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Frindsbury

Frindsbury photos (1 available)

Old photo of Frindsbury

Frindsbury maps (2 available)

Old map of Frindsbury

Frindsbury books (30 available)

Frindsbury memories

Name search

I am looking for details of Florence Gammon, formally Dunk from Rye, Sussex. She was married to Herbert Gammon, also from Rye. The children were Arthur Eaton Gammon, 9 and Alice Gammon, 12. Her father was my great great grand uncle, Leaf Temple Dunk, 1834, from Rye.  
Contributed by joe dunk

Kent memories

Name search

I am looking for details of Florence Gammon, formally Dunk from Rye, Sussex. She was married to Herbert Gammon, also from Rye. The children were Arthur Eaton Gammon, 9 and Alice Gammon, 12. Her father was my great great grand uncle, Leaf Temple Dunk, 1834, from Rye.  
A memory of Frindsbury contributed by joe dunk

Traffic Jams at Star Hill

Rochester, the Red Lion, Star Hill Corner c1955

I regularly went across this junction on the bus to and from home in Rochester and school at Chatham between 1955 and 1961. The Gaumont cinema was directly across the road from Bourne & Hilliers Dairy. I went to Saturday morning pictures, and ocassionally to the Victor Sylvester Ballroom Dancing classes, also at the cinema. Unlike the photo, Star Hill and the New Road were gridlocked morning and evening for the school run.
A memory of Rochester contributed by Keith Mungham

M2 Bridge worker in St. Bart's Hospital

Rochester, M2 Bridge c1960

I remember being in St. Barts Hospital in 1961 or 1962, aged 11 or twelve, to have my appendix removed. At that time there was a construction worker recovering from a very serious injury received while working on the bridge. His whole arm had been removed, leaving him only his right shoulder.I met him during a mass held in the ward and he was amazingly cheerful and determined to stand and kneel as required by the service.

A memory of Rochester contributed by Keith Mungham

Extracts From Frindsbury & Kent books

Frindsbury, All Saints Church c1960

Much vandalised in the 1950s, the prominent but isolated old church became one of the first in the Rochester diocese to lock its doors when not in use and the first to install an alarm system. The workman on the scaffolding against the tower, however, is more probably repairing the ravages of time, the most relentless vandal of all.
An extract from from"Chatham and the Medway Towns Photographic Memories".

Gillingham, Darland Banks c1960

In 1933, 70 acres of chalk downland were acquired by Chatham and Gillingham councils to create this beautiful open countryside nature reserve between the two towns. The local wildlife includes several species of orchids and butterflies. At the centre of this picture, we can see the horses of travellers whose mobile homes are among the trees.
An extract from from"Chatham and the Medway Towns Photographic Memories".

Rochester, the Red Lion, Star Hill Corner c1955

The bus advertises Fremlins’ ales outside the Red Lion, a Style & Winch house of flamboyant grandeur, but now no more, sad to say. There are now traffic lights and a great deal more traffic where this policeman stands on point duty at the junction of High Street with Corporation Street (left) and Star Hill (right).
An extract from from"Chatham and the Medway Towns Photographic Memories".

Chatham, Town Hall and Military Road c1955

The virtual absence of motor traffic suggests that this photograph may have been taken in 1956, during the Suez Crisis petrol rationing, which did not end until the following year. The restrained architecture of The Eagle Tavern contrasts with that of both the Town Hall and the Chatham Constitution Club on the right of this picture.
An extract from from"Chatham and the Medway Towns Photographic Memories".

Chatham, High Street c1955

This part of the High Street is very different today, with The Sun Hotel gone from its Medway Street corner site. The dome further down the street was on the old Empire Theatre, which could seat 2,500 people. It specialised in music hall-style entertainment before it closed during the 1960s.
An extract from from"Chatham and the Medway Towns Photographic Memories".