Posts Tagged ‘Kent’
October 9th, 2009
COLCHESTER — It wasn’t that I had a long way to go but that the tangle of roads in the atlas looked very complicated, so I decided to try and get to Colchester as directly and quickly as possible. Except for the bit where I took a brief detour to the Isle of Sheppey. I passed through Queenborough and on to Sheerness. A rather featureless and desolate-looking piece of England. The most interesting part of the detour was the giant hump of a bridge that you had to cross to and from the Isle. You were warned about hazardous cross-winds when crossing.
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October 8th, 2009
HIGH HALDEN — The sun came out again today just in time for my pilgrimage to Canterbury. But first i took a detour to Biddenden to have a look around the churchyard for Humphreys. As expected a lot of the tombstones old enough to be of interest were well worn and unreadable.
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October 7th, 2009
HIGH HALDEN — Today was Groundhog Day—a replay of yesterday except the weather got worse. I found a few more probable and possible ancestors but still not the most wanted. Not much more to say about today.
October 6th, 2009
HIGH HALDEN — It was an early start to the day; I was out the door by 7:30 am. and heading for one of Maidstone’s park and rides. I arrived at the bus stop outside County Hall an hour later which gave me an hour and a half to retrieve some e-mails and update the blog at McDonalds.
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October 5th, 2009
HIGH HALDEN — I’ve enjoyed a really good run of weather since I arrived in England. Today, if I remember correctly, was only the second day that it has rained consistently but the first that has affected my sightseeing. The forecast is for more rain tomorrow but as I will be inside at the Centre for Kentish Studies the weather can do what it likes—just as long as it clears up for Thursday.
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October 4th, 2009
HIGH HALDEN — This morning I drove down to Battle to visit Battle Abbey and the site of the Battle of Hastings. I did the audio tour and took the long option which led you right around the battlefield. The site is not quite as it was in 1066 as the top of the hill was subsequently levelled to build the abbey and the field was terraced for the abbey’s use. There are probably a few more trees now as well—so you had to use your imagination a little.
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October 3rd, 2009
HIGH HALDEN — There’s not a lot to say about today. I visited four, no five, churchyards looking for tombstones. The first was at Egerton from whence the Russells came. From Egerton I went on to Pluckley, and from Pluckley to Little Chart.
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October 2nd, 2009
HIGH HALDEN — I began this morning by driving to Maidstone to locate the Centre for Kentish Studies and to make an appointment for the following week. Amazingly I found a park right outside the building and will be revisiting on Tuesday and Wednesday.
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