Originally posted by Cubitt
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Please realize that I was not addressing what might have been specifically your misconception. Rather, I was addressing a very widely held misconception: That Bury's various 'East End' residences qualified him as a 'local'.
Some photographs of Bury's manor: The Parish of Bromley St. Leonard (October 2007)
Figure 1: Derelict Churchyard; Site of the Parish Church of Bromley St. Leonard (Click to View in flickr)
Bury was married in St. Mary's Church, Parish of Bromley St. Leonard; which was built on the site of the medieval Chapel of St. Mary, on the grounds of the Priory of St. Leonard.
St. Mary's Church and its medieval foundations were destroyed during German bombing, in World War II.
Figure 2: Derelict Churchyard; Site of the Parish Church of Bromley St. Leonard (Click to View in flickr)
Figure 3: Derelict Churchyard; Site of the Parish Church of Bromley St. Leonard (Click to View in flickr)
Figure 4: Derelict Churchyard; Site of the Parish Church of Bromley St. Leonard (Click to View in flickr)
Figure 5: Derelict Churchyard; Site of the Parish Church of Bromley St. Leonard (Click to View in flickr)
Approximately one third of St. Mary's Church stood in the immediate foreground (i.e. this side of the hedgerow); …
Figure 6: Blackwall Tunnel; Site of the Parish Church of Bromley St. Leonard (Click to View in flickr)
… while its remaining two thirds stood here (at an elevation of approximately six feet above the highway).
Figure 7: High Street, Parish of Bromley St. Leonard (Click to View in flickr)
Figure 8: 3 Spanby Road, Parish of Bromley St. Leonard ??? (Click to View in flickr)
Today's 3 Spanby Road, at its northern end / east side.
Figure 9: 3 Spanby Road, Parish of Bromley St. Leonard ??? (Click to View in flickr)
What I believe to have been 3 Spanby Road, Parish of Bromley St. Leonard, in 1888; at its southern end / east side (second door from the right).
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