Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Sturry" ¶ 8
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Sturry and Church
The large parish of Sturry Church incorporates the former mining village of Hersden and several hamlets.
* A photographic tour of St Nicholas Church, Sturry

Sturry and England
During the Second World War, Sturry was one of the most badly bombed villages in England, the greater part of the High Street being destroyed by a parachute mine in 1941 during the Baedeker Blitz, killing 15 people of which 7 were children aged 12 and under.
Sturry railway station serves the village of Sturry near Canterbury in Kent, England.

Sturry and Primary
* Sturry Primary school

Sturry and school
The school, which is mixed, currently has around 425 pupils, ages 3 to 13, and is located at Milner Court in Sturry.
Rusty Goffe who appeared as an Oompa-Loompa in the 1971 film Willy Wonka & The Chocolate Factory was born and raised in the town attending nearby Sturry Secondary school.
Other conversions of oasts for non-residential purposes include a theatre ( Oast Theatre, Tonbridge, Oast house Theatre Rainham, a Youth Hostel ( Capstone Farm, Rochester, another at Lady Margaret Manor, Doddington – now a residential centre for people with learning difficulties ), a school ( Sturry ), a visitor centre ( Bough Beech reservoir ) offices ( Tatlingbury Farm, Five Oak Green and a museum ( Kent Museum of Rural Life, Sandling, Preston Street, Faversham, Wye College, Wye and the former Whitbread Hop Farm at Beltring.
Spires Academy, formerly known as Sturry Secondary Modern School and later Frank Montgomery School, is the only secondary school in Sturry.

Sturry and is
Sturry is a village on the Great Stour river three miles north-east of Canterbury in Kent.
Sturry railway station was opened in 1848 and electrified in 1962, by the South Eastern Railway: it is on the line between Canterbury west and Ramsgate.
Human habitation in Sturry is thought to have started around 430, 000 years ago, as dated flint implements-namely knives and arrow-tips-show.
Fordwich itself is smaller in size than Sturry.
In the book, Letters to Sturry, it is recorded that on Wednesday, 28 August 1940, there were eight separate air raid warnings and on ' Battle of Britain Day ', 15 September 1940, a German Dornier bomber plane, ( Aircraft 2651, 3rd Staffel, Kampfgeschwader 76 ), crash-landed in a field below Kemberland Wood near the Sarre Penne stream.
Nonetheless a number of interesting buildings remain intact in Sturry, including St Nicholas parish church, which is predominantly Norman in style, with the oldest parts dating to about 1200.
The junior part of The King's School, Canterbury, is also located in south Sturry.

Sturry and near
Other signs of early human activities include a collection of axes and pottery shards from the Bronze Age and more pottery from the Sturry Hill gravel-pits, and a burial-ground near Stonerocks Farm showed that there was an Iron Age settlement of Belgic Celts ( who gave Canterbury its pre-Roman name of Durovemum ) from the end of the 2nd Century BC.
Some of them settled near Sturry: their cemetery was found at Hersden.
Sturry has had a cricket club playing off Field Way since 1863, Sturry Cricket Club in 2005 were made homeless after the land was sold, currently the club are playing out of Polo Farm Sports Ground near Fordwich and run two sides in the KRCL on saturday and a friendly side on sundays.

Sturry and north
Since the 1960s a large number of satellite housing estates have been built on the north side of the village, mostly in former woodland, which have turned Sturry into one of the major dormitary villages for Canterbury.

Sturry and village
A 16th Century manor house and oasthouse, built in 1583 and which belonged to St Augustine's Abbey in Canterbury still stand in Sturry village beside the medieval tithe barn-although they have all been incorporated into the King School after they were sold by the widow of Lord Milner in 1925.

Sturry and with
The most important era for Sturry, determining its future shape, size, function and name, was that part of the early 5th century when the beleaguered Romano-Britons brought in Frisians and Jutes as mercenaries to help them fight against invading Picts and Scots, and rewarded them with land.

Sturry and Hersden
The road continues via Upstreet and Hersden to Sturry, and on to the cathedral city of Canterbury.

Sturry and .
Nearby villages include Rough Common, Sturry and Tyler Hill.
Sturry was the first ; Stour-gau, meaning district or lathe on the Stour.
Three of the five crew were killed and were firstly buried in Sturry Cemetery but then re-interred in the late 1960s into the German war cemetery at Cannock Chase.

Church and England
The New Testament offered to the public today is the first result of the work of a joint committee made up of representatives of the Church of England, Church of Scotland, Methodist Church, Congregational Union, Baptist Union, Presbyterian Church of England, Churches in Wales, Churches in Ireland, Society of Friends, British and Foreign Bible Society and National Society of Scotland.
According to a newspaper report of the 1961 statistics of the Church of England, the `` total of confirmed members is 9,748,000, but only 2,887,671 are registered on the parochial church rolls '', and `` over 27 million people in England are baptized into the Church of England, but roughly only a tenth of them continue ''.
An amazing article in the Manchester Guardian of last November, entitled `` Fate Of Redundant Churches '', states than an Archbishops' Commission `` reported last month that in the Church of England alone there are 790 churches which are redundant now, or will be in 20 years' time.
The general tone of articles appearing in such important newspapers as the Manchester Guardian and the Sunday Observer implies a kindly recognition that the Catholic Church is now at least of equal stature in England with the Protestant churches.
On successive Sundays during October, 1960, Paul Ferris ( a non-Catholic ) wrote articles in the Observer depicting clergymen of the Church of England, the Church of Rome and the Nonconformist Church.
We do well to remind ourselves that from men and women of New England ancestry also issued the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, the Seventh Day Adventists, Christian Science, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, the American Home Missionary Society, the American Bible Society, and New England theology.
The Anglican Communion is an international association of national and regional Anglican churches ( and a few other episcopal churches ) in full communion with the Church of England ( which is regarded as the mother church of the worldwide communion ) and specifically with its principal primate, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Some of these churches are known as Anglican, such as the Anglican Church of Canada, due to their historical link to England ( Ecclesia Anglicana means " English Church ").
Each church has its own doctrine and liturgy, based in most cases on that of the Church of England ; and each church has its own legislative process and overall episcopal polity, under the leadership of a local primate.

Church and Primary
St. Petroc's Voluntary Aided Church of England Primary School Athelstan Park, Bodmin, Cornwall was given this title in September 1990 after the amalgamation of St. Petroc's Infant School and St. Petroc's Junior School.
There are also two state Church Schools ; Llandaff City Church in Wales Primary School and Bishop of Llandaff Church in Wales High School.
* Primary ( LDS Church ), children's Sunday School organization
There are also a number of primary schools in the area such as Cuddington Croft, St Cecilias Catholic Primary School, Cheam Fields Primary, Cheam Common Primary, Cheam Park Farm Nursery and Infants School, Cheam Park Farm Juniors, Nonsuch Primary and St. Dunstans Church of England Primary.
* Coulsdon Church of England Primary School
Archbishop Sumner School ( Church of England ); Henry Fawcett Primary School ; St. Anne's Primary School ( Roman Catholic ); St. Mark's Primary School ( Church of England ); Vauxhall Primary and Walnut Tree Walk Primary School.
* The Queen's Church of England Primary School
On Saturday mornings, St Paul's churchyard in Stoke Newington High Street hosts an active farmers ' market – relocated in July / August 2011 from its earlier site in the playground of William Patten Primary school on Stoke Newington Church Street.
* Saint Mary's Church of England Primary
* Saint Matthias Church of England Primary

0.138 seconds.