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A History of the County of Gloucester
… The income was not fully used and a surplus of £342 3 s. 8 d. existed in 1828. 13 In 1834 a school was built by … and partly by subscription, including £500 from E. J. D. Paul. 18 In 1910 the Seys and Bridges charities were … buildings were erected and the school, called St. Dominic's, was placed on an established footing with 50 pupils. 24 …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… manor passed to his son, also John, 52 who held a knight's fee at Woodchester in 1285. 53 John died in 1297 and was … It was apparently acquired in the 18th century by Samuel Paul (d. 1768). His cousins and joint devisees, John Paul of Tetbury and Obadiah Paul, owned it with an estate of …
The Environs of London
… free from the payment of the same, when they came to God's board, might say a Pater noster and an Ave for his soul, … T. D.; Thomas Jones, S. T. D.; Thomas Warmester, S. T. D.; Paul Knell, M. A.; John Cooke; Ja. Armachensis 43; Robert … at this place; he was afterwards under-master of St. Paul's school 50. John Fowlke, Esq. of Glaybury, anno 1686, …
A History of the County of Essex
… committee bought the freehold of the premises. 15 St. Paul's Church of England school, Woodford Bridge, was opened in … in 1968 when the boys school was completed. 39 St. Paul's Roman Catholic secondary (modern) school was opened in …
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 … new district chapelry was created, when the church of ST. PAUL, Manor Road, was built in 1854. 58 C. B. Waller, who as … had been mainly responsible for raising the money for St. Paul's, became the first vicar. He was succeeded by his son, …
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 … to the original building plots. 94 Quitrents rose from 36 s. 5 d. in 1230 to 43 s. in the 1260s, c. 45 s. in 1279, and … Before later encroachments it was unusually wide, almost a chain, and therefore comprised roughly an acre. 18 Taken …
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 … twentieth, c. 43 contributors paid a total of only c. 3 5 s., less than nearby Hanborough or any Oxfordshire market … star for the duke of Marlborough cost 50 gn., and a 2 oz. chain sold in France for 170. 80 The craft's introduction to …
A History of the County of Oxford
… its customs were ancient. The plots laid out at the town's foundation were held by burgage tenure, 76 and the … Woodstock, whose bailiff was accountable for the borough's rents, market tolls, and profits of court. 79 In King … during that of Gamaliel Bobart in 1775. A mayor's gold chain and enamelled badge with the borough arms were …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… of Redbornestoke, union and county of Bedford, 4 miles (S. W.) from Bedford; containing 1122 inhabitants. It … elevation. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king's books at 13. 6. 8., and has a net income of 236; the … Upper division of the hundred of Dudstone and King's-Barton, union, and E. division of the county, of …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… cathedral, of which the only one now remaining is Edgar's tower. In 1041, a tax imposed by Hardicanute excited an … But by far the loftiest tract is the Malvern hills, a chain extending from north to south, upon a base about six … in 1304, with a fair on the festival of St. Peter and St. Paul. The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the …
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