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A Topographical Dictionary of England
… Bleak Barnsley from the exposed situation of the original town, now a hamlet in the chapelry, was anciently celebrated … Independents, Primitive Methodists, Methodists of the New Connexion, and Wesleyans; and a Roman Catholic chapel. … windows, copied from designs by Sir Joshua Reynolds at New College, Oxford; the eastern window is elaborately …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… lost 419 a. to the city and 92 a. in the north to the new civil parish of Longlevens and gained 2 a. from Wotton … from 1860 was dominated by a private mental hospital. 20 New buildings in brick included many villas, a vicarage house … the county magistrates bought that land for the site of a new county asylum. 101 The estate was enlarged and from 1908 …
A History of the County of Essex
… petitioned the corporation for barracks to be built in the town and in the same year the first infantry barracks were … Street which was bought by the army in 1804, had two new wings added during the Napoleonic wars and was sold in … in 1888. 30 The hutted hospital closed in 1896 when a new brick-built hospital of five blocks for 221 patients was …
A History of the County of Shropshire
… levels. 34 About 1818, to improve the prospect from the new Willey Hall, Barrow Hill was cleared, part of the area being taken into the new park, and the school and almshouses were moved nearer to … and endowed them by will proved in 1632. They formed a row of two-storeyed houses with three chimneys and three side …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… by S.) from Dalton, and 9 (S. W.) from Ulverston, the post-town. This place is situated at the south-western extremity … a ferry for passengers and cattle, from a place called New Holland, in this parish, to Hull, a distance of 2 miles. … The parish consists of Barrow proper; a part of the market-town of Mountsorrel; the chapelries of Quorndon and …
Alumni Oxonienses
… Reg. Barstable, James See Bastable. Barston, John pleb. New Inn Hall, matric. 30 Nov., 1652, B.A. 5 June, 1656; … aged 19; B.A. 31 Oct., 1606. Bartlet, John 'cler. fil.' New Inn Hall, matric. 9 Dec., 1650; ejected from the vicarage … Gray's Inn Reg. Bateman, Edmund s. Edm., of Northampton (town), gent. Magdalen Coll., matric. 27 March, 1705, aged 15; …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… it. ARMS. Beaumaris BEAUMARIS, a sea-port, borough, market-town, and chapelry, having exclusive jurisdiction, and … bridge at one extremity, and connected at the other with a new entrance into Beaumaris. The ancient walls by which the … of 1831, in order to furnish materials for building a new hotel, and for completing other improvements. In front of …
The History and Antiquities of the County of Suffolk
… enclosures, but stags' horns are occasionally found, when new ditches and drains are dug. The right of free-fishery and …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… BARTLEY REGIS, a tything, in the parish of Eling, union of New Forest, hundred of Redbridge, Romsey and S. divisions of … two curacies were consolidated into one benefice, and a new church was erected by subscription. The parish is on the …
A Dictionary of London
… of St. Bartholomew was taken down for the erection of the New Royal Exchange. Named after the church of St. Bartholomew … occupied by Bartlett's Buildings (q.v.). Bartlett Street A new street so called, forming part of Bartlett's Buildings, …
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