Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Tonbridge also hosts numerous community events, including a Christmas festival when the high street is closed to traffic, a firework display in November organised by Tonbridge Round Table, [54] a dragon boat race and a summer fete in the castle grounds (which is also the location of numerous musical performances in the summer months).
124 High Street Tonbridge and Malling: Jettied House: 15th century: 8 May 1950 1363400: 124 High Street: Notes. External links ... 124 High Street: Notes
The next section bypasses the original route of the A21 along the B245 through Hildenborough, Tonbridge High Street, and Pembury Road to join the current route near the second A26 junction. Between Leigh and Haysden the road crosses the River Medway by means of a two-span viaduct.
Eurostar trains ran through Tonbridge station until the first section of the High Speed line was built through Kent, to cut down journey times from London to the Channel Tunnel. The transfer happened on 28 September 2003. The station was refurbished in 2011–12. [citation needed] In 2015, the station gained a resident cat, Saffie.
The Angel Ground was a sports ground at Tonbridge in the English county of Kent. It was used as a venue for first-class cricket by Kent County Cricket Club between 1869 and 1939 and then for association football by Tonbridge Angels F.C., until 1980. It was subsequently demolished and redeveloped by Tonbridge and Malling District Council in 1980.
East Malling Halt opened in 1913. The station is at high level, adjacent to the railway bridge over the High Street, and the platforms are accessed by steps from street level: there are no lifts. [2] Originally built of sleepers, [3] the halt was rebuilt in concrete in the late 1950s. [4]
The Tudor Mulberry Cottages on the High St St Benedict's Church, Paddlesworth, dates to the early 12th century All Saints Church, the parish church of Snodland. Snodland is a town in the borough of Tonbridge and Malling in Kent, England. It lies on the River Medway, between Rochester and Maidstone, and 34 miles (55 km) from central London. At ...
Independent Congregationalists founded Tonbridge's first Nonconformist place of worship in 1751; only St Peter and St Paul's Church pre-dated it. The group met in a rented room, but in 1791 they built this chapel on Back Lane (now Bank Street). It was superseded in 1876 by a new chapel on the High Street, nearer the centre of population. [15]