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A Topographical Dictionary of England
… have been commuted for 171. The church has a low round steeple; the east end of the north aisle has been converted …
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
… feet wide, and thirty-five high; the height of the steeple is forty-five feet. In the parish is a ford called …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… comprise respectively 7 and 2 acres. The church has a steeple on the south side. Here was a castle in which Hengist …
A History of the County of Chester
… The destruction in 1597 of the Carmelite church and steeple, a notable landmark, altered the skyline of the city, …
A History of the County of Chester
… tower at St. John's, begun c. 1518; 3 the remaking of the steeple and main body of St. Mary's in the 1490s and early …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… was erected at an expense of 130 on the site of the old steeple, and a western tower surmounted by a spire was built …
A History of the County of Sussex
… porch existed in 1546 63 and there was also a lead-covered steeple. 64 The chancel arch was reconstructed in 1750, a …
The Environs of London
… to lay up all the leading branches, and tack them to the steeple. Lord Colerane adds, that there was formerly a high cross of wood on the steeple, which was destroyed in the civil war with great …
A History of the County of Middlesex
… chapel in 1921, when a new clergy vestry was added. The steeple, damaged in the Second World War, was repaired in …
A History of the County of Middlesex
… undressed stone in 'modernized Gothic', with a tower and steeple. Extensive school buildings were put up at the rear … and evening services at St. Mark's in 1903. After the steeple had been found unsafe in 1937, shops were built along …
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