Search

Displaying 7931 - 7940 of 8083
Alumni Oxonienses
… perhaps student of Lincoln's Inn 1664, as 3s. John, of Plymouth, Devon. See Foster's Inns of Court Reg. Watts, Hugh …
A History of the County of Hertford
… and registered in 1872. 382 The Scotch Presbyterians and Plymouth Brethren have chapels at Watford, and the Primitive …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… distant, bearing west-south-west, and at the entrance of Plymouth Sound, is the small island called by mariners the …
Old and New London
… also examples of the porcelain of Bow, Chelsea, Bristol, Plymouth, Worcester, and Derby. Here, too, are represented …
A History of the County of Stafford
… claimed by her cousin's son, Edward Holmes, a labourer in Plymouth dockyard. Doubt was cast on his legitimacy, however, … at the dockyard. He was described as a ropemaker of Plymouth in 1839 and 1841, as a gentleman in 1841, and as a …
A History of the County of Sussex
… is known, namely Wesleyan. 48 In 1860 the Christian, later Plymouth, Brethren registered for worship a building in High …
Alumni Oxonienses
… of Inner Temple 1697, as son and heir of Martin, of Plymouth, Devon, gent. See Foster's Inns of Court Reg. White, …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… or Penny-Cross, a chapelry, in the parish of St. Andrew, Plymouth, union of Plympton St. Mary, hundred of Roborough, … and S. divisions of Devon, 2 miles (N. by W.) from Plymouth; with 267 inhabitants. The vicarial tithes have been …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… books at 7. 4. 6., and in the gift of the Countess of Plymouth: the tithes have been commuted for 227. 10., and the …
The Apprenticeship of a Mountaineer
… full of his Bible, and very apt with his texts. He is a Plymouth brother, which is the same as saying that he is no …
Displaying 7931 - 7940 of 8083