Articles of interest in Rye
Rye Particular Baptist Chapel is a former Strict Baptist place of worship in Rye, an ancient hilltop town in Rother, one of six local government districts in the English county of East Sussex. Built in the 18th century on the site of a decaying Quak…
Robertsbridge Abbey was a Cistercian abbey in Robertsbridge, East Sussex, England.
Ringle Crouch Green Mill is a smock mill in Sandhurst, Kent, England that was demolished to base level in 1945, and now has a new smock tower built on it as residential accommodation and an electricity generator.
Newtown is a suburb of Ashford in Kent, South East England, it was originally built by the South Eastern Railway company, adjacent to the railway station, and includes extensive workshops known as Ashford railway works, High Speed 1 runs past the ar…
Mountfield Halt (TQ 746 197 (50°57′01″N0°29′12″E) was situated on the Hastings Line between Robertsbridge and Battle. It opened in 1923 and was closed on 6 October 1969. Both platforms were built of sleepers.
Golden Sands Halt railway station was a private station on the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway in St Mary's Bay, Kent, England.
Friary of the Sack, Rye was a friary in East Sussex, England.
East Sussex Cricket Ground was a cricket ground in St Leonards-on-Sea, Sussex. The ground was located at the site of a racecourse which had moved after 1826 from the Bulverhythe Salts.
Dungeness was a railway station which served the Dungeness headland in Kent, England. Opened in 1883 by The Lydd Railway Company, it closed to passengers in 1937. Part of the line which served the station is converted to the main access road as a me…
Dixter Halt was a short-lived halt station on the Kent and East Sussex Railway on an unmade road leading to Great Dixter house near Northiam in East Sussex.
Whitewater Dyke is a tributary of the Great Stour river, joining with the East Stour and then the Great Stour at Pledge’s Mill at the bottom of East Hill in Ashford, Kent, England.
Swifts Park was a cricket ground in Cranbrook, Kent. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1862, when Kent played pre-county club Yorkshire in the grounds first first-class match.
Sedlescombe organic vineyard is an award winning English vineyard located in Robertsbridge, just outside Sedlescombe in East Sussex.
Ruckinge Dyke is a tributary of the Great Stour, joining with the East Stour and then the Great Stour at Pledge’s Mill at the bottom of East Hill in Ashford, Kent, England.
RAF Kingsnorth may refer to one of two separate military airfields in Kent, which were located at two different places in Kent and operated in two distinct periods.
Maplehurst Wood is a 31.6 hectare (78.08 acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest, located in Westfield, East Sussex, England.
Hoad's Wood is an 78 hectare area of woodland in Kent, England, close to Great Chart (map ref. TQ9542), which has been designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest by Natural England. The wood has held this status since 1951. English Nature (…
Hastings Priory was a medieval Augustinian monastic house in Hastings, East Sussex, England.
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