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BROADSTAIRS , a watering- place, in the Isle ofSee also: Thanet See also: parliamentary division of Kent, See also: England, 3 M
.
S.E. of See also: Margate, on. the See also: South-Eastern & See also: Chatham railway
.
Pop. of See also: urban See also: district, Broadstairs and St See also: Peter's (19or) 6466
.
From 1837 to 1851 Broadstairs was a favourite summer resort of See also: Charles Dickens, who, in a sketch called " Our
See also: English Watering-Place," described it as a place " See also: left high and dry by the See also: tide of years." This seaside See also: village, with its " semicircular sweep of houses," See also: grew into a considerable See also: town owing to the influx of summer visitors, for whose entertainment there are, besides the " Albion " mentioned by Dickens, numerous hotels and boarding-houses, See also: libraries, a bathing establishment and a See also: fine See also: promenade
.
Dickens' residence was called Fort See also: House, but it became known as See also: Bleak House, through association with his novel of that name, though this was written after his last visit to Broadstairs in 1851
.
Broadstairs has a small pier for fishing-boats, first built in the reign of See also: Henry VIII
.
An archway leading down to the
See also: shore bears an inscription showing that it was erected by See also: George Culmer in 1540, and not far off is the site of a See also: chapel of the Virgin, to which See also: ships were accustomed to See also: lower their top-sails as they passed
.
St Peter's parish, lying on the landward See also: side of Broadstairs, and included in the urban district, has a See also: church dating from the 12th to the end of the 16th century
.
Kingsgate, on the
See also: North See also: Foreland, north of Broadstairs on the See also: coast, changed its name from St Bartholomew's See also: Gate in honour of Charles II.'s landing here with the duke of See also: York in 1683 on his way from See also: London to See also: Dover
.
Stonehouse, close by, now a preparatory school for boys, was the residence of Archbishop See also: Tait, whose wife established the orphanage here
.
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