, second son of James Walsingham, lord of the Manor of Scadbury in Chislehurst , Kent, was the father of Sir Francis Walsingham (c.1532-1590), Principal ...
34, North Cray Road: 34 and 36, Bexley High Street Bexley: Houses: 1787: 17 December 1980: 1064246: 34 and 36, Bexley High Street: 56–62, Bexley Lane Crayford: House: 18th century: 17 December 1980: 1359380: 56–62, Bexley Lane: 57 and 59, Bexley High Street, Bexley Bexley: Houses: Late 17th or early 18th century: 1 October 1953: 1359377
Foots Cray Garden Open Space is a 0.12-hectare (0.30-acre) paved public area on Foots Cray High Street. [59] Foots Cray Recreation Ground is a 3.4-hectare (8.4-acre) recreation ground situated to the west of Cray Road, south of Foots Cray.
Foots Cray Place was one of the four country houses built in England in the 18th century to a design inspired by Palladio's Villa Capra near Vicenza. Built in 1754 near Sidcup , Kent , Foots Cray Place was demolished in 1950 after a fire in 1949. [ 1 ]
Sidcup High Street is on the A211, following in length the old London – Maidstone – Hythe road. The A211 starts just at the eastern end of Eltham High Street, running through New Eltham, then alongside the A20 Sidcup By-pass before ending at Foots Cray, where the B2173 continues towards Swanley along the former A20 road.
Barnes Cray and North Cray were two hamlets in the Cray Valley; and Belvedere was the location of a medieval monastery. The map of Bexley [15] shows that a large proportion of its area comprises suburbia. Some named places, like Albany Park and Barnehurst, are names given to developments engendered by the building of the railways.
Foots Cray Meadows is an area of parkland and woodland 97 hectares (240 acres) in size, within the London Borough of Bexley, England. [1] It borders the suburbs of Albany Park , Sidcup , Foots Cray , North Cray and Ruxley .
The River Cray was the largest river in the hundred of Ruxley flowing northward through six of its parishes, four of which are named after it. The River Cray rises in Orpington then flows through St Mary Cray, St Paul's Cray, North Cray, Foots Cray, and Bexley before crossing the northern border and Watling Street into the Hundred of Lesnes.