Search
A History of the County of Surrey
… into tithings called Chertsey, Allesden, and Adisford (i.e. Addlestone), Lolewirth or Hardwitch in Hardwicke, … always apparent. Manning, quoting from the title deeds of Edmund Boehm, who held Ottershaw in 1811, states that in the … his son to Thomas Sewell, whose son sold it in 1796 to Edmund Boehm. 163 It afterwards became the property of Sir …
A History of the County of Buckingham
… It leads past the almshouses erected in the reign of James I by Thomas son of Richard Wedon of Pednor, 11 and past the … then a year old, his son Edward having predeceased him. 90 Edmund Earl of Cornwall, who then held the honour of … son by her first husband, during whose minority Edmund Brudenell held the custody. 118 John Nevill proved his …
A History of the County of Hertford
… only three survive. Eleanor, the first wife of Edward I, died at Harby, co. Notts., 7 miles west of Lincoln, on 28 … Bentley, D.L., in 1840, and is now the residence of Mr. Edmund T. Doxat, J.P. Other hamlets are Hammond Street and … Clopton and Katherine his wife surrendered by a fine to Edmund Denny and others, 199 and which passed in 1520 to …
The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent
… II. in his 15th year, by consent of parliament, granted to Edmund de Woodstock, earl of Kent, his half brother, the ferm … rents of assize in Chesilhurst are specified. 1 His sons, Edmund and John Plantagenet, earls of Kent, dying without … term, under the like rent and convenants. 4 King James I. in his 8th year, granted to George and Thomas Whitmore, …
A History of the County of Surrey
… demesne lands there by charter of Henry III. 11 Edward I confirmed these estates to the scholars of Merton in 1290, … of Wallingford, and in 1279 was in the possession of Edmund Earl of Cornwall. In 1300 the tenant of the earl in … or Chessington Hall in 1851 and still owns it. 63 In 1279 Edmund Earl of Cornwall claimed in Chessington his free …
A History of the County of Oxford
… in 1801, obtained permission to turn the line of the road (i.e. Akeman Street) and so extend his grounds. By 1823 the … in the year before his death he had sold Chesterton to Edmund, Earl of Cornwall. 58 In 1283 Edmund founded Ashridge College (Herts.) 59 and between 1285 …
A History of the County of Huntingdon
… of the manor, passed to the second, Joan, wife of Sir Edmund Ingoldesthorpe. 90 She died in 1494, when her heirs … John Willimott, d. 1788. The registers are as follows: (i) baptisms, marriages and burials, 13 Aug. 1561 to 1733; … 151 There are no charities for this parish. V.C.H. Hunts, i, 216. Ibid. i, 2289, 2823, 313. Drawing in Carter Coll. …
A History of the County of Surrey
… was ever held for Chiddingfold as a manor, although Edward I in 1300 granted a fair to the Bishop of Salisbury at his … came later into the possession of the Forde family. Edmund Forde, who acquired it from Henry Windsor and Eleanor … the church of Chiddingfold with the chapel of Piperham (i.e. Haslemere) to his clerk, Geoffrey de Lechlade, to hold …
The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent
… having been their residence from the time of king James I. as it is now of Henry Streatfield, esq. The face of the … his second wife, who survived him, and afterwards married Edmund Rokewood, he had, as appears by his will, Henry, his … By Margaret, his wife, Sir Robert had one son, Edmund, who was one of the justices of the King'sbench, and …
A History of the County of Berkshire
… part of it was let to William and Godfrey, 8 to whom Henry I gave permission to cultivate the waste here. 9 The profits … he sold the manor to Giles Pocock, Giles Head and Edmund Cooke on behalf of Pocock. 27 Giles Pocock 28 was a … Dorothy his wife, conveyed it in 1601 to William Homes and Edmund Cooke. 102 The history of the manor becomes obscure …