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An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Essex
… and a door of original linen-fold panelling. d(25). Red Lion Inn, 100 yards S.W. of (24), was built early in the … Hill Bridge, 250 yards W. of the church. The Barn is of red brick and was formerly a house with central hall and … head of the same form. The Wall, adjoining the road, is of red brick, and has buttresses on the inner side; it is of …
Records relating to the Barony of Kendale
… de Bethum of a plea that he with Hugh Le Esquier, Simon de la Croye, Adam son of Osbert, William son of Osbert, Adam …
A History of the County of Oxford
… America, presumably exporting primarily through London. Red- and blue-dyed blankets and duffields were traded for …
A History of the County of Oxford
… fined in 1291. 13 In 1282 a Witney man owned property in 'la boucherie' (presumably the butchers' shambles) in Oxford, …
A History of the County of Oxford
… that it would halve employment and viewing it 'as sly as a cow at a bastard calf', though in 1838 John Early alleged …
A History of the County of Oxford
… which time there was a public house there, 278 and small red-brick terraces further south on Burford Road, overlooking …
A History of the County of Oxford
… Henry Dorne (d. 1785), besides his own house, owned the Red Lion and at least thirteen dwellings mostly along Corn … three building workers, and others including a cow-keeper and a traction-engine driver. Occupants of … a Young Men's Social Club based at Church Green, and a Red Triangle Club with clubrooms on High Street, which held …
A History of the County of Oxford
… town inspectors continued to appoint a 'blue-coated and red-collared beadle'. 174 Witney was said to be 'very … Infirmary in Oxford was acquired from the British Red Cross Society in 1923 and was replaced in 1934, partly …
A History of the County of Oxford
… to form altar recesses. In 1867 traces of white and of red or brown colouring were discovered on the splays of the … beneath the west side of the tower, was probably the 'red rood' before which a parishioner asked to be buried in …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… place, which takes its distinctive affix from Gilbert de la Ley, its proprietor in the reign of Henry II., was … An hospital for five lepers was founded by Gilbert de la Ley, of which the only memorial now remaining is a pointed …
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