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A Topographical Dictionary of England
… curacy, in the patronage of the Crown and the Bishop of Manchester, alternately; income, 130. Divine service is for …
A History of the County of Stafford
… in Staffs. to the Price Changes of the 19th Century' (Manchester Univ. Ph.D. thesis, 1965), chap. iv, esp. pp. 98 …
A History of the County of Essex
… J. Morton, 'The Day Continuation Institutes of West Ham' (Manchester Univ. M.Ed. thesis, 1968). W. Ham Elem. Educ. …
Survey of London
… Wood & Co. Ltd, both contractors being from Swinton, Manchester. The Depression appears to have delayed this end …
Alumni Oxonienses
… fellow Brasenose Coll. 1649; fellow collegiate church of Manchester 1660, rector of Llangwm-Dymell, co. Denbigh, 1660, …
Old and New London
… to the Earl of Oxford; the sword of state to the Earl of Manchester; the sceptre with the dove to the Duke of …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… to Warrington, passes on the south; and the Liverpool and Manchester railway runs through the township, by an inclined …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… in malt and hops; shoes are manufactured for the Manchester market, and near the town is an establishment for … boats ply to London and the intervening towns, and to Manchester and Shrewsbury. The market is on Friday; and there …
Old and New London
… in some degree to her husband's fall. Here, too, was Manchester House, which appears to have been cut up into … occupied by bachelor members of Parliament, and known as Manchester Buildings. Their site is now covered by the … because they adjoined the town residence of the Earls of Manchester, with "a very fine court which hath a handsome …
The Apprenticeship of a Mountaineer
… cut up wood and drew shields. No news. Great fire at Manchester, upwards of 15,000 destroyed. Mr Smith came to …
Displaying 9201 - 9210 of 9287