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Oast Houses and KilnHop oast houses and kiln, Kent, England
Oasthouses at Whitbreads Hop Gardens, Paddock Wood, Kent. Date: circa 1930s
Drying Hops 1906Three men drying hops inside a Kentish oast house
Toll House on Putney Bridge, LondonOld Toll House at the Northern end of Putney Bridge, London. Built by local master carpenter Thomas Phillips to a design by architect Sir Jacob Acworth
Oast House in Kent
An Oast House in Kent Victorian period
The Hop Garden, Wrotham, Kent Date: 1875
Oast Houses by Terry Whitworth
Coaching/winter with oast house by Savile Lumley
Landscape Scene of Hop Picking 1858Hop-picking, mainly in Kent and Sussex in early part of September and ends towards the end of October. Date: 1858
Interior of Oast House, Kent, England. Showing the Hops Floor Date: 1910s
Oast House - Hop Gardens, Paddock Wood, KentOast House - Hop Gardens, Paddock Wood, Tonbridge, near Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England. For Whitbreads Brewery Date: 1920s
Oast Houses, Chestfield, KentOast Houses, Chestfield, Whitstable, near Herne Bay, Kent, England. Date: 1910s
Oast House, Maidstone, Kent, England. Showing Horse & Cart with Hops Date: 1908
Load of Hops at Oast House, Kent, England. Date: 1900s
Oast House, Horham, SussexOast House, Horham, Heathfield, near Uckfield, Sussex, England. Date: 1937
Harvesting scene with laden cartHarvesting scene showing a cart laden with hay, and two oasthouses in the background
Oast houses, Beckley Furnace, East SussexOast houses at Beckley Furnace, East Sussex
Kentish HarvestHarvest time in a Kentish farmyard, with stacks of hay being built and the typical oast houses in the background, near Cranbrook, Kent, England. Date: 1950s
Ploughing field 1930s
Oast Houses 1908Oast houses and hops being taken for drying. Date: 1908
Oast Houses, East SussexA fine cluster of Oast Houses (a building designed for the drying of hops) although these particular ones are to be found in East Sussex, near to Hastings
Parish Workhouse, Frittenden, KentA large timber framed building that once served as the Frittenden parish workhouse, Kent. An oast house stands at the left
Kentish Oast HousesThese familiar landmarks of Kent are the red brick and tiled hop kilns used for drying hops after harvesting. This one sits beside the village pond
Fine Haystacks in KentA fine stackyard on a farm in Staplehurst, Kent. The stacks are shaped like round huts which compliment the oast houses in the background
Kentish SceneryEvery spring the cherry orchards around Newington, near Sittingbourne, Kent, England, exhibit a wonderful display of blossom