Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Whitstable's secondary school is The Whitstable School, formerly The Community College Whitstable. It is a secondary modern school which changed its name from Sir William Nottidge School in 1998. In 2009, 25% of its pupils gained at least five GCSEs at grades A*–C – this increased to 37% in 2011. [ 59 ]
The museum has collections and displays on themes of the natural world, local oyster trade, early diving and the actor, Peter Cushing, who lived locally, [8] as well as displays on the 1953 floods, shipwrecks and maritime archaeology. The collections are held under the following headings: social history, science and technology, maritime, land ...
Heritage railroad and museum with steam locomotives, freight and carriage stock, railway artefacts British Cartoon Archive: Canterbury: City of Canterbury: Art: Exhibit gallery of political and social-comment cartoons from British newspapers and magazines, part of the University of Kent: Canterbury Heritage Museum: Canterbury: City of ...
Pages in category "Museums in the City of Canterbury" ... Whitstable Museum and Gallery This page was last edited on 10 May 2021, at 10:54 (UTC). Text ...
In 1977, a full cosmetic restoration of the locomotive was undertaken with help from the National Railway Museum. Presently, Invicta is owned by the Transport Trust. During November 2008, it was announced that a £41,000 Heritage Lottery Fund grant had been made to Canterbury City Council to develop a new museum at Whitstable to house Invicta.
Catalogues for art or museum exhibitions may range in scale from a single printed sheet to a lavish hardcover "coffee table book".The advent of cheap colour-printing in the 1960s transformed what had usually been simple "handlists" with several works to each page into large scale "descriptive catalogues" that are intended as both contributions to scholarship and books likely to appeal to many ...
Whitstable Museum and Gallery; Whitstable Oyster Festival; Whitstable railway station; Whitstable Town F.C. All Saints Church, Whitstable; Great Fire of Whitstable, 1869
Canterbury (/ ˈ k æ n t ər b (ə) r i / ⓘ, /-b ɛ r i /) [3] is a city and UNESCO World Heritage Site, in the county of Kent, England; it was a county borough until 1974. It lies on the River Stour.