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A History of the County of Oxford
… Budd (d. 1623), with assets worth 104, owned two looms, wool, yarn, and finished blankets, but had household goods … leaving three looms and goods valued at 121 (including wool and cloth worth 95), his net assets after payment of … 1850s county magistrates held courts in the town hall or Staple Hall Inn. 197 A purpose-built County Court, on the …
A History of the County of Oxford
… in the town hall or in local inns such as the Lamb, the Staple Hall, and the King's Arms. A vestry- or committee-room … were made to paupers on out-relief, and packs of yarn or wool were bought for spinning either in or out of the … by one of the nurses before 1891, moved to the former Staple Hall Inn on Bridge street, but closed about 1901. 274 …
A History of the County of Oxford
… help from his wife's family the Townsends, owners of the Staple Hall Inn, 37 and the following year William Castle, a … as a place of worship in 1971. 58 A scheme to convert the Staple Hall Inn into a chapel was overruled on planning …
A History of the County of Essex
… were presumably kept originally for dairying as well as wool, as in other Essex marshland parishes where grazing in … there were 236 sheep on Wivenhoe manor and 166 fleeces of wool were sold, but the flock seems to have been shared with … economy in the 16th and 17th centuries, supply- ing wool for the cloth trade of Colchester and other towns, but …
A History of the County of Essex
… from Wivenhoe to London with cloth and returned with wool for the Colchester cloth industry. 11 Ships sailed to …
A Dictionary of London
… Wollechirchehaw - Wool Exchange Wollechirchehaw See Mary (St.) Woolchurch. Wollewharf See Wool Quay. Wolsies Gate A water gate in the roparie, in … in the maps and not definitely located. See Legates Inn. Wool Exchange On the east side of Basinghall Street at Nos. …
A History of the County of Oxford
… them, one with a flock of 19, the other with 10, had any wool. Mary Hall (d. 1715) had 27 cows and a bull, worth £108, … a fulling mill, as it was by 1616; a small amount of wool was taken in 1341 from John Cabbel of Wolvercote who had …
A History of the County of Shropshire
… and vegetables from the surrounding countryside were a staple. No tolls or dues were collected then, but c. 1935 the …
Dictionary of Traded Goods and Commodities
… of DOZEN Sources: Inventories (mid-period), Tradecards. Wool comb [woole combe; woll combe; wole comb; combes for wool] Sometimes abbreviated to COMB as in 'one pare of … but more correctly to WOOLLEN fabrics made with short staple CARDED WOOL as opposed to WORSTED. There were many …
Alumni Oxonienses
… July, 1665, aged 16. Woolley.. See also Wolley, page 1668. Wool(le)y, John of London, gent. Brasenose Coll., matric. 21 …
Displaying 12561 - 12570 of 12609