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A History of the County of Somerset
… disbanded before 1926 and its banner hangs in the parish church. 54 There was a reading room in the village in 1920. … including 70 children at each service. 31 The medieval building, evidently dating from the 12th century and … solid and drift, sheet 312 (1973 edn.). Proc. Som. Arch. Soc. lxxvi, suppl. 103. S.R.O., Q/SR Mich. 1864; S.R.S. …
Survey of London
… and date of structure. Corunna House is a simple Georgian building of three storeys dating back to the early years of …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northamptonshire
… and were arranged around a large courtyard. The main building, a double-corridor villa, was built in about AD 100 … (1958), 140; 49 (1959), 115; Wolverton and District Arch. Soc. Newsletter, 4 (1959), 7; 7 (1962), 2 4; Britannia, 1 … probably consisted of a single street extending from the church in the S.W. to The Green. The Main Street was blocked …
A History of the County of Northampton
… field system. 17 In addition, the earliest reference to a church at Furtho suggests that the undertenant may have been … there were only 410 residents and in 1961 405. Limited new building lifted the figure to 496 in 1981, still only … 342. The Beauchamp Cartulary Charters 1100-1268 (Pipe R. Soc., N.S. xliii), 97. Ibid., 99. Ibid., xxvii-xxxii. Cal. …
Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire
… of meadow, a pasture wood one qu. long, and two broad, Soc. This was William Peverells fee; but here was another … and Bullwell, to find three Chaplains, two in the Church of St. Katherin of Cossale, and the third in the said …
A History of the County of Somerset
… ridge and beginning some 2.5 km. due south of the parish church, was added as an allotment under inclosure in 1807. … Lane were rebuilt on old sites. Later in the 19th century building spread northwards, in part influenced by the … M. Williams, 'Notes on . . . Cossington'. Proc. Som. Arch. Soc. xlvii. 171-2. S.R.O., D/P/coss 2/1/1-6. Ibid. D/D/Ca …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… net income, 58; patron, the Vicar of Kingston, to which church this was once a daughter church: the tithes are appropriate to the Dean and Chapter of Bristol, and have been commuted for 68. The church contains some interesting monuments to the Stowells, …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Cambridgeshire
… N.W. corner of the Rectory moat and immediately E. of the church. The parish extends only to 970 acres of boulder clay, … mansard roof carried over service outshuts on the W. The building was subsequently cased in white brick and enlarged. … College, Cambridge; see also W. J. Corbett, R. Hist. Soc. Trans., n.s. XI (1897), 67); enclosure map (C.R.O.); air …
Survey of London
… of this, and it seems probable that there was neither building nor way on this part of the glebe, until its … grounds of Cheyne House, and on the west is a dilapidated building dating from about the same period. Cheyne House was …
A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… 28 Two sets of almshouses were later supported, one in Church End built in 1816, 29called Moreton's almshouses, the … known as Little London. 30There were eight almshouses in Church End in 1851. 31 In the early 1960s they were allowed … each of two poor householders, and the remaining half for church purposes. 45In the 1860s the eleemosynary part of the …
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