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Egginton Kay
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Egginton Kay's conversations

Since the recent development there is no longer a taxi rank in this position

This is where we experienced the best meal of our holiday in June 2009.

Future-proof booking hall. When the sea levels have risen to flood Woolwich, this will double up as a lighthouse.

Thank you Bill. I have enjoyed looking at the Plumstead stories website. I hope other people will be pleased to read them. I often wondered why my photo was receiving so many hits. Now I understand why when I see all the school pictures on the website. Plumstead has certainly changed since your youth. Thank you for making the contact.

The village pound was used in bygone days to keep stray animals until collected by their owners. These wrought iron gates have now been replaced with a wooden gate, more in keeping with the original.

Pill Box by the side of the Trent and Mersey Canal where Brindley's aquaduct carries the canal over the River Dove.

Monk's Bridge was built around 1300 by the monks of Burton Abbey on the site of an earlier Roman bridge. It may well spring from the foundations of the Roman bridge. It carried the A38 (Ryknield Street)traffic until the 1930s when it was bypassed by a new concrete bridge.

This scratch dial is a primitive form of sundial that dates back to around 1300 AD. The Rector would place a stick in the hole and the alignment of its shadow with a scratch indicated the time of a Church service.

Egginton Church is dedicated to St. Wilfrid. This is a modern stained glass window depicting St. Wilfrid among things typical of Egginton village: willow wands, swallows, the River Dove and the green fields.

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