Articles of interest in Kemsing
A Commissioners' church is an Anglican church in the United Kingdom built with money voted by Parliament as a result of the Church Building Act 1818, and subsequent related Acts. Such churches have been given a number of titles, including "Commissio…
Lewisham Road railway station in London was built by the London, Chatham and Dover Railway on the Greenwich Park branch. It opened in 1871. It was very close to the South Eastern Railway's St Johns station. Although the line was intended to rival So…
Ladywell Arena is a multiple use sports arena in Ladywell in Lewisham, London, England and run on their behalf by Fusion Lifestyle. It is run on the same frame as the leisure centres in Lewisham. The arena is located on the edge of Ladywell Fields. …
Kit's Coty is a small village on the slopes of Blue Bell Hill between Maidstone and Rochester in the English county of Kent.
Kirkdale School (1964 - 1980s) was a small, independent free school located at 186 Kirkdale, Sydenham, London, England.
Kingswood House, formerly known as King's Coppice, is a Victorian mansion in West Dulwich at the southerly tip of the London Borough of Southwark, England. It is a Grade II listed building. In 1811 William Vizard (the solicitor to Queen Caroline in …
Keston Windmill is a grade I listed Post mill in Keston, formerly in Kent and now in the London Borough of Bromley.
Kelsey Park is a public park in Beckenham in the borough of Bromley, Greater London.
The John Brunt V.C. is a public house in Paddock Wood in Kent. Originally named The Kent Arms, on 3 September 1947 the pub was formally renamed John Brunt V.C. in honour of an English soldier, John Brunt, who won the Victoria Cross in the Second Wor…
Honor Oak railway station was a station opened in December 1865 in Honor Oak, London by the London, Chatham and Dover Railway on the Crystal Palace and South London Junction Railway. The line was built to carry passengers to The Crystal Palace after…
Holcombe Manor was built in 1887 as a house by the first mayor of Chatham, George Winch (September 20, 1842 – February 22, 1914), for him and his wife Mary Clarke Bluette to live in. Mary was brought up in the village of Holcombe Rogus, Devon. Winch…
Hadlow Cricket Club was one of the early English cricket clubs, formed in the early to mid eighteenth century.
HVDC Kingsnorth was a high-voltage direct-current (HVDC) transmission system connecting Kingsnorth in Kent to two sites in London. It was at one time the only application of the technology of high voltage direct current transmission for the supply o…
Great Culverden Park is a small, 9½ acre, woodland, about half a mile from the centre of Tunbridge Wells in Kent, England west of Mount Ephraim and bounded entirely by houses along Royal Chase, Knightsbridge Close, Culverden Park Road and Mt.Ephraim.
Gravesend West was a railway station on the Gravesend West Line which served Gravesend in Kent. It opened in 1886 and was, for some time, a regular destination for boat trains from London which linked with steamers on the station's pier to ferry pas…
Goudhurst is a closed railway station on the closed Hawkhurst Branch in Kent, England.
Gallions railway station adjoined the River Thames by Gallions Reach, in Beckton, east London, on the Eastern Counties and Thames Junction Railway.
The Free Watermen and Lightermen’s Almshouses (generally known as the Royal Watermen's Almshouses) on Beckenham Road / Penge High Street, Penge, Kent, were built in 1840–1841 to designs by the architect George Porter by the Company of Watermen and L…
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