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The second elephant may be found across the pond, in New Jersey.
The original Pavilion was opened by HRH Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll.
The opera lives on in this pub – with two performances a year!
This pub is a former police station.
This pub is named after a comedy great!
This building was once a television and electrical store, and it also housed an ironmongery business.
This pub was once The Oxford Cinema.
Discover the history of Folkestone.
In The Pickwick Papers, residents of Maidstone were known as ‘Muggletonians’.
You can’t post your letters here anymore!
The rear of this building was originally a roller-skating rink and also a venue for political speeches.
The earliest reference to a Golden Lion in Rochester dates from 1808.
This pub is named after someone who plays a great role in Gravesend’s history.
The Ingoldsby Legends first appeared in 1840 in a periodical edited by Charles Dickens.
Take a look at old pictures of Herne Bay.
This town’s name is part Latin and part Anglo-Saxon in origin.
The former hotel originally opened in 1896.
The Westgate is a medieval gatehouse built in approximately 1379AD, from Kentish ragstone.
Ashford’s Fire Brigade was the second oldest volunteer service in England!
Read about the history of Sevenoaks and William Sevenoke.