Searching for "Kensington St John the Baptist"

We could not match "Kensington St John the Baptist" in our simplified list of the main towns and villages, or as a postcode. There are several other ways of finding places within Vision of Britain, so read on for detailed advice and 13 possible matches we have found for you:

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  • If you are looking for hills, rivers, castles ... or pretty much anything other than the "places" where people live and lived, you need to look in our collection of Historical Gazetteers. This contains the complete text of three gazetteers published in the late 19th century — over 90,000 entries. Although there are no descriptive gazetteer entries for placenames exactly matching your search term (other than those already linked to "places"), the following entries mention "Kensington St John the Baptist":
    Place name County Entry Source
    CHELSEA CHELSEA , a London suburb, a parish, and a district in Middlesex. The suburb lies on the Thames, opposite Battersea and Imperial
    DERBY (West) Kensington, Stanley, Knotty-Ash, and other hamlets, and part of the borough and suburbs of Liverpool; contains a botanic garden, a zoological garden, a lunatic asylum, and a large industrial school; and was only a chapelry of Walton-on-the-Hill till 1847. Acres, 6, 123. Rated property, £232, 783. Pop. in 1841, 16, 864; in 1861, 52, 694. Houses, 9, 239. Pop. of the portion within Liverpool borough, in 1841. 9, 760: in 1861, 36, 527. Houses, 6, 378. The property is much subdivided. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Chester. Value Imperial
    GEORGE (St.) HANOVER-SQUARE GEORGE (St.) HANOVER-SQUARE , a parish, a sub-district, and a district, in Westminster, Middlesex. The parish is the largest Imperial
    HAMMERSMITH Kensington district, Middlesex. The suburb lies on the river Thames, 6 miles WSW of St. Pauls; is almost joined to London, through the medinm of Kensington; lies within the district of the Metropolitan Board of Works; has stations, with telegraph, on the Hammersmith and City railway, and on the Kew section of the North London railway; has post offices‡ in Broadway, King street, Dorcas terrace, and Starch green, a post office‡ in New road, and pillar boxes in Brook green, Fulham road, Hammersmith terrace, and the Grove, under London W.; and is a seat of petty sessions Imperial
    KENSINGTON St. Mary-K., £1, 242; of H. T., £639; of St. Mary-W. B., £300; of the others, not reported. Patron of St. Mary-K., St. John, St. James, H. T., and St.with-ST. A., the Bishop of L.; of St. B., the Vicar of St. Mary-K.; of St. Ph., the Rev. J. D. Clayton; of St. Peter, R. Martin, Esq.; of A. S., the Rev. Dr. Walker; of St. Mark, Miss Keye; of St. Mary-W. B., the Vicar of H. T.; of St. Paul and St. Peter, Onslow-square,J. Freake, Esq.; of St Imperial
    Kilmarnock Kilmarnock, a royal and police burgh in the SW corner of the parish just described, a seat of important manufactures Groome
    KNIGHTSBRIDGE KNIGHTSBRIDGE , a quondam hamlet, now a metropolitan suburb, and three chapelries, in the parishes of St. George-Hanover-square, St Imperial
    LIVERPOOL LIVERPOOL , a large seaport town on the S verge of Lancashire; the second for population and for commerce in England Imperial
    LONDON Kensington, Hammersmith, Fulham, Chelsea, St. George-Hanover-square, St. John-the-Evangelist-Westminster, St. Margaret-Westminster, St. Peter-Westminster, St. Martin-in-the-Fields, St. James Westminster, St. Marylebone, Hampstead, St. Pancras, Islington, StokeNewington, Hackney, St. George-Bloomsbury, St. Gilesin-the-Fields, St. Anne-Soho, St. Paul-Covent-garden, St. Mary-le-Strand, St. Clement-Daues, St. Andrew-Holborn-above-the-Bars, Clerkenwell, St. Luke, Shoreditch, Bethnal-green, Spitalfields, Whitechapel, Minories, St. George-in-the-East, Stepney, Limehouse, Bow, BromleySt.Leonard, Poplar, Christchurch-Southwark, St.SaviourSouthwark, St. Olave-Southwark, St. Thomas-Southwark, St. John-Horsleydown, Bermondsey, St. Georgethe-Martyr, Newington, Lambeth, Clapham Imperial
    MARYLEBONE MARYLEBONE , a parish, a district, and a borough, in Middlesex. The parish forms a compact portion of the metropolis; lies Imperial
    NOTTING-HILL St. John, St. Peter, All Saints, St. Mark, and St. Andrew; and were constituted in 1845, 1857, 1861, 1863, and 1867. Pop. of St. John in 1861, 15, 662; of St. Peter, 6, 660. Houses, 1, 913 and 981. The livings are vicarages in the diocese of London. Value, not reported. Patron of St. John, the Bishop of London; of St. Peter, R. Martin, Esq.; of All Saints, Dr. Walker; of St. Mark, Miss Kaye. St. John's churchstands on the site of the Hippodrome; and is a cruciformstructure in the early English style, with a good spire. St. Peter Imperial
    Stirling Stirling (old forms Strivelin, Striveling, Strivelyn, Strewelin, Sterling), a market town, a royal and parliamentary burgh, and the county town Groome
    WESTMINSTER Kensington palace and to Chelsea hospital on the W; it measures about 3½ miles from E to W, and from ½ mile to 2 miles from N to S; it stands compactly, all round, with other parts of the metropolis; it contains St. James' park, the Green park, Hyde park, and 16 squares; and, except for including these open places and some minor ones, it is all completely edificed. It took its name from a great minster, founded in the early part of the 7th century, and called West-Minster in distinction from the original St. Paul Imperial
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