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A History of the County of Essex
… and granted it to Sir Anthony Browne, master of the horse, and his (second) wife, Elizabeth. None of Browne's …
A History of the County of Essex
… with transepts, characterized by semi-circular windows and flying-buttresses. In 1875 the Union church opened a Sunday … Bridge) was over 300. 119 The church was wrecked by flying bombs in 1944, and, instead of rebuilding, the …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… for a short time, and was present at the celebration of a horse-race. The township comprises 3705 acres, chiefly arable …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… remarkable as being generally manufactured of old nails of horse-shoes, formed into bars. Queen Elizabeth, among other …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northamptonshire
… rubble internally, early 19th-century. (17) Former Horse and Jockey Inn, coursed rubble walls with much … 18th-century but with 19th-century roof. To W. of the yard are the remains of the Tithe Barn with high weathered …
A History of the County of Oxford
… rear access to the workhouses and workshops in the large yard behind the house was provided by a corporation lease of … Alderman John Tasker (d. 1741) the house was the White Horse. 9 It was still so called in the 1780s but was the … acquired c. 1814 by Morrell's Oxford brewery and was the Horse and Jockey, later Horse and Groom, closed by the 1860s. …