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Displaying 141 - 150 of 1711
Broadwell Parish: Kelmscott
A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 17, Bampton Hundred (Part Four)
… that of Kelmscott's other agricultural land. Fisheries and Weirs Fish provided an important supplementary resource from …
Broadwell, Langford and Kelmscott: Cotswolds to Thames
A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 17, Bampton Hundred (Part Four)
A History of the County of Shropshire
… and during the Middle Ages there were fishponds and fish weirs on the Severn at Broseley. 99 In 1226 Buildwas abbey … paid 32 s. rent for a weir. 5 In 1575 there were three weirs. 6 James Clifford, lord of the manor, owned Robin's …
Survey of London
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
A History of the County of Stafford
… in the river. 2 19th-century extensions to Burton borough Weirs Weirs regulated the flow of water, especially where there … in Burton Extra by 1414. 4 They were respectively the two weirs recorded as being 120 feet and 240 feet long in 1698, …
A History of the County of Stafford
A History of the County of Stafford
A History of the County of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely
… one once called the Head lode, 11 but from the 1670s the Weirs. 12 Running parallel to the village street, that stream … end of the medieval village, where it met the navigable Weirs. It was superseded from the mid 17th century by the … Those crofts run down to private landing places on the Weirs, 52 which there bend east to run eventually only 150 …
An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in the County of Cambridgeshire
… W. of Newnham and extends from the fen edge at the Weirs to the N. end of Low Road. It stands on flat land 200 … and 5 ft. or more deep) the W. ends of which joined the Weirs. At the E. end of the S. side a subsidiary basin 15 ft. … Basins and Canals (TL 5881683658126664), lie along the Weirs from the extreme N. end of North Street, S. of Goose …
Displaying 141 - 150 of 1711