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Canterbury

Canterbury photos (229 available)

Old photo of Canterbury

Canterbury maps (2 available)

Old map of Canterbury

Canterbury books (26 available)

Canterbury memories

The present day hospital.

Canterbury, St John's Hospital Gateway 1898

St John's Hospital is home to 35 elderly people. 24 live in the older part. There are 6 houses each holding 4 flats. House six can be seen in the photo, it stands alongside the hospital chapel. The chapel is used twice a week by the residents. Beyond the chapel and graveyard are two more modern buildings, St John's House is about 40 years old and comprises of 2 flats, one of which is occupied by the chaplain of he hospital. Alongside St John's House is St Elisabeth House. It has 8 flats and is for the more frail of our residents. It was built in 1999 and took the name of St ...read more here
Contributed by Susan Hedges

Kent memories

The present day hospital.

Canterbury, St John's Hospital Gateway 1898

St John's Hospital is home to 35 elderly people. 24 live in the older part. There are 6 houses each holding 4 flats. House six can be seen in the photo, it stands alongside the hospital chapel. The chapel is used twice a week by the residents. Beyond the chapel and graveyard are two more modern buildings, St John's House is about 40 years old and comprises of 2 flats, one of which is occupied by the chaplain of he hospital. Alongside St John's House is St Elisabeth House. It has 8 flats and is for the more frail of our residents. It was built in 1999 and took the name of St ...read more here
A memory of Canterbury contributed by Susan Hedges

William Amos

In the 1851 census William Amos, believed to have been my Great Grandfather, lived with his wife Caroline and children in No.10 High Street, Sturry. He is recorded as being a schoolteacher. In the 1861 census he is recorded as being a Shipping Agent living in Whitsable, address unclear in the register. A rather strange change of occupation.

I would be very interested in learning more about him and his family and which school, possibly Kings, which is close by, that he taught at.

Peter Amos
A memory of Sturry contributed by Peter Amos

The day the pub got blown up

Does any one remember the local pub in Sturry, that got blown up in ww2, my dad saved a little boy, but through shock, the young lad later died. Does any one remember the ODELL family who lived in ROOKERY NOCK?
   Would love to hear from any one who knew them, my sister was in the Land army, any one who can remember her, her name was HAZEL ODELL, she also worked in the backers in Sturry.

                            You can get me at ....pamelaodell2000@yahoo.co.uk
A memory of Sturry contributed by First Name Last Name

Extracts From Canterbury & Kent books

Canterbury, the Cathedral 1888

Since Saxon times, Canterbury has been the spiritual capital of England. The cathedral was rebuilt in the 12th century, when it began to assume the form in which we see it today. It was here that Thomas à Becket was murdered in 1170, and the city has been a place of pilgrimage ever since. In this fine study, the huge west front dominates the scene.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Cathedrals".

Canterbury, the Cathedral 1888

A fine study of the cathedral with the huge west front dominating the scene. Perhaps the most famous symbol of the Anglican church, it is a dominant landmark for many miles around.
An extract from from"Kent Photographic Memories".

Canterbury, the Cathedral 1888

This magnificent cathedral heralds the beginning of English Christianity: Augustine was appointed its first archbishop in 597. Over the centuries it has been witness to fire and murder. In 1170 its then archbishop, Thomas a Becket, was slaughtered there by four knights of Henry II. By the late 19th century the Pilgrims' Way through London to Kent had brought many visitors to its doors.
An extract from from"Kent Revisited Photographic Memories".

Canterbury, the Cathedral, the Norman Crypt 1888

The crypt dates from Norman times, and it is considered to be one of the finest in the world. Note the decorative carving on the pillars, which is similar to that at Durham Cathedral. This atmospheric early photograph emphasises the awesome majesty and ancient mysteries of the Christian tradition.
An extract from from"50 Classics - Cathedrals".

Canterbury, the Cathedral, the Norman Crypt 1888

The crypt at Canterbury dates from Norman times and is one of the cathedral’s many treasures. This excellent study was taken in 1888 and is a rare and wonderful picture; the awesome majesty of the subterranean setting symbolises the ancient mysteries of the Christian tradition.
An extract from from"Kent Photographic Memories".