
![]()
Please note that due to the very high graphic content of this site some pages may take a little while to load.

City of Canterbury.

Canterbury.
From
whichever direction you enter the city, the skyline is dominated by the
cathedral. At 557 feet high it presides over Canterbury. It is the mother church
of the Anglican Faith throughout the world, and has held pilgrimage status since
1170 when Thomas Beckett was martyred.
The cathedral spans the centuries - the earliest part being the Romanesque Crypt
circa 1100, the rebuilt Gothic Quire circa 1200 and the Nave built in the 14th
and 15th centuries. See the famous stained glass windows and visit the tomb of
Henry IV and the Black Prince.

Canterbury.

Canterbury.
A bustling pedestrian high street offering a host of famous shops, restaurants, cafes and pubs. Canterbury is less than 1 mile in diameter and thus all the visitor attractions can be reached on foot.

Canterbury.

Canterbury, The River Stour which runs through Canterbury.

Canterbury.

Canterbury.

Crabble corn mill.
The current mill, built in 1812, is situated in the picturesque village of River, on the outskirts of Dover. There have been documented mills on this site since at least the 13th Century while excavations conducted during 2004 hint at a structure possibly dating back to Roman times. Rescued from demolition, fully restored and opened to the public in 1990.

Crabble corn mill.

Crabble corn mill.
Crabble Corn Mill is a six storey Grade II* listed building of more than special national importance. The main tower contains possibly the only remaining complete set of 19th Century automated flour milling machinery in the country. Crabble Corn Mill is a working museum showing visitors how flour was produced a hundred years ago in the age of water power.
Please click on the page numbers below to view pictures