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A History of the County of Hampshire
… well placed on a river navigable by small craft to the foot of St. Giles Down, near but not too near the … afterwards be apprentices to any of the company should be admitted to the same on payment of 10 s. 'when he beginneth … the other to the chamber of the city. Any person hereafter admitted who should not have been so apprenticed should pay …
A History of the County of Hampshire
… extended premises in the Sustern Spital, a hospital for women, a dependency of the monastery on the west, and the … houses, one in St. Thomas' Street (now being moved to Kingsgate Park), another in Kingsgate Street, and another … towards the end of the century, when the college declined to expand to the north by annexing the 17th-century house of …
A History of the County of Hampshire
… existence of Winchester owed its first beginnings to its important geographical and political status 3 rather … was agreed that 'the talowe chandelar which is and shalbe admitted to serve the inhabitants of the city of tallow … so wise and free, the citizens so civil and faithful, the women so fair and pure' . . . . . 212 Only once was there a …
Survey of London
… stood on the south side of the street until it was moved to its present site at the corner of Cleveland Street and … Marcey was rated for the school in 1770. It was removed to its present site in Hampstead Road in 1790. John Goodge … Skinners, Merchant Taylors, Ironmongers and Apothecaries Companies. No. 36. 1779, Henry Morland, probably Henry Robert …
A History of the County of Berkshire
… the king by Ralf son of Seifrid, but had formerly belonged to Harold the Earl; 'then it was taxed for 5 hides, now for 4 … thus a new work, and there are no grounds for assuming it to be older than the Conquest or that any part of it occupies … when living in State apartments to which the public were admitted. It was therefore decided to construct new lodgings …
A History of the County of Berkshire
… but are interesting as representing the traditions as to the early history of Windsor which were current in the … castle from 1 o'clock until the evening, when they were admitted, being confined for the night in a tower 'where they … involved the expulsion from the castle of a number of poor women and children, who in their destitute state were …
Survey of London Monograph
… Windsor Herald WINDSOR HERALD The office of Windsor is said to have been instituted for the service of the Order of the … Croix 1524 aged 16; servant of Lord Chancellor Audley; admitted Gray's Inn 1529 (? 1521); Windsor 1534; attached to … NORGATE Norgate Windsor, pat. 28, cr. 31 October 1633, admitted by Parliamentary Commissioners 8 November 1648. …
A History of the County of Stafford
… for the poor Charities for the poor Almshouses for five women built in Hawfield Lane in 1887 were endowed by William … a Scheme of 1909 their administration was transferred to the trustees of the Consolidated Charities of … (d. 1922) left money for the erection of almshouses for women, and by 1925 two houses had been built in Wheatley …
A History of the County of Stafford
… as part of Staffordshire. 2 It was wholly transferred to Staffordshire in 1894, when the remaining part of the … on the north and east sides of Dale brook was added to the adjoining Derbyshire civil parish of Newton Solney. 3 … treats the former township, including the part added to Newton Solney in 1894 up to that date. Winshill township …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… Ansfrid de Cormeilles who had received it on his marriage to a niece of Walter de Lacy, 45 although Walter's son Hugh … of the honor among the daughters of Walter de Cormeilles, to Godfrey of Craycombe who married Alice. 48 From 1303, … dead by 1276 but his son, Henry (d. 1279), although admitted to the king's peace in 1268, does not seem to have …
Displaying 39101 - 39110 of 39242