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The location of the former Newark Hospital is now mainly a car park behind Strood High Street. The 19th century railway embankment carrying the Chatham Main Line cuts across the back of the old hospital site. Strood Market was held on part of this land, but was relocated to make way for a food store, Aldi. An archaeological dig of the site was ...
During the reign of King Richard I (1157–1199), bishop Gilbert de Glanville gave the church to his hospital in Strood. After several appeals to the pope the monks of Rochester regained control of it in 1255. The early vicars, up to 1401, received only a yearly stipend from the convent.
Mill Hill Anglo-Saxon cemetery is a place of burial located close to the town of Deal in Kent, South-East England. Belonging to the Middle Anglo-Saxon period, it was part of the much wider tradition of burial in Early Anglo-Saxon England. Mill Hill was an inhumation-only cemetery, with no evidence of cremation.
Frindsbury Extra was a ward of Strood Rural District Council which was abolished in 1974. [45] Eleven of the 16 Strood Rural parishes, joined Rochester City Council and Chatham Borough Council to become the Rochester-upon-Medway Borough Council which in 1978 became Rochester-upon-Medway City Council.
Temple Manor is a scheduled ancient monument (number 1011805) and grade I listed building (number 1120910) in Strood, Kent. [1] [2] The Manor has been owned by various religious, national and farming owners over 600 years.
May 23—The Alabama Historical Commission has officially recognized the Berlin/Kritner Cemetery as a historical site and placed in on the state registry. Nancy Kuykendall, Jamie Bryant, Cheryl ...
Washington's tomb at the United States Capitol in Washington D.C., originally designed to entomb the body of George Washington.. Burial places of presidents and vice presidents of the United States are located across 23 states and the District of Columbia.
Chatham Cemetery to Gillingham Victoria Bridge via Chatham Town Hall and Brompton. Chatham Town Hall to Gillingham Pier Road via Chatham Hill, Gillingham and James Street. Chatham Railway station to the dockyard via Chatham Town Hall. The network expanded for several years, and by 1908 there were eight operational routes: [2]