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A History of the County of Essex
… 19th to the Martens, who were often visited by William Wilberforce. 60 It was demolished in 1882. In High Street one …
A History of the County of Essex
… 1919. 26 The war memorial church of OUR LADY OF SORROWS, Wilberforce Street (later Killip Close), was built in 1925 as …
A History of the County of Sussex
… tombs of three Bishops of ChichesterGilbert, Durnford, and Wilberforce; also of the famous cricketer Frederick William …
Old and New London
… honours which the University can confer. Dr. Samuel Wilberforce was next in succession to Dr. Ireland. He was the third son of the celebrated philanthropist, William Wilberforce, and was born in 1805. He was ordained as curate … in 1845, and translated to Winchester in 1869. Bishop Wilberforce took a prominent part in the debates in the House …
Old and New London
… as a memorial of those members of Parliament who, with Mr. Wilberforce, advocated the abolition of the British …
Fasti Ecclesiae Anglicanae 1541-1857
… 1894 (Somerset House, death certificate; Reg. Durnford, Wilberforce and Ridgeway p. 31). The bp.'s reg. is presumably …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
… from the time of the Conquest, was the property of the Wilberforce family, from which was descended the late William …
A History of the County of York East Riding
… the Percys in Wilberfoss was that of the Wilberfoss or Wilberforce family. An early member of the family was Ilger …
The Environs of London
… John Cooksey, late curate of Wimbledon, (1777) 52; William Wilberforce, Esq. (1777); he was uncle to William Wilberforce, Esq. M.P. who inherited from him a house at …
A History of the County of Oxford
… 119 Jerram's Witney career left the antipathetic Bishop Wilberforce torn between admiration at the rector's … and distaste for his easy relations with Dissenters, which Wilberforce blamed for the difficulties of Jerram's successor …
Displaying 351 - 360 of 370