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A History of the County of Sussex
… estates. In the north-west in the early 17th century Mr. Shelley's wood 32 was presumably the demesne woodland of Binsted manor, until then owned by Sir John Shelley, 33 and in the north-east corner the Queen's wood, so … 97 Thereafter the manor descended in the Michelgrove and Shelley families with Michelgrove in Clapham. Following the …
A History of the County of Sussex
… Thomas Carpender, 16 and he alienated it in 1561 to Thomas Shelley, 17 who promptly sold it to Sir Richard Sackville, by …
A History of the County of Essex
… its upkeep. 17 In 1618 it was said that Bobbingworth and Shelley shared the responsibility for the highway leading from Ongar via Shelley Bridge to Moreton. 18 This road evidently then, as now, lay partly in Bobbingworth, partly in Shelley, and partly on the boundary between these two …
Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters
… dat &c. 53 Jacob Pavett filius Johannis Pavett nuper de Shelley in Com Essex agr. defct po: se appren Richardo Alnutt …
A History of the County of Sussex
… of John Michelgrove was seised when she married John Shelley, and which they settled in 1511 on their son William …
Alumni Oxonienses
… 19; B.C.L. 3 Feb., 1624-5, D.C.L. 30 June, 1630, rector of Shelley, Essex, 1621, and of St. Faith's, London, 1628, …
A History of the County of Somerset
… a chalice, paten, and flagon of c. 1675 by Charles Shelley and a dish or paten of 1757. 81 Marriages celebrated …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… townships of Cartworth, Foulston, Hepworth, Kirk-Burton, Shelley, Shepley, Thurstonland, Wooldale, and part of …