Current developments
The most important new development on the website is the provision of a new A-Z index. We hope this new index will allow website visitors to more easily find pages on topics of interest to them, and even to suggest new topics (if they do not find the information they are looking for). Many thanks to David Lewis and Joyce Ainslie for the painstaking work in compiling the index and cross-checking all the links.
A new page has been added to describe the recently restored great south window of Canterbury Cathedral. This is the largest window in the cathedral containing many stained glass images (of the ancestors of Christ) that are hundreds of years older than the original 600-year old gothic window. While gaining access to the catehdral is still limited, why not visit the new page to view some of these ancestors?
There is a new page on the south east transept of the cathedral and another on the prolific children's author, G A Henty, and an update to the page on the Poor Priests' Hospital.
We have also made avalable a list of nearly 100 talks delivered to CHAS members from 2004 to 2021.
Basic counts
number of site visitors 940 per day (based on Moonfruit counts)
size of site (MB) 600 MB
number of pages 894
number of images 3220
Past progress
A brief checklist of past developments follows, with hyperlinks to the current site:
2009 and 2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2014
2014
2015
2015
2015
2017
2018 and 2019
2020
DL/IO
May 2021
site created covering membership, meetings, excursions, etc
launch of first 100 pages of city history
new sections on Street Scenes and on the Cathedral
new section on Research topics
won Hayes award for best writing on Canterbury history
new section on oral history
reproduction of Canterbury Times articles (to 2016)
major re-formatting of site for ipads and tablets
reproduction of booklets on St Alphege local history trails
reproduction of past Society publications
new section on city Architecture
extension of various sections in Street Scenes
public release of Geoff Downer's pages on cathedral Building Stones