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A History of the County of Oxford
… Margaret in Woodstock chapel. 57 Thomas Croft (d. 1488), a merchant and royal servant who shared with his brother …
A History of the County of Oxford
… a Woodstock man who was neither a woollen nor a staple merchant was reported for buying large quantities of wool … the Bull inn. 6 John Exnyng, a London grocer and staple merchant, acquired some of the Marshalls' Woodstock houses in … mill, 59 William Fly, mayor in 1618, was also a wool merchant, 60 and John Raunson, who died as mayor in 1611, may …
A History of the County of Oxford
… borough and its inhabitants free burgesses with a guild merchant and the same liberties and customs as New Windsor. … constitution, derived from that of the medieval guild merchant, was membership or freedom of the guild. In 1584, …
A History of the County of Oxford
… person', 93 and the Tory Sir John Gladstone, a Liverpool merchant, was returned unopposed with a rich Whig, James …
A Dictionary of London
… M. Ft of Fmes, II. 75). No later mention. It was a wool merchant's sign. Woolsack Alley See Cutler Street. Worcester …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… 1872 to 1876, 35 and a little farther up the Wye a timber-merchant made a quay and warehouse in 1851. 36 It was in use … in 1856, a threshing machine contractor, a haulier, a coal merchant, and a corn-dealer in 1876, and a mason in 1885. …
A History of the County of Somerset
… 15th and early 16th centuries; one farmer was a Bridgwater merchant. 17 From 1566 it was let to Robert Dudley, earl of …
Petitions to the Worcestershire Quarter Sessions, 1592-1797
Thoroton's History of Nottinghamshire
… 35l. reserved upon the demise made to William Chastelyn, merchant of London, to hold to him and his successours in …
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