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| 1 |
 | 'Lark Rise', Juniper Hill Believed to be Flora's birthplace. Sold in 2004 for £350,000.
Source: Daily Telegraph 8/4/2004 |
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| 2 |
 | 'Logan Brae', Victoria Road, Bellevue Hill, Woollahra, New South Wales, Australia Showing the front of the house and tennis court |
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| 3 |
 | 'Logan Brae', Victoria Road, Bellevue Hill, Woollahra, New South Wales, Australia Loganbrae (2nd house in) showing terracing by Council |
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| 4 |
 | 114 Malmesbury Road, Bow, London Believed to be Leonard Frederick Ennever (on table) with his father. Person to left is unidentified. |
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| 5 |
 | 19 Norfolk Road, Brighton, Sussex |
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| 6 |
 | 33 Lower Fort Street, Millers Point, Sydney, NSW |
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| 7 |
 | 41 Hollywood Way, Woodford Green, Essex |
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| 8 |
 | 413 1/2 S Walnut St, Appleton, Wisconsin, USA |
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| 9 |
 | 51 The Charter Road, Woodford Green, Essex The garden before its re-design c1955 (with Jax). |
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| 10 |
 | 91 Fairfoot Road, Bromley St Leonard, Middlesex On the final day it was occupied before being demolished. |
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| 11 |
 | Abney Park Cemetery |
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| 12 |
 | Abney Park Cemetery |
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| 13 |
 | Abney Park Cemetery |
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| 14 |
 | Agra Cantonment Cemetery, Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India |
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| 15 |
 | Aldershot Military Cemetery, Aldershot, Hampshire |
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| 16 |
 | All Saints, East Hanningfield, Essex |
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| 17 |
 | All Saints, Tilney All Saints, Norfolk |
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| 18 |
 | Ardley, Oxfordshire The area in which Flora used to live and her grandfather used to sing. Juniper Hill is just north east of the map. © Gillian R. Warson 'Fact and Fiction' Flora Thompson and the 'Fewcott Part Book'. |
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| 19 |
 | Back Street (Now Upminster Road South) Back Street (Now Upminster Road South) facing towards what is now The Ship and O'Donnell & Hawthorne Estate Agents. On the right is the church wall. The building with people standing outside is the Rainham Blackmith - The Old Smithy. |
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| 20 |
 | Barrack Street, Norwich, Norfolk © http://www.the-plunketts.freeserve.co.uk/ |
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| 21 |
 | Bell Inn, Rainham |
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| 22 |
 | Bertenacre Military Cemetery, Flêtre, France Courtesy www.cwgc.org |
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| 23 |
 | Buck's Row, Whitechapel Buck's Row, now called Durward Street, was the scene of what is generally accepted as the first murder committed by Jack the Ripper. Buck's Row is a small thoroughfare leading in an East to West direction in the Eastern section of Whitechapel, not far South from Bethnal Green. |
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| 24 |
 | BULLY-GRENAY COMMUNAL CEMETERY, BRITISH EXTENSION |
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| 25 |
 | Cassino War Cemetery |
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| 26 |
 | Chingford Mount Cemetery, Chingford, London E4 |
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| 27 |
 | Chingford Mount Cemetery, Chingford, London E4 Copyright: Francis Frith |
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| 28 |
 | City of London Cemetery & Crematorium Source: http://www.newham.gov.uk/Services/ArchivesAndLocalHistory/AboutUs/ArchivesAndLocalHistoryCemetery.htm |
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| 29 |
 | Clenchwarton Church, Norfolk St Margaret, Clenchwarton
The villages out here run into each other; West Lynn straggles out, the houses get pleasanter and eventually become Clenchwarton.
Compared with some of the exotica around here, St Margaret is refreshingly conventional - pretty much all of a late 14th/early 15th century piece, and no transepts, separate tower or modern chancel in sight. A mixture of carstone and flint, the church is very attractive; and slightly ramshackle, as if made out of chocolate chip cookies.
This is another locked church with a keyholder, but they are so rarely in on Saturday mornings that I didn’t bother; you can see almost everything there is to see through the clear glass windows of the nave, and it is low church Victorian inside, the diametrical opposite of its West Lynn neighbour. Apart from the garish glass in the east window, it looked almost non-conformist in character.
I would have liked to have seen the memorial that Mortlock notes, to Francis Forster, 1741: When the terrible inundation Feb 16 1735 threatened the destruction of this whole Level, He with unshaken resolution, when all around him droop'd under their misery, opposed the Flood, repaired the broken ramparts, and sav'd the land from that fatal ruin with which the next assault must have overwhelm'd it.
Source: www.norfolkchurches.co.uk |
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| 30 |
 | Colney Hatch Asylum (also known as Middlesex County Pauper Lunatic Asylum) |
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| 31 |
 | Congham St Andrews Church, Norfolk |
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| 32 |
 | Coram Foundling Hospital, London Since demolished. |
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| 33 |
 | Coram Foundling Hospital, London Black and white photo of boys marching out of the London Foundling Hospital for the last time before the building was demolished and the children relocated to Redhill, Surrey c.1926.
Source: http://www.foundlingmuseum.org.uk/ |
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| 34 |
 | Cross Keys Inn, Chadwell Heath, Essex (recent) |
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| 35 |
 | Crouy British Cemetery, Crouy-sur-Somme, France Cemetery: CROUY BRITISH CEMETERY, CROUY-SUR-SOMME
Country: France
Locality: Somme
Visiting Information: Wheelchair access is possible with some difficulty. For further information regarding wheelchair access, please contact our enquiries department on telephone number 01628 634221.
Location Information: Crouy is a village about 16 kilometres north-west of Amiens on the west side of the River Somme, on the Amiens-Abbeville main road. The British Cemetery is a little south of the village on the west side of the road to Cavillon and there is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission signpost on the main road.
Historical Information: The cemetery was used between April and August 1918 for burials from the 5th and 47th Casualty Clearing Stations, which had come to the village because of the German advance. In October 1919, 42 graves were brought to Crouy from the small military cemetery at Riviere, a few kilometres away to the north-west. These burials had been made from the 12th, 53rd and 55th Casualty Clearing Stations at Longpre-les-Corps Saints between May and August 1918. They now occupy rows E and F of plot IV and part of row D, plot VI. The cemetery now contains 739 Commonwealth burials of the First World War, and a number of French and German war graves. The cemetery was designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield.
No. of Identified Casualties: 781
Source: CWGC |
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| 36 |
 | Enumerator's Schedule 1841 Records location of Bowyers Building as off or adjacent to Commercial Road, John Street and Grovers Place. |
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| 37 |
 | Etaples Military Cemetery Source www.cwgc.org |
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| 38 |
 | Feriköy Protestant Cemetery, Constantinople, Turkey Feriköy Protestant Cemetery, Constantinople, Turkey |
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| 39 |
 | Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery, Texas, USA |
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| 40 |
 | Golden Lion, Prittlewell 1999 |
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| 41 |
 | Ingestre Buildings, Ingestre Place, Westminster, Middlesex Architect: Charles Lee |
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| 42 |
 | Islington St John's Road site Map of site |
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| 43 |
 | Islington Workhouse |
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| 44 |
 | Kensal Green Cemetery, London |
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| 45 |
 | Kings Head Hill, Chingford |
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| 46 |
 | Kings Head Hill, Chingford Low Street is now known as Sewardstone Road |
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| 47 |
 | Kings Head, Rochford 1999 |
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| 48 |
 | Lighthouse Baptist Church Began in a house in the 1860's in a road called Blackthorn Street in Bow just 100 yards from the present building. There was something of a Baptist revival in London at that time - partly connected with the influential ministry of Charles Spurgeon. The group may have been connected with Bow Baptist Church which was founded in the 18th. c.. In the mid 19th. c. the building of the London docks and the explosion in the population of the City led to rapid development of Bow and Poplar and, presumably, many new fellowships formed. The first building - Blackthorn St. Mission - was built around 1869/70 but the congregation grew and the Lighthouse Building was built. This was done in 1895. It was planned to have a nautical style lighthouse on the stub tower but shortage of funds meant it was never built. |
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| 49 |
 | Loos British Cemetery Source www.cwgc.org |
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| 50 |
 | Millbank Prison, Westminster, Middlesex |
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| 51 |
 | Mitta Mitta township Showing the Laurel Hotel & the General Store. |
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| 52 |
 | Mitta Mitta valley A view up the Mitta Mitta valley from the lookout just past Eskdale. |
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| 53 |
 | Nunns-Ridgway House Built c1845. Robert Nunns built this home at approximately 128 Main Street. By 1874 the house was owned by Phebe Ridgway. The house, which stood between the present Setauket School and the Emma S. Clark Memorial Library, was torn down around 1954.
Source: The Setaukets, Old Field and Poquott by Three Village Historical Society |
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| 54 |
 | Oakland Farm Cottages, Chigwell, Essex |
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| 55 |
 | Parish Church of St George in the East St. George in the East is situated immediately east of Whitechapel, between Stepney, Shadwell and Wapping. The church of St. George in the East with its 160 ft tower, was built in 1714-29 to the designs of Nicholas Hawksmoor, and created a separate parish from Stepney. In 1886 the churchyard was landscaped as a public garden. The interior of the church was severely damaged by incendiaries in May 1941, a temporary building serving the parish until being rebuilt in 1960. |
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| 56 |
 | Parish Church of St George in the East St. George in the East is situated immediately east of Whitechapel, between Stepney, Shadwell and Wapping. The church of St. George in the East with its 160 ft tower, was built in 1714-29 to the designs of Nicholas Hawksmoor, and created a separate parish from Stepney. In 1886 the churchyard was landscaped as a public garden. The interior of the church was severely damaged by incendiaries in May 1941, a temporary building serving the parish until being rebuilt in 1960. |
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| 57 |
 | Parish Church of St George in the East St. George in the East is situated immediately east of Whitechapel, between Stepney, Shadwell and Wapping. The church of St. George in the East with its 160 ft tower, was built in 1714-29 to the designs of Nicholas Hawksmoor, and created a separate parish from Stepney. In 1886 the churchyard was landscaped as a public garden. The interior of the church was severely damaged by incendiaries in May 1941, a temporary building serving the parish until being rebuilt in 1960. |
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| 58 |
 | Parish Church, All Saints, Doddinghurst, Essex Courtesy www.essexchurches.com |
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| 59 |
 | Parish Church, All Saints, East Horndon, Essex Courtesy www.essexchurches.info |
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| 60 |
 | Parish Church, St Mary the Virgin, Walthamstow, Essex |
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| 61 |
 | Parish Church, St Mary the Virgin, Walthamstow, Essex |
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| 62 |
 | Parish Church, St Nicholas, Kelvedon Hatch, Essex Courtesy of www.essexchurches.info |
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| 63 |
 | Peckham House Lunatic Asylum Residents of Mott's establishments would have a meagre diet, for example dinner, on alternate days, at Peckham was officially 'meat, potatoes and bread' and 'soup and bread' ('The soup is made from the liquor in which the meat for the whole establishment is boiled the previous day, together with all the bones, with the addition of barley, pease, and green vegetables'). The seventh day was 'Irish stew and bread'. The quantity of meat used was not stated. But there were numerous complaints of short measure, poor quality, fraud and false accounting. In October 1829 an official inspection found 'the pea soup distributed to the paupers to be sour, of bad quality in other respects, nor do they conceive the bread which they saw given with it was in sufficient quantity'. In 1830 the kitchen was 'extremely dirty ' wholly insufficient in size ' the persons employed in it ' slovenly and the utensils bad.'
Source: www.vauxhallsociety.org.u |
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| 64 |
 | Peckham House Lunatic Asylum location 1862 map by Edward Weller shows Peckham House on land east of Lyndhurst Road that nowadays appears to be occupied by a school. |
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| 65 |
 | Rainham Church 1909 or 1929 (probably 1909) |
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| 66 |
 | Rainham Church and The Broadway Although Rainham Broadway was merely a dusty, open space in 1895 it was already the focal point of Rainham. |
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| 67 |
 | Rainham Church and The Broadway Although Rainham Broadway was merely a dusty, open space in 1895 it was already the focal point of Rainham. |
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| 68 |
 | Rainham, early 1900s. Rainham in the early 1900s and the village had still not lost its medieval layout. |
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| 69 |
 | Rainham, early 1900s. Rainham in the early 1900s and the village had still not lost its medieval layout. |
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| 70 |
 | Rose Lane, Ratcliff Courtsey of Ordnance Survey Maps |
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| 71 |
 | Royal visit to church of St George's in the East Queen Alexandra visiting the church in August 1903. This is possibly the earliest photograph of a royal visit to the East End, although the Queen, who was a patron of the Royal London Hospital, made several vists there later. Courtesy: A century of the East End. |
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| 72 |
 | Royal visit to church of St George's in the East Queen Alexandra visiting the church in August 1903. This is possibly the earliest photograph of a royal visit to the East End, although the Queen, who was a patron of the Royal London Hospital, made several vists there later. Courtesy: A century of the East End. |
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| 73 |
 | Royal visit to church of St George's in the East Queen Alexandra visiting the church in August 1903. This is possibly the earliest photograph of a royal visit to the East End, although the Queen, who was a patron of the Royal London Hospital, made several vists there later. Courtesy: A century of the East End. |
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| 74 |
 | Runnymede Memorial The Air Forces Memorial at Runnymede commemorates by name over 20,000 airmen who were lost in the Second World War during operations from bases in the United Kingdom and North and Western Europe, and who have no known graves. They served in Bomber, Fighter, Coastal, Transport, Flying Training and Maintenance Commands, and came from all parts of the Commonwealth. Some were from countries in continental Europe which had been overrun but whose airmen continued to fight in the ranks of the Royal Air Force. The memorial was designed by Sir Edward Maufe with sculpture by Vernon Hill. The engraved glass and painted ceilings were designed by John Hutton and the poem engraved on the gallery window was written by Paul H Scott. |
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| 75 |
 | Serpent's Hall, South Weald, Essex Now pulled down. Courtesy of Essex Record Office. |
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| 76 |
 | Setauket Rubber Factory Known as the 'upper' rubber factory, this building was located across from the current North Fork Bank at approximately 46 Route 25A. This area was known locally as 'Chicken Hill'. The factory was founded as the Nunns and Clark Piano Factory before the Civil War and then it was occupied by the rubber company.
Source: The Setaukets, Old Field and Poquott by Three Village Historical Society
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| 77 |
 | St Andrew Undershaft |
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| 78 |
 | St Dunstan's Church |
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| 79 |
 | St Dunstan's Church |
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| 80 |
 | St Dunstan's Church |
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| 81 |
 | St Dunstan's Church |
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| 82 |
 | St Dunstan's Church c1797 |
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| 83 |
 | St Dunstan's Church c1797 |
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| 84 |
 | St Dunstan's Church c1797 |
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| 85 |
 | St Dunstan's Church c1797 |
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| 86 |
 | St John & St Giles, Great Easton, Essex |
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| 87 |
 | St John the Baptist, Loughton, Essex |
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| 88 |
 | St Luke's Church 1881 View looking south-east towards St. Luke's Church and Norwood Cemetery (seen on its left).
In the foreground is the London Brighton South Coast railway line and houses along Bloom Grove. The Crystal Palace with its two towers is just visible in the distance. |
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| 89 |
 | St Luke's Church, West Norwood, Lambeth 1825 |
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| 90 |
 | St Mary's A.D.S. Cemetery, Haisnes, France |
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| 91 |
 | St Matthew's Church, Bethnal Green |
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| 92 |
 | St Matthew's Church, Bethnal Green |
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| 93 |
 | St Matthew's Church, Bethnal Green |
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| 94 |
 | St Matthew's Church, Bethnal Green |
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| 95 |
 | St Olave Hart Street, City of London Courtesy of wikipedia |
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| 96 |
 | St Swithins Church |
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| 97 |
 | St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery Source: wikipedia |
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| 98 |
 | Tel El Kabir War Cemetery |
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| 99 |
 | The Chapel, Coram Foundling Hospital, London The Chapel as drawn by Thomas Rowlandson and Augustus Charles Pugin for Ackermann's Microcosm of London (1808-11). |
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| 100 |
 | The new church under construction - 1895 Source: http://www.historyhouse.co.uk/kelvedonhatch/stnicholas.html |
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| 101 |
 | The old church late 19th century Source: http://www.historyhouse.co.uk/kelvedonhatch/stnicholas.html |
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| 102 |
 | The Three Crowns (prev Rainham Ferry House Inn) Daytrippers enjoying the sun outside The Three Crowns, Rainham-On-Thames, 1921. This pub was a favourite destination of Eastenders seeking fun in the countryside since it was built in the 1830s. It was also made popular due to the Gravesend Ferry which used to dock here. The land on which the Pub stood, and the Pub itself were swallowed up by the Murex factory complex in the 1960s. |
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| 103 |
 | Three Crowns, Rainham Ferry, Rainham, Essex Courtesy of Local Studies Library, London Borough of Havering |
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| 104 |
 | Three Crowns, Rainham Ferry, Rainham, Essex Courtesy of Local Studies Library, London Borough of Havering |
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| 105 |
 | Three Crowns, Rainham Ferry, Rainham, Essex Showing The Three Crowns also known as the Rainham Ferry House Inn and as the Ferry House between 1860 & 1867. |
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| 106 |
 | Tilney All Saints History, gazetteer, and directory of Norfolk, and the city and county of the Norfolk c1836 |
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| 107 |
 | Tilney All Saints, Norfolk |
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| 108 |
 | Warlincourt Halte British Cemetery, Saulty, France Warlincourt Halte British Cemetery, Saulty, France |
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| 109 |
 | Woodlands Cemetery |
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| 110 |
 | Wythburn Church c1870 before addition of the chancel in 1872 |
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