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St Lawrence Mill, a smock mill marked on the 1819-43 Ordnance Survey map that was burnt down on 15 May 1873. [4] The millers were Richard Fuller in 1845 and J Chantler in 1862. [ 6 ] This mill stood on or near the site of Canterbury's earliest recorded windmill, which stood at Little Foxmould in the Ridingate area.
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The Deanery Chartham: House: 17th century: 30 January 1967: 1085676: Upload Photo: Tudor House Chislet: House: c.1500: 29 September 1952: 1084381: Upload Photo: The Town Hall and The Crane House, with the stocks outside the Town Hall
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 ...
H P Barton and Caleb Wright built the first mill on the west side of Union Street on a field known as Barnfield in 1851. The mill had 20,000 spindles. By 1866 Wright had new partners, Peter and Charles Eckersley, and the partnership built the second mill. By 1870 Caleb Wright and Company had built a third spinning mill and three more mills were ...
The Church of St Martin is an ancient Church of England parish church in Canterbury, England, situated slightly beyond the city centre.It is recognised as the oldest church building in Britain still in use as a church, [2] and the oldest existing parish church in the English-speaking world, although Roman and Celtic churches had existed for centuries.
Canterbury St Martin's Mill: Tower: 1817: Working until 1890, house converted in 1920. Canterbury St Martin's Black Mill: Smock: 1816 [61] Demolished 1868, [62] Canterbury St Lawrence Mill Smock: 1843 Stood 5 furlongs (1,000 m) south south west of St. Martin's Church, Canterbury. Burnt down 15 May 1873. [62] Canterbury Dane John Mill Post: 1731
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.