Demolished by Henry VIII as part of the dissolution of the monasteries. Our picture shows the ruins as they were in 1826.
c.1485 the priory built Bromley Hall, a manor house near the River Lea, still standing as the oldest brick building in London.
Demolished by Henry VIII as part of the dissolution of the monasteries. Our picture shows the ruins as they were in 1826.
c.1485 the priory built Bromley Hall, a manor house near the River Lea, still standing as the oldest brick building in London.
This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Holy Trinity Priory
Site of the Priory of the Holy Trinity, founded 1108. The Corporation of the ...
Burnt at the stake in Bow (or possibly Stratford) for his Protestant beliefs. Blind. Shared a stake with Laverock who chatted with him during their ordeal.
Became vicar in 1947 of St Marks Kennington and oversaw the restoration of the building following WW2 damage. He may have a first initial 'H'.
Established under the leadership of Alexander M'Aulay to ‘promote the erection of commodious chapels in suitable situations in and around the metropolis, to assist in the enlargement of existing ch...
Born Brixton. In 1882 founded the Church Army, an evangelical organisation aimed at the poor in London and then during WW1 among the troops in France. Prebendary of St Paul's Cathedral. Known as "t...
Poet and essayist. Born Henry Austin Dobson at Plymouth, Devon. He spent his entire working life at the Board of Trade. His first poems were published in 1868. In 1876 he and a group of other poets...
This Georgian house was on The Green, Hampstead, in an area now occupied by the west-most part of the Hampstead Royal Free Hospital. It was Sir Rowland Hill's home for 30 years, during which time S...
A high-speed railway link from London through Kent to the UK end of the Channel Tunnel. Officially known as the Channel Tunnel Rail Link (CTRL) and originally as the Union Railway or Continental Ma...
A corps of the British Army. It provides military engineering and other technical support to the British Armed Forces. Known as 'sappers' apparently from the French 'sappe' meaning 'spadework' or '...
United Kingdom citizen who died in the terrorist attacks in America on 11 September 2001. Jane Louise Simpkin was born on 28 March 1965 in Crumpsall, Manchester, Lancashire, the elder daughter of ...
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