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Displaying 17031 - 17040 of 17142
A History of the County of Essex
… succession his younger brother William (1619) and William's son Richard (1645). 6 In 1824 the next presentation was … duchess of Bedford (d. 1920). 10 In 1930 the duchess's executors sold it to the diocese, for vesting in the … (Colettines). 78 It is a late-18th-century building of brown brick having a two-storeyed front of five bays and a …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Dorset
… Woodlands 25 WOODLANDS (0509) (O.S. 6 ins., SU 00 NE, SU 00 NW, SU 01 SW) Woodlands covers … above O.D. the land rises gently, on Chalk, to a low N.-S. ridge capped by Reading Beds, about 250 ft. above O.D. … barn walls have cornices as in the house. (15) Charlton Dairy Farm (02561062), house, of two storeys with attics, has …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… the parish. The living is a rectory, valued in the king's books at 13. 1. 10., and in the patronage of the Crown: the … Woodmancott WOODMANCOTT, a hamlet, in the parish of Bishop's-Cleeve, union of Winchcomb, hundred of Cleeve, Eastern … the surface hilly. The living is annexed to the rectory of Brown-Candover: the tithes have been commuted for 168. 10., …
A History of the County of Sussex
… manor or at Wick and Sands manors together were worth £3 8 s. in 1318. 90 Nine copyholds of Wickensands manor were … C 134/62, no. 2. B.L. Add. MS. 57311, ff. 2v., 3v.-4. E.S.R.O., SAS/I 183 (TS. cat.). K.A.O., U 269/E 341, f. 42v. W.S.R.O., Add. MS. 17101. E.S.R.O., SAS/EG 192 (TS. cat.); cf. …
A History of the County of Oxford
… (approx. 19 in. to 1 mile). Quitrents imposed on the town's original burgages survived until the 1930s. They were … and Jane Gibbs (d. 1686, 1692). 2 From 1723, when Gabriel Brown became innkeeper, the George prospered; in 1738 Edward … Harley, earl of Oxford, found it 'a very good house'. 3 Brown (d. 1739) was succeeded by his wife Anne and nephew …
A History of the County of Oxford
… for the Poor Municipal Charities. The corporation's first almshouses were successors to those founded in the … but his debts exceeded the value of the estate. 55 Sophia Brown (d. 1859) by will of 1830 gave to the corporation a house in Brown's Lane to provide doles to the poor in memory of her …
A History of the County of Oxford
… and burial ground were reconsecrated in 1336 the bishop's licence was granted not to the rector but to the vill. 36 … rector, and a silver almsplate was given by Sophia Brown in 1845. 41 The churchyard contains several … Oxon. a 39, f. 170; Boro. Mun., framed drawing of Lancelot Brown's plan to crenellate park wall: reproduced in D. Green, …
A History of the County of Oxford
… developed at a gate into the royal park. The town's curving west boundary perhaps represents the line of the … west. There was building, too, on the later Park Lane, Brown's Lane, Rectory Lane, and probably Chaucer's Lane, … in the centre of the town a large plot at the corner of Brown's Lane and Market Place, later the site of Fletcher's
A History of the County of Oxford
… owed over a third of the total rental. 70 The hospital's estate had been granted in the mid 13th century by … 18th century, and possibly from the mid 17th when Thomas Brown, butcher, was occupant. 92 No. 48 Oxford Street, where … Gt. Exhibition, pp. 57, 107. Refs. supplied by Mrs. E. T. Brown-Grant. E. T. Brown-Grant, 'A Clockmaking Family', Oxon. …
A History of the County of Oxford
… master, who was to be a good preacher. 88 In 1587 Cornwell's relict Mary Dolman gave money to trustees to buy property … to the trustees in 1598 in final settlement of Cornwell's gift. 91 A sum of £50 given earlier by the Dolmans directly … 29 and a brief revival under the mastership of Thomas Brown (1876-80), who increased the roll to c. 35 probably by …
Displaying 17031 - 17040 of 17142