Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Davington Priory, around 1910. The tower and roof of the parish church are in the background. Davington Priory was a priory on the north Kent coast of England.It sits on Davington Hill, now a northern suburb of Faversham but then an isolated rural location.
Kent 51°23′27″N 0°46′32″E / 51.3909°N 0.7756°E / 51.3909; Elmley is the local name for the Isle of Elmley, in the civil parish of Minster-on-Sea , part of the Isle of Sheppey in the Swale district, in the county of Kent , England.
The North Kent Marshes are in the far north of the county of Kent spanning dry and wet south banks and inlets of the Thames Estuary in south-east England. The marshes are one of 22 Environmentally Sensitive Areas recognised by the UK's Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA). They are in the Thames Gateway regional planning ...
Ashford Green Corridor; Bedgebury National Pinetum; Bewl Water; Bough Beech Reservoir; Brockhill Country Park; Capstone Farm Country Park; Emmetts Garden
Payday at Snowdown Colliery - sculpture. The Kent Coalfield is a coalfield in the eastern part of the English county of Kent.The Coalfields Trust defines the Kent Coalfield as the wards of Barham Downs and Marshside in the Canterbury district, and the wards of Aylesham, Eastry, Eythorne & Shepherdswell, Middle Deal & Sholden, Mill Hill and North Deal in the Dover district.
The north of Kent is a plain bordering the Thames Estuary. South of this is the North Downs, a chalk downland ridge which crosses the county from north-west to south-east and which forms dramatic chalk cliffs, including the White Cliffs of Dover, where it meets the English Channel. [5]
Sheerness (/ ʃ ɪər ˈ n ɛ s /) is a port town and civil parish [2] [3] beside the mouth of the River Medway on the north-west corner of the Isle of Sheppey in north Kent, England. With a population of 13,249, it is the second largest town on the island after the nearby town of Minster which has a population of 16,738.
Whitstable (/ ˈ w ɪ t s t ə b əl / ⓘ) is a town on the north coast of Kent, England, at the convergence of the Swale and the Greater Thames Estuary, [2] five miles (eight kilometres) north of Canterbury and two miles (three kilometres) west of Herne Bay.