Search

Displaying 31 - 40 of 1242
A History of the County of Sussex
… death in 1652 the rape passed to his son Thomas, a lunatic from 1653, who was restored to the dukedom of Norfolk …
History Theses 1970-2014: Historical research for higher degrees in the universities of the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland
… Britain Categories: Britain and Ireland; 19th Century The lunatic asylum in British India, 1857-80: colonialism, … Colonial and imperial policy and administration, in India; Lunatic asylums, in India; Insanity, in India; India; …
A History of the County of Oxford
… and early 19th, sometimes for parishioners in hospitals or lunatic asylums in London and elsewhere. 15 In 1793 the …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… places, and contains a population of 31,767. The county lunatic asylum, a handsome brick building on the road to …
Benson (Including Fifield, Preston, Crownmarsh, Roke)
A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 18, Benson, Ewelme, and the Chilterns (Ewelme Hundred)
… retained it until 1814 when Robert Hucks (declared a lunatic in 1792) was succeeded by his niece Ann Noyes (d. …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… are several infant, Sunday, and other schools. A pauper lunatic house was erected in 1813, and a dispensary …
A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland
… about 150 boys, of whom 40 are also clothed. A pauper lunatic house was erected in 1813, and a dispensary was …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… a citizen of London, and now converted into a private lunatic asylum. The houses in general are meanly built of …
Survey of London
… which empowered Justices of the Peace to erect County Lunatic Asylums. It was amended by an Act of similar title in …
A History of the County of Middlesex
… its sick poor. 43 In 1827 it opposed the building of a new lunatic asylum for the metropolis on the ground of expense. … Street under the L.B.'s plan of 1986. 70 Bethnal House lunatic asylum 71 opened as a private madhouse in Kirby's …
Displaying 31 - 40 of 1242