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A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… 'staith', meaning such parts of the banks of a watercourse or sea beach as were used for a regular landing-place for men or goods. Staithes were quite common in East Anglia, e.g. the … Stith is mentioned in Domesday ( Lines. Domesday, ed. Foster and Longley (Lines. Rec. Soc. xix), 184) as a socland …
A History of the County of Sussex
… cover remained in 1978 in the wide strips of wood, or 'rews', which divided the fields. The home park on the … (1762); Par. 211/1/1/1, loose letter; Par. 211/1/1/3. Foster, Alum. Oxon.; W.S.R.O., Par. 211/1/1/3; Par. 211/1/2/1. Evans, Worthing (1814), ii. 157. Foster, Alum. Oxon. W.S.R.O., Ep. I/22A/2 (1844, 1865); Ep. …
A History of the County of Leicestershire
… and was 50 in 1931. 14 Wistow Hall, which may be built on or near the site of the earlier medieval house, retains the … finials, kneelers, and large lateral stacks remained more or less unaltered until after the end of the 18th century. 18 … (Rec. Com), iv. 300. Linc. Episcopal Records, ed. C. W. Foster, 265; Assoc. Archit. Soc. Rep. & Papers, xxiv. 468. …
A History of the County of Oxford
… gable to the street, perhaps of the late 15th or early 16th century. No. 49 Market Square is a … the town hall, was probably the 'new built' house or tenement fronted with brick mentioned in 1739. 13 The … is visible, but a few examples of probably late 18th- or early 19th-century brickwork exist, as at No. 34 Corn …
A History of the County of Oxford
… not all early adherents necessarily lived within the town or parish. For much of the 18th century Dissent, though … being largely through association with the Independents or Congregationalists. 10 From the 1760s, however, the … neo-Gothic chapel, which, with a nearby Independent or Congregationalist chapel built in 1828, symbolised the …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Northamptonshire
… of internal features, including at least two penannular or ring ditches, probably hut-circles. Two other … pottery has been found, perhaps relating either to (12) or to (23) ( Beds. Arch. J., 3 (1966), 6). a(14) Roman … J. Northants. Mus. and Art Gall., 10 (1974), 38; inf. P. Foster). On a map of the parish of 1774 and on the Enclosure …
A History of the County of Oxford
… house, and the 8 dissenters returned in 1676 and the 3 or 4 returned in the 1680s were probably Baptists. 69 A … His followers attended the service at Ladson's house, or went to his chapel in Oxford. 71 Applications for meeting … Recusants', O.A.S. Rep. (1924), 18, 20, 32-3, 35, 42. M. Foster, 'Gloucester Hall', Oxoniensia, xlvi. 106-9; V.C.H. …
A History of the County of Shropshire
… 500 metres south-east of Wombridge church in 1847. 11 Four or five ploughteams belonged to William Charlton's Wombridge … 1818 the Charltons' Wombridge mines were leased to James Foster, and in 1852 to John Bennett & Co. 43 Bennett died in … major new iron-making enterprise began in 1818 when James Foster, the eminent Midland ironmaster, leased mines at …
Alumni Oxonienses
… July, 1606; rector of Stanton Fitzwarren, Wilts, 1625; see Foster's Index Eccl.; for an account of his son John, see Calamy, i. 292; & Foster's Index Eccl. Woodcoke, Anton B.A. 26 Feb., 1572-3; … March, 1685-6, aged 20. [ 16] Woodcock, Lawrence (Wudcocke or Wodecocke) fellow New Coll. 1508-20, from St. …
A History of the County of Essex
… where a branch of his family owned land; William ad aquam, or atte Ree, was one of a family from which Ray House derived … and Chigwell, and his name indicates that the bury or manor-house was at one time in this corner of the village, … Ivy House dating from the early 19th century, where Edward Forster the younger lived from 1834 until his death in 1849, …
Displaying 7911 - 7920 of 7973