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Historical Account of Newcastle-upon-Tyne
… Thos. flax-dresser, Hexham Wakenshaw Joseph, shopman Wake, Nic. farmer, Seaton House Waldie John, watchmaker, …
Yorkshire Lay Subsidy
… and John de Duddene, 508 li 16 s. 8 d. Northants.Hugh Wake, Hugh Daundelyn, and John de Wyleby, 1,803 li 18 s. 11 …
A History of the County of Lancaster
A Topographical Dictionary of Wales
A History of the County of Chester
… with the soldiers who assisted at the blaze. 78 In the wake of the disaster the brigade was disbanded and replaced …
A History of the County of Gloucester
… attended the view 25 and they owed a 2 d. fine called wake in the later 16th century, evidently in place of it. In …
A History of the County of Essex
… the north, by the road through Epping Forest from the 'Wake Arms'. The forest has always formed an important part of … 5 The road leaves the forest about a mile south of the 'Wake Arms', at Goldings Hill and runs south down hill, … built a new road through the forest from Woodford to the 'Wake Arms', running along the western boundary of Loughton …
A History of the County of Somerset: Volume 10
… a Sherborne (Dors.) banker, who in 1794 sold to Thomas Wake of North Barrow. In 1831 Wake's sons sold to William Purlewent, who had already bought … Som. I, 452. SRO, D/P/lov 23/4. Ibid.; ibid. DD/THG box 1 (Wake to Purlewent 1830, Corry to Purlewent 1837); DD/X/CRP 2. …
A History of the County of Shropshire
… bargemen fought on market day, and by the 1760s the parish wake, held after Michaelmas, was notorious for the … to prevent those concerned in a bull-baiting at the recent wake from getting work. 80 Badgers 81 and bulls were baited at Ironbridge wake, but bull-baiting there was finally put down by the …
A Topographical Dictionary of England
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