Dorking
Dorking is a town on the A24 road in Surrey, England. It is the setting of the 1871 novel, The Battle of Dorking.
Dorking Media
Simplified geological cross section of the western Weald, showing how the land was uplifted to form the Weald-Artois anticline (dashed lines) and the strata as they are today (solid lines).
An engraving of Deepdene House (1842) by the illustrator Thomas Allom (1804–1872)
Dorking Deepdene railway station (then known simply as "Deepdene"), photographed in June 1964
Castle Mill on the River Mole at Pixham, painted by Wilmot Pilsbury in 1898
A female Dorking chicken[note 1]
The mock-Tudor arch leading from South Street to Rose Hill
The 14-storey Linden Lea tower block was built as part of the Goodwyns estate in 1965.
The north transept of the 12th century medieval parish church, demolished c. 1830.
The Grade II listed United Reformed Church, built 1834.
- A veteran sergeant in the Dorking Home Guard cleans his Tommy gun at the dining room table, before going on parade, 1 December 1940. H5850.jpg
A veteran sergeant in the Dorking Home Guard cleaning a*Tommy gun (December 1940)
References
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