Co-operative Store, Corner of Cray Road & Tylers Green Road 1920s Baptist Chapel, Road 1900s HERITAGE TRAIL

Broadway Shops looking towards Village Green 1927 The Moat House, Green Court Road 1907

Length: Approximately 5 Kilometres (3 Miles) Time: A gentle 3 hour stroll, or as 2 shorter circular walks Start & Finish: Village Hall Car Park, BR8 8LT (Free Parking)

Council Office, Village Hall, Stones Cross Road, Crockenhill, BR8 8LT | T: 01322 614674 ROAD SAFETY WARNING

Extreme care must be taken when walking this Trail as some of the roads/lanes have no pedestrian footpaths or pedestrian crossings.

Instructions for the walk are in red within the grey boxes. The numbers in the text relate to the numbers on the map, on the back page of the booklet.

Foreword This Heritage Walk booklet was the brainchild of Crockenhill Parish Council but could not have been achieved without the extensive knowledge and help of Dr Susan Pittman, our local historian, who also provided the majority of the photographs, and to whom we owe a great deal of thanks. Thank you also to the ladies of the W.I. for making a contribution towards the production costs and to our Clerk, Barbara Morris.

Brief History of Village by Dr Susan Pittman Crockenhill’s earliest documented history starts in 1388, when the village, or hamlet as it was then, was known as Crockern-Held, which translates as “the hill where stands a pottery kiln”. This bore fact to the heavy clay soil, sand and woodland that provided the resources to make, in this case, tiles for the surrounding areas, hence current names, like Tylers Green Road and Tilecroft. In Elizabeth I’s time thousands of tiles were supplied for the huge roof of the kiln at which was to smelt ‘gold’ found by Frobisher in Canada - the whole enterprise collapsing when the ore was found to be ‘fool’s gold’.

In the 15th century a large tract of Crockenhill was given to the nuns at Dartford Priory, who held it until the Dissolution of the Monasteries by Henry VIII. After holding it for a few years, in 1540 the King gave Crockenhill to one of his favoured courtiers, Sir Percival Hart of , and it remained part of the vast Lullingstone estate into the 1930s, when the estate was broken up.

It seems that Crockenhill really started to come into its own when the hamlet was deemed large enough to support its own church in 1851, All Souls’. Not that the hamlet was without a place of worship, since the Baptists had founded a chapel there at least by 1801, and before that meetings were held in an ordinary house. The Baptist presence went back further to the 1690s, as evidenced by their Old Burying Ground at Darns Hill.

By the mid-19th century, market gardening was booming, especially strawberries which grew well on recently grubbed-up woodland. was readily accessible by road and rail, and with the benevolent rent policy of the Hart Dyke family, the most enterprising smallholders gradually became wealthy farmers.

Two such people were brothers, Thomas and John Wood. Thomas became fascinated with steam power in the 1860s and introduced steam traction for agricultural purposes to the district. His descendants still live and work in the village. John Wood concentrated on large-scale fruit growing and also established a series of greenhouses in the village. Among the more exotic crops grown were grapes at Chalks greenhouses (now Bransell Close), while for a hobby he cultivated bananas and paw-paws in the greenhouses at his home, The Mount.

There was so much soft fruit produced that much of it went towards making jam, the Woods at one time having a jam factory in neighbouring . Market gardening provided employment in Crockenhill right up to the 1960s when cheap imports made production uneconomic. However, in the 1990s it returned to Wested Farm where market gardening has continued since.

Today Crockenhill continues to be a thriving community with a good social mix of well-established families and new ones. Most employment is now found away from the village, but its sense of identity remains strong and Crockenhill fiercely defends its status whenever it feels a threat, and the Parish Council plays a large part in this. (2015) 1. Village Hall Opened on 19 July 1958, with money raised by The Victory Fund which began in the Second World War to provide a war memorial to the dead. At a public meeting in 1945 it was decided that the memorial be a village hall, and by 1949 over £2000 had been raised for this purpose. Since it opened the Village Hall has been run by a Voluntary Management Committee, under the trusteeship of the Parish Council. 2011

From the front of the Village Hall, cross Stones Cross Road onto the Village Green

2. Village Green Once part of the Lullingstone Estate, this was given to the Parish Council in 1922 by Sir William Hart Dyke of . On 20 July 1919, a day after the official Peace Celebrations, derelict cottages on the Green were set on fire as an unofficial celebratory bonfire.

The Village Green before 1919 when the Looking up The Village Green towards cottages were burnt down the Primary School 2015

Leaving the Village Green, make your way up Stones Cross Road

3. Primary School Built in 1906 as an early County funded school, its first pupils were transferred from the Non- Conformist School behind the Baptist Church, which you will see later. The original school building remains the core of the school, but there have been later extensions, the last being a wing of new classrooms opened in October 2010.

1907 2015

Approx 100m further up Stones Cross Road and on your right you will see 4 4. Coal Tax post Placed around the boundary of outer London under Victorian Acts (in 4th year of the Queen’s reign [1840-41], and 25th year [1861]). Coal crossing the line had to pay a duty on arrival at the Corporation of London (whose shield is on the post). The money raised was used to build up the embankments along the River Thames in and to provide a proper sewage system for the capital. There are several throughout the village.

Look through the hedge behind the Coal Tax Post to see a pond

5. Osier pond The osiers (willows) round the pond were grown to provide twigs used in the rural industry of basket making to provide containers for fruit to be transported to London markets. The photo on the right shows Les Everest and Tom Pert with apples in woven willow baskets, September 1923.

From Victorian times until the 1960s Crockenhill was well known for the production of fruit.

Marlpits and pond 2013

From the Coal Tax Post continue along Stones Cross Road for approximately 45m and you will see a house on your right

6. Marlpits The part of this house nearest the pond was formerly the Lee family home called ‘Homefield’ and was originally sited near the Baptist Church, which you will see later - 17. Jack Lee moved the house, brick by brick, to this spot in 1975-1976, and added a fifteenth century timbered hall, which came from elsewhere in Kent.

In the former orchard between this house and the Cricket Meadow, marl was dug to lay on the chalk fields. The land between Stones Cross Road and Green Court Road has deposits of clay - unlike most of the land round the village which has Blackheath pebble beds to the west and chalk underlying Thanet sand elsewhere.

Leaving Marlpits continue along Stones Cross Road to the bend and on your left you will see 7 7. Tilecroft Built in 1887, the house name is a reminder of the early industry of tile making in Crockenhill (crock-ern-hill = hill with an oast or kiln for making crocks, which first appeared in 1388). Tile Kiln Wood lies beyond Tilecroft.

2011

The picture on the left shows Alexander (b.1908) and Bernard Clements (b.1910) outside the front of Tilecroft, May 1913. Boys did not wear trousers until aged about 4

Continue up Stones Cross Road, passing the entrance to the Cricket Meadow on your right, to the junction with Green Court Road. On your left is another coal tax post on the verge and on your right you will see 8

8. Cricket Meadow and War Memorial The land was purchased from money raised in a Memorial Fund in the First World War and commemorates those who died in the conflict, as stated on the war memorial. The war memorial itself cost £82, and was unveiled on 4 March 1922. The money was raised from communal jam making and from money remaining from a fund set up to finance Belgian refugee families, who were adopted by the village during the war.

To mark the centenary of the First World War, at the Remembrance Service on 9 November 2014, 27 named crosses were laid for servicemen from the village who died in the war.

Shortly after unveiling in 1922 2014 The inscription to those who died in the Second World War was added later. In 2012 the Memorial underwent cleaning and refurbishment. A Remembrance Service is held here each year.

On the far side of the Cricket Meadow, a plaque was erected to commemorate the centenary of the start of First World War and reads “2014 Centenary Year, The people of Crockenhill remember their men and women who died in the Great War of 1914-1918 to whom this meadow is dedicated.”

From the War Memorial, keeping to your left, continue along Green Court Road, passing Green Court Sports Club on your left

9. Green Court Road This section of Green Court Road was previously the main road between Crockenhill and Swanley. When the Swanley by-pass was built in the early 1960s a new bridge and approach road to Swanley was constructed, (shown in 12), leaving this road as a cul-de-sac.

At the end of Green Court Road (cul-de-sac) turn right onto the footpath with the A20 Swanley by-pass on your left

10. Dibsdall Meadow This field was bought at auction by the Parish Council with public subscriptions and mortgage to prevent development in 2010, and was named ‘Dibsdall Meadow’

At the end of the footpath on your right-hand side you will see 11

11. Dibsdall Memorial This memorial stone was erected in 2013 to recognise the contribution Cllr Colin Dibsdall made with the fight to maintain the Green Belt here, and all his work throughout the village during his 28 years of public service as both District and Parish Councillor (1983-2011), and to thank those who donated money for the purchase of this field.

Two of Cllr Dibsdall’s daughters and granddaughter who unveiled the memorial, 3 November 2013.

At the end of footpath where it meets Goldsel Road look to your left 12. Goldsel Road Goldsel was the name of the wood which once covered Dibsdall Meadow. This road, to link Swanley and Crockenhill, was built over the new Swanley bypass.

In 1964/1965 the bridge to Crockenhill was under construction as shown in the picture on the right.

From Dibsdall Memorial turn right and continue along Goldsel Road to Green Court Road – approximately 800m. Do not take right turn into Green Court Road but continue straight on and just past the bus stop, you get a good view of 13

13. Moat Farm House At right angles to the main road, this is the oldest house in the village and dates from 1500. It is an example of a Kentish Wealden house, which had a central hall with smoke from the central hearth escaping through the roof. The second floor was reached by ladders which led to sleeping accommodation.

Moat Farm in the 1890s with the Everest children 2015

A little further on, past Moat Farm House, on your right-hand side, just after Appledene, you come to 14

14. The Red House This was built in 1902 by Edwin Vinson as a wedding present for his daughter Olga Felicity, on her marriage to Edward Jones. Having for many years been used by the Primary School, since the opening of the new classroom wing in 2010 it has reverted to private ownership.

2010 The next house on your right is 15

15. Canema Canema was built in the 1890s as a manse for the Baptist minister. ‘Canema’ is named after a slave plantation featured in Harriet Beecher Stow’s novel ‘Dared, a Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp’, of 1856. The central part of Canema is original, but in the mid-1990s it was extended on both sides.

Canema in the 1900s and 2008

Cross the main road into Seven Acres

16. Seven Acres

The land once formed part of Caleb Lee and Sons cold storage and fruit pulping site. It was acquired by North British Housing Association, now Places for People, to provide affordable rented homes. The development was built in 1986, here seen under construction.

Follow the road round to the right and at the end you will see no 45 facing you. Take the footpath on the right. At the end of the footpath, turn left into Eynsford Road. In approx 90m, on your left hand side, you come to 17 17. Baptist Church The Baptist Church was built in 1869, but the Baptist connection with Crockenhill goes back to the C17th. The earlier chapel was in Old Chapel Road. Behind the church a school was built in 1874, and ran by subscription from local Baptists until its closure. Following this the primary school at the top of the Green was built.

If you look at the bricks between the two doors at the side of the building, there are holes and scratch marks where the children sharpened their slate pencils to use on slate boards. You can also see the original boot scraper. Notice also the foundation stone on the front wall of the church.

On the opposite side of the road is the Baptist Burial ground. The earliest grave is that of William Wise (1897), 5 stones from the entrance on the right hand side. The ground was given to the Baptists by John Wood of The Mount to mark Queen Victoria’s Diamond Jubilee.

At the far end of the graveyard on your left hand side is a War Graves Commission headstone to Henry Charles Albert Andrews who was in the Royal Navy and died in action lst June 1944.

From the Baptist Church retrace your steps back along Eynsford Road to the footpath. On your left hand side on the opposite side of the road, immediately before All Souls’ Church (C of E), is the new Vicarage. Cross the road to 18

18. All Souls’ Church Before All Souls’ was built in 1851, villagers worshipped in Eynsford. The land was donated by Joseph Berens and the church called ‘All Souls’ in memory of his recently deceased brother Richard, who was Bursar of All Souls’ College Oxford. Note the rows of limes planted in the 1850s. The church, especially the interior, the lych gate and the tomb of Isabella Perceval (d.1860), (in front of the west door), who was a benefactress of the church, are all Grade 2 Listed as unspoilt examples of the Early English mid-C19th style.

Inside the church are plaques listing those who were killed in the First and Second World Wars. Follow the path around the front of the church to the back to find a War Graves Commission military headstone (see below) for Henry Jarrett (alias H. Cloud). He is not listed on the First World War plaque in the church, perhaps because while on sick leave in the village, he was accidentally shot dead with a bird-scaring gun by his nephew. Nevertheless he was given a full military-honours funeral. On retracing your steps, note the foundation stone on the lower corner of the church.

All Souls’ Church, 1862, with young lime trees, and Isabella Perceval’s new tomb On leaving the Church grounds look opposite, and either side of West View Road, is a row of terraced houses. To your right is 19 19. Church View, terraced housing with strange numbering There is no consistent house numbering in the village because farmers like John Wood from The Mount numbered the houses they provided for their workers according to the list on the rent books. Hence by the time the Edwardian terrace of Church View was built, numbers began at 81 and ended at 88.

If you look up, you will note that the chimney stacks on Church View Cottages, opposite the Church, have crosses on them. On the other side of West View Road, (where the continuation of house numbers from 89 will be found), no.106 has its original door furniture. From the church gate, cross Church Road into Main Road and in approx 45m on your left hand side is 20 20. Kingsnorth On the left opposite the road junction of the Broadway is a residential complex called ‘Kingsnorth’. Until the 1960s this was the site of the main village store - latterly run by the Kingsnorth family.

Kingsnorth Store in the snow of 1963, The Chequers Public House to the right.

The next building on your left hand side is 21

21. The Chequers Public House The earliest reference to the name of the pub dates from 1707. Maps since 1802 give the same footprint to the building, which is likely to be very old. Chequers can be from the chequered cloth used for early accountancy (hence Chancellor of the Exchequer), but for many country pubs it is derived from a drink made from the fruit of the chequer or wild service tree, (which can be seen later on in Harvestfield Park – no. 31).

In this early C20th postcard The Chequers 2015 is on the right, and beyond is Main Road At this point if you wish you can take refreshments in The Chequers Public House, or call in at the end of the walk. This point marks approximately half way around the trail.

There is also a tea and cake shop opposite, in the parade of shops, which opened in 2015.

From the Chequers Public House, cross Old Chapel Road and continue along Cray Road. Past the bus stop on your left is the entrance to 22

22. Sounds Lodge Sounds field name dates from at least Tudor times, when the Sound family lived in the village. In 1874 Thomas Wood built a large Victorian house, named Sounds Lodge, which was demolished in 1974 to make way for the present Sounds Lodge development. Some of the Victorian trees from the garden remain - e.g. monkey puzzle at the entrance.

Aerial view of Sounds Lodge House in 1974 prior to demolition.

Cray Road is immediately in front of the house with the entrance to the present Sounds Lodge to the left of the house.

Opposite the entrance to Sounds Lodge on the other side of Cray Road is the entrance to 23

23. The Mount This was designed for John Wood, brother of Thomas Wood, in 1886, by architect St. Pierre Harris. Remnants of the Victorian planting can be seen alongside Cray Road.

A little further on, on your right-hand side, opposite the Garage, is 24 24. Pear Tree cottages, 52 and 53 Cray Road Once the farm of the Mosyer family, both are listed. The frontages date back to the 1690s-1720s.

This 1902 photo of Pear Tree Cottages shows the outshot roof (sometimes called a cat slide) at the back, which is contemporary with the first build.

Turn left into Tylers Green Road. On your left about 50m along the road opposite no. 18 is - 25

25. The Old Foundry This was the site of Thomas Wood & Sons’ steam engine business founded in 1861, and still owned by the Wood family. Some of the original workshop machinery from the 1870s remains in situ in the large building.

Here is the view in the 1920s with the yard full of steam ploughs.

If you look through the side gate in Tylers Green Road you can see some living vans, used by the crews of the threshing machines and plough engines when travelling round far-off farms under contract.

Some of the newer houses opposite replaced earlier ones, like the ones nearby, due to damage wrought by a V2 flying bomb, which fell in Sounds Lodge grounds in February 1944.

Continue up Tylers Green Road. On your left opposite nos 38/40 you will see 26

26. Pearmain This house was built in 1899 by Thomas Wood for his daughter, Elizabeth Vinson, newly widowed with a young child, Miriam. It was on an orchard site, and an old Pearmain apple tree remained in the garden until it died.

A little further up on your right you come to Darns Hill. You can take a short detour up the track to see 27 27. Darns Hill Near the top of Darns Hill (approx 150m) on your right hand side, there is a closed Baptist Old Burying Ground which dates back to the 1690s when the nearest chapel was in . Later the ground was given to Crockenhill Baptist Church. It passed to the Parish Council in 1984 via ‘Jim’ (Charles Edwin ) Vinson.

The entrance gate dates from the 1880s The earliest tombstones are from the 1700s of the Cox family. William Cox, a farmer from Lullingstone gave the land for the burial ground. He lies in a chest tomb alongside two of his sons who predeceased him. Here is the headstone of one, William Cox junior, who died in 1715.

Retrace your steps back to Tylers Green Road and turn right. Continue along Tylers Green Road for approximately 200m and take the first turning left into Old Chapel Road

28. Old Chapel Road Immediately on your right when you turn into Old Chapel Road you will see yew trees (protected by Tree Preservation Orders), dating from the C18th, which once stood in the garden of the old farmhouse of Lashes Farm.

Before the Baptist chapel was built in Eynsford Road, a group of worshippers met in Old Chapel Road in premises owned by the blacksmith, and from 1801 there was a permanent chapel there.

Tracing from 1875 property deed showing location of previous Baptist Chapel Adjoining no. 17 Old Chapel Road, take the footpath on your right hand side into Barnfield Close. At the end of the footpath keep to the path to your right to another footpath between no. 7 and Rosslyn

29. Barnfield Close The alley way once was an ancient footpath across farmland, as seen in the Lullingstone Estate map of 1802 (below). The houses were built in the 1960s.

Map on the right shows the centre of Crockenhill in 1871 (Ordnance Survey map). Barnfield is in lower left corner, with footpath from Daltons Road to Old Chapel Road.

At the end of this footpath you reach Tylers Green Road Turn left and cross the road. Take the immediate right hand turn up Daltons Road. On your left about 100m up you will pass the entrance to Woodmount

30. Woodmount The land for council housing was provided by Mrs Jack Wood of the Mount - hence named Woodmount, which was built in the 1950s.

Continue along Daltons Road. Beside no. 28 take the track into Harvestfield Park. Go under overhead barrier and after approx 50m go through a pedestrian gate on your left hand side which takes you into the park

31. Harvestfield Park The name Harvestfield dates back to 1507 when, like much of Crockenhill, it was owned by the Priory of Dartford. In 1540 Henry VIII granted the land to the Hart family of Lullingstone where it remained until 1934. It was leased as allotment land from 1895 and was bought by the Parish Council in 1935.

With the fall in demand for allotments in the 1980s, much of the 25 acres became public open space, but one section remains exclusive to allotment holders.

Immediately inside the gate on your left hand side is a row of oak trees grown from acorns by the Women’s Institute and planted to commemorate the Millennium in 2000. The Lullingstone Estate Map (1802) (right) shows Lower and Upper Harvest-fields. Cross-field is now Woodmount and Clay hills with orchard now Newports. Daltons Fields farm area is now Highcroft Hall.

Just past the enclosed playground on your right is the Wild Service tree as mentioned under ‘The Chequers’ (No 21). Shown here from ‘The Mitchell Beazley Pocket Guide to Trees’ by Keith Rushforth (1983)

You may like to take the opportunity to take a short walk around Harvestfield Park which extends to nearly 25 acres. See map on the board at the entrance/exit. Keep to the footpath and go straight on with the cycle humps on your left and exit by the main gate at the end of the path into Harvest Way, by some garages. Just after the garages take the footpath on your right hand side, down some steps, which leads into Newports.

32. Newports There was an old cottage called Newports which was demolished to make way for the entrance to this early council housing site in the 1930s. The surname Newports is an old one dating back in the village to Tudor times.

A time bomb from a string jettisoned from a German plane in September 1940 destroyed several houses in the lower numbers of Newports (as in the 1947 aerial photograph). In the aerial photograph, housing built by the outbreak of War, is being joined by new houses at the far side. The rest of Newports was completed in the 1950s (except for very recent additions).

At the end of the footpath turn left and keep bearing left for 200m until you reach its junction with Church Road. Turn right into Church Road and continue for a short distance when the footpath ends. On your right you will see 33 33. Almshouses The wealthy Mosyer family used their money to benefit the people of Crockenhill. From 1850 Maria Mosyer, the last of the line, became the major benefactress of the church, and built the church school, as well as this row of almshouses in 1861 dedicated to her father. In front you can see the low stone bollards which were used to stop the steam engines causing damage to the wall. Note also the memorial stone on the front of the building.

Continue along Church Road. Adjacent to the Almshouses is 34

34. The Cottage Various features date this cottage back to 1600.

Pictured above left in 1870s when it was a farmhouse with William and Elizabeth Wood and family.

On the pillar capstone pictured above right between The Cottage and 1-4 Harnetts Close you can see Maria Mosyer’s initials carved “MM 1856”

Next to the Cottage is housing for the elderly called Harnetts Close, formerly Crockenhill Church School

35. Harnetts Close This was built on the site of Crockenhill Church School, demolished in 1960s to make way for housing for the elderly. Its name derives from the last and long-serving head of the school, Harvey Henry Harnett. The school was built in 1856 with money provided by Maria Mosyer on whose land it was built.

The lime trees were in the former playground and original railings can been seen to the left of Harnetts Close, along the side drive, next to Chaud Abri, amongst the hedgerow.

Architect’s plan of the church school c.1855

Further along Church Road just before All Souls’ Church, on your right is 36 36. Houghton House This was the original Vicarage, built in 1854. Note the grey and red brickwork fashionable at the time.

At the end of the road (with All Souls’ Church on your right) you are back into Main Road. Cross the road and turn left. Continue for approximately 50m turning right into The Broadway

37. The Shops For centuries a pond filled this space, until complaints about its foulness led to it being drained.

This postcard sent in 1906 shows the shops with the butcher’s and the baker’s delivery carts

The pond shown here in the 1890s, with the buildings of the forge at its side. To the left of the photograph are the cottages burnt down on the Village Green as mentioned in 2.

The pond site was used for a row of shops erected in the c.1890s/1900s by John Wood. Note the unusual feature that they are staggered to accommodate the rounded shape of the pond.

2015

On the opposite side of the road to the shops you will see 38 38. The Anchor & Hope Site A beer house called ‘Anchor & Hope’ stood here until subsidence, caused by erosion of chalk from underground streams, led to its demolition in 1973. Now it remains an open space since future subsidence cannot be ruled out.

This view dates from the early C20th. It shows the beer house, cottages, and the farmhouse, called ‘Fern House’, across the back. Fern House stood sideways onto the road, and the lime trees shown here are the only feature shown in the photograph that remains, now to be seen behind the bus stop.

Anchor and Hope site, 2015

Anchor and Hope in the early 1920s, with the first bus (1922)

From the shops cross the road and turn right. Take the first left into Stones Cross Road to return to the Village Hall

We hope you have enjoyed the walk and the brief glimpse into the past. If you want further information on Crockenhill please visit the website www.crockenhillpc.org.uk Meadow View, Main Road, with demolished house Westview with newer council houses 1930s ‘The Barracks’ beyond 1920s

The former vicarage, now Houghton House, Church Road, perhaps 1930s Almshouses, Church Road, 1920s

Eynsford Road from Chapel to Church 1900s The Village Green from Stones Cross Road 1920s

Crockenhill Parish Council in compiling this booklet has used its best endeavours to ensure that the information is correct but takes no responsibility for any error, omission or defect therein.

This publication should not be copied in its entirety or part thereof without the express permission of Crockenhill Parish Council. 9 Swanley Bypass Green Court Road

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Track to Harvestfield Park

1: Village Hall 14: The Red House 27: Darns Hill 2: Village Green 15: Canema 28: Old Chapel Road 3: Primary School 16: Seven Acres 29: Barnfield Close 4: Coal Tax Post 17: Baptist Church 30: Woodmount 5: Osier Pond 18: All Souls Church 31: Harvestfield Park 6: Marlpits 19: Church View 32: Newports 7: Tilecroft 20: Kingsnorth 33: Almshouses 8: Cricket Meadow & War Memorial 21: The Chequers Public House 34: The Cottage 9: Green Court Road 22: Sounds Lodge 35: Harnetts Close 10: Dibsdall Meadow 23: The Mount 36: Houghton House 11: Dibsdall Memorial 24: Pear Tree Cottages 37: The Shops 12: Goldsel Road 25: The Old Foundry 38: The Anchor & Hope 13: Moat Farm House 26: Pearmain

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