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St Peter and St Paul, Bromley

Church of England church buildings in the London Borough of BromleyChurches bombed by the Luftwaffe in LondonDiocese of RochesterGrade II* listed buildings in the London Borough of BromleyGrade II* listed churches in London
History of the London Borough of BromleyRebuilt churches in the United Kingdom
St Peter and St Paul, Church Road, Bromley geograph.org.uk 1766695
St Peter and St Paul, Church Road, Bromley geograph.org.uk 1766695

St Peter and St Paul is a church in the town of Bromley, Borough of Bromley, in south east London. Known familiarly as Bromley Parish Church, it is not far from Bromley High Street and approximately halfway between Bromley North and Bromley South railway stations. The church is part of the Diocese of Rochester within the Church of England. Largely destroyed by bombing during the Second World War, St Peter and St Paul was rebuilt in the 1950s. It has been Grade II* listed since 1955.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Peter and St Paul, Bromley (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Peter and St Paul, Bromley
Church Road, London Plaistow (London Borough of Bromley)

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Wikipedia: St Peter and St Paul, BromleyContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.405 ° E 0.0131 °
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Address

Bromley Parish Church of St Peter & St Paul (Bromley Parish Church)

Church Road
BR2 0EG London, Plaistow (London Borough of Bromley)
England, United Kingdom
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St Peter and St Paul, Church Road, Bromley geograph.org.uk 1766695
St Peter and St Paul, Church Road, Bromley geograph.org.uk 1766695
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Nearby Places

White Hart Field

White Hart Field was a cricket ground in Bromley in south-east London. The ground, which was in the county of Kent until 1965, was on an area of open space and farm land which stretched from Bromley Palace to Widmore Green. The area was used regularly for cricket in the 18th century and the cricket field was at the back of the White Hart Inn which it was named after, although the only recorded matches on the ground took place in the 1840s.Teams representing Kent played two matches on the ground in 1841 and 1842 against an England team. The second match, which took place in August 1842, marks the first match which Kent County Cricket Club played after the official formation of the club during the 1842 Canterbury Cricket Week. These two matches were retrospectively awarded first-class cricket status. The final recorded match on the ground took place in 1847 when the Gentlemen of Kent played the Gentlemen of Surrey. The ground was the home ground of Bromley Cricket Club between 1856 and 1886.The field where the ground was located was in private ownership until 1897 when it was donated to the town of Bromley to mark the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Victoria with part of the field becoming an ornamental park. Originally named Victoria Gardens, the site of the ground is now part of Queens Gardens managed by Bromley Borough Council alongside The Glades shopping centre. The area is no longer used for cricket and the ground itself is no longer physically in existence although a plaque marks the former use of the gardens.