| DOVER | Site Of England's white chalk cliffs |
| DARTFORD | Town near London, site of England's first paper mill |
| ESSEX | Site of England's Colchester Castle |
| EPSOMDOWNS | Site of England's most prestigious horserace |
| SEVENFOLD | Disposed of round flat note like sisters of chalk cliffs (9) |
| SISTERS | Seven -; chalk cliffs forming part of the South Downs (7) |
| SEVENSISTERS | A tube station, group of chalk cliffs or the Pleiades |
| GYPSUM | Soft, white, chalk-like substance used to make plaster of Paris (6) |
| BEACHYHEAD | Chalk cliffs here are killing - hurting inside |
| LIME | White, chalk-like product for applying to soil - or a citrus! (4) |
| WELLS | One of England's smallest cities, site of the Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew and Bishop's Palace (5) |
| ROSERED | Fairytale sister of Snow-White; or, similar to the crimson of Ilex aquifolium berries, pillar boxes, poinsettia bracts, pomegranate "jewels" or robins' breasts, the colour of England's national flower |
| BETHLEM | A variation of the name of England's first hospital for people with mental illnesses, part of the hospital's presentday name (7) |
| UNREASON | The Abbot of ___, Scottish equivalent of England's Lord of Misrule |
| ROSETTE | A bloom-like carving, cut diamond, knot of ribbons, leopard spot, pattern, wheel window, whorl of leaves or other thing reminiscent of England's national flower (7) |
| CHURCHILLDOWNS | *Prime minister of England's bouts of depression during WWII? |
| OXBRIDGE | Portmanteau of two of England's ancient universities (8) |
| SHREWSBURY | The location of one of England's bloodiest battles, fought in 1403, in which Henry 'Hotspur' Percy d |
| MARTINPETERS | Scorer of one of England's goals in the 1966 World Cup Final (6,6) |
| HORN | The Norfolk ... is one of England's oldest breeds of sheep (4) |