Parliamentary Directory, 1899. 2884
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NPS 0373B, Part 2
2.5. Wixenford Bottom and Farm History Like Pomphlett Barton, Wixenford was owned by the Dukes of Bedford until the early nineteenth century but had been acquired by the Earl of Morley before 1841 when it is recorded in his freehold on the Plymstock tithe award. Although it may not have been secured immediately, in the negotiations of 1805-06, Lord Boringdon showed a particular desire to secure Wixenford as well as Pomphlett Barton, as part of his efforts to secure the complete visual envelope of Saltram, and because of the access the valley affords into the heart of the Saltram landscape (DRO, L1258M/SS/C/DL101). The planting has been identified as c1770 (NPA, 1999, 42). A narrow band of tree- planting along the road between the farm and the eastern end of the creek which became Chelson Meadow is recorded as early as 1785 [see Fig.16]. By 1809, it appears to have been planted with two more substantial strips of woodland on either side of its valley [Fig.26]. The 1869 Ordnance Survey appears to show tree- plantingalong both the centre and on the slopes although the 1881 OS does not make such a distinction. The 1869 OS also indicates a drive running down the centre, lined with trees. It certainly shows a drive on the north side of the valley running along the edge of the plantation and the open fields. This is shown to be a metalled surface on the 1881 OS. The 1907 OS indicates both the metalled drive and a less formal drive along the edge of the stream in the bottom of the valley, the two drives meeting at the northern end of the valley, where a wall crosses the valley, with a gate to allow the drive through [Fig.27]. -
Introduction to the Abercorn Papers Adobe
INTRODUCTION ABERCORN PAPERS November 2007 Abercorn Papers (D623) Table of Contents Summary ......................................................................................................................2 Family history................................................................................................................3 Title deeds and leases..................................................................................................5 Irish estate papers ........................................................................................................8 Irish estate and related correspondence.....................................................................11 Scottish papers (other than title deeds) ......................................................................14 English estate papers (other than title deeds).............................................................17 Miscellaneous, mainly seventeenth-century, family papers ........................................19 Correspondence and papers of the 6th Earl of Abercorn............................................20 Correspondence and papers of the Hon. Charles Hamilton........................................21 Papers and correspondence of Capt. the Hon. John Hamilton, R.N., his widow and their son, John James, the future 1st Marquess of Abercorn....................22 Political correspondence of the 1st Marquess of Abercorn.........................................23 Political and personal correspondence of the 1st Duke of Abercorn...........................26 -
Plym Valley Connections Heritage Lottery Fund Project
Designers of the London 2012 Olympic Parklands PLYM VALLEY CONNECTIONS HERITAGE LOTTERY FUND PROJECT LANDSCAPE CHARACTER AND HERITAGE ASSESSMENT AUGUST 2013 CONTENTS 1.0 FOREWORD 5 2.0 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 8 3.0 INTRODUCTION 10 4.0 APPROACH TO THE LCHA 12 5.0 METHODOLOGY 14 5.1. Guidance and Sources of Information 14 5.2. Study Area 15 6.0 OVERVIEW OF ASSESSMENT THEMES 16 6.1. Introduction 16 6.2. Physical Landscape and Natural Heritage 16 6.3. Cultural Heritage 22 6.4. People, Access and Places 30 6.5. Drivers for Change 33 7.0 LANDSCAPE CHARACTER AREAS 34 1. Coastal and Tidal Waters Landscape Character Type 36 2. Open Coastal Plateau and Cliffs Landscape Character Type 42 3. Lowland Plain Landscape Character Type 44 4. Wooded Valley and Farmland Landscape Character Type 46 5. Upland Fringes Landscape Character Type 54 6. Upland Moorland Landscape Character Type 62 7. Urban Landscape Character type 64 8.0 PROPOSED HLF BOUNDARY AND CONSIDERATIONS 66 9.0 CONCLUSIONS 68 APPENDICES 71 Appendix 1. Workshop Summary Findings Appendix 2. List of Significant Heritage Assets Appendix 3. Gazetteer of Environmental Assets Appendix 4. Landscape Character Overview FIGURES 4 1.0 FOREWORD “The longer one stays here the more does the spirit of the moor sink into one’s soul, its vastness, and also its grim charm. When you are once out upon its bosom you have left all traces of modern England behind you, but, on the other hand, you are conscious everywhere of the homes and the work of the prehistoric people. -
Saltram House: the Evolution of an Eighteenth-Century Country Estate
University of Plymouth PEARL https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk 04 University of Plymouth Research Theses 01 Research Theses Main Collection 2020 Saltram House: The Evolution of an Eighteenth-Century Country Estate Norley, Katherine R http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/16730 University of Plymouth All content in PEARL is protected by copyright law. Author manuscripts are made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the details provided on the item record or document. In the absence of an open licence (e.g. Creative Commons), permissions for further reuse of content should be sought from the publisher or author. Saltram House: The Evolution of an Eighteenth-Century Country Estate By Katherine R Norley A thesis submitted to the University of Plymouth in partial fulfilment for the degree of RESEARCH MASTERS School of Humanities and Performing Arts December 2020 1 This copy of the thesis has been supplied on condition that anyone who consults it is understood to recognise that its copyright rests with its author and that no quotation from the thesis and no information derived from it may be published without the author’s prior consent. 2 Author’s Declaration At no time during the registration for the degree of Research Masters has the author been registered for any other University award without prior agreement of the Doctoral College Quality Sub-Committee. Work Submitted for this research degree at the University of Plymouth has not formed part of any other degree either at the University of Plymouth or at another establishment. This study was financed with the aid of government funding. -
House of Peers. Ali'habetically Arranged
1727 PARLIAMENTARY DIRECTORY. [1852. HOUSE OF PEERS. ALI'HABETICALLY ARRANGED. Created. 1790. Abercorn Marquis of, K.G., P.C., Groom of the Stole in the Household o.f H. R. H. Prince Albert, Ches terfield house, South Audley street, and Priory, Stanmore, MiddleselC, and Barons court, New Town Ste"'art, Tyrone, Ireland, and Ardverekie lodge, Laggan, N.B [Airthrie castle, near Stirling 1801. Abercromby Lord, Lord Lieutenant of Clackmannanshire, and a Colonel in the Army (no address in London), 1662. Aberdeen Earl of, in the peerage of Scotland, sits as Viscount Gordon (1814) in that of the United Kingdom, K.T., P.C., Lord Lieut. of Aberdeenshire, Keeper of Greenwich Park, 7 Argyll street, and Haddo house, near Methlic, Aberdeeushire 17841 Abergavenny Earl of, 58 Portland place, Bridge castle, Tunbridge wells, and Birling Manor, Maidstone, Kent 1682. Abin~don Earl of, Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire, and HighSteward of Abingdon, 7 Albemarle street, and W,Ytham abbey, Oxford 1835. Abinger Lord (no address in London), Abinger hall, Dorking, Surrey 1821. Ailesbury Marquis of, K.T., 41 Grosvenor square, and Tottenham park, Marlborough, and Jervea.ux abbey, Middlebam, near Bedale 1831. Ail sa Marquis of, Christie's hotel, 57 & 58 St. James's street, & Culzean caSltle, l\Iaybole, Ayrshire 1639. Airlie & Lintrathern Earl of, Scotch Representative Peer, Carlton cluh, 94 Pall mall, Cortachy castle, by Kerriemuir, Forfarshire, N.B 1696. Albemarle Earl of (no address in London), Quidenham hall, Kenninghall, Norfolk 1801. Alvanley Lord (no addre<>s in London), Tarporley, Cheshire, & Pepper hall, Yorkshire 1826. Amuerst Earl, P.C., 66 Grosvenor street, New Bond street, and Knole, Sevenoaks 1815. -
List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007
Library and Information Services List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 – 2007 A - J Library and Information Services List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 - 2007 A complete listing of all Fellows and Foreign Members since the foundation of the Society A - J July 2007 List of Fellows of the Royal Society 1660 - 2007 The list contains the name, dates of birth and death (where known), membership type and date of election for all Fellows of the Royal Society since 1660, including the most recently elected Fellows (details correct at July 2007) and provides a quick reference to around 8,000 Fellows. It is produced from the Sackler Archive Resource, a biographical database of Fellows of the Royal Society since its foundation in 1660. Generously funded by Dr Raymond R Sackler, Hon KBE, and Mrs Beverly Sackler, the Resource offers access to information on all Fellows of the Royal Society since the seventeenth century, from key characters in the evolution of science to fascinating lesser- known figures. In addition to the information presented in this list, records include details of a Fellow’s education, career, participation in the Royal Society and membership of other societies. Citations and proposers have been transcribed from election certificates and added to the online archive catalogue and digital images of the certificates have been attached to the catalogue records. This list is also available in electronic form via the Library pages of the Royal Society web site: www.royalsoc.ac.uk/library Contributions of biographical details on any Fellow would be most welcome. -
Devon Tourism: the Story of the County's Economic Leviathan
University of Plymouth PEARL https://pearl.plymouth.ac.uk Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences Devon Tourism: the story of the county's economic leviathan Essex, SJ http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/13075 Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association for the Advancement of Science, Literature and the Arts All content in PEARL is protected by copyright law. Author manuscripts are made available in accordance with publisher policies. Please cite only the published version using the details provided on the item record or document. In the absence of an open licence (e.g. Creative Commons), permissions for further reuse of content should be sought from the publisher or author. 1 ESSEX, S. & BRAYSHAY, M. (2018) Devon Tourism: the story of the county’s economic leviathan, Transactions of the Devonshire Association, 150, 177-222. Devon Tourism: The Story of the County’s Economic Leviathan Stephen Essex, BA, PhD, FRGS, MHEA, MRTPI and Mark Brayshay, BA, PhD School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Plymouth Over the past 149 volumes of these Transactions, fewer than half a dozen papers have focused directly on tourism in Devon. Given its key role in shaping the county’s history, landscape and infrastructure, and its contemporary social and economic character, such a dearth of studies is striking and contrasts with the burgeoning body of scholarly work on Devon tourism aired elsewhere. The aim of this paper is to offer a broad, benchmark review of the origins, historical growth and changing character, as well as the contemporary state and future prospects, of tourism in the county. -
House of Lords Bill: 'Stage One' Issues Bill 34 of 1998-99
RESEARCH PAPER 99/5 The House of Lords Bill: 28 JANUARY 1999 'Stage One' Issues Bill 34 of 1998-99 The House of Lords Bill is due to have its second reading debate on 1-2 February. This Paper is one of a series which provides Members with briefing on the Bill, and on the wider issues surrounding Lords reform. This Paper deals directly with the Bill itself and the proposals for the ‘transitional’ House of Lords ('stage one'). Research Paper 99/6 focuses on options for longer-term Lords reform, including the proposed Royal Commission ('stage two'), and Research Paper 99/7 concentrates on the place of Lords reform within the present Government’s extensive programme of constitutional change. Developments in the run-up to, and since the 1997 general election are summarised in Research Papers 97/28, 98/85 and 98/105, and, generally, are not reproduced in the present series of Papers. Research Paper 98/104 and the Appendix to this Paper provide relevant statistics on the House of Lords and its membership, and Research Paper 98/103 examines the legislative role of the House. The House of Lords Information Office and Library both provide a range of relevant information (including the history of previous attempts at reform) in the form of Papers and on the Parliament website. See also the Bill’s Explanatory Notes, Bill 34-EN. Barry K Winetrobe HOME AFFAIRS SECTION HOUSE OF COMMONS LIBRARY Recent Library Research Papers include: List of 15 most recent RPs 98/110 Water Industry Bill Bill 1 [1998/99] 03.12.98 98/111 Employment and Training Programmes -
Auction 86 to Take Place on 8 December 2018
Auction 86 To take place on 8 December 2018 Please post bids to Peter McGowan, Nethergreen House, 9 The Green, Ruddington, Notts NG11 6DY Or email: [email protected] The deadline is Tuesday, 4 December 2018. Late bids cannot be recorded. Ensure you include your current address and contact details. If you are bidding by email, please make sure you have received his confirmation of receipt. Successful bidders living outside the UK will be asked to pay for their lots before despatch. If two bids of the same amount are received for a lot, then the bid received first will take precedence, so early bidding is desirable. All lots now carry reserves, either at a default value of 75% of the estimate or at an undisclosed figure set by the seller. No bid will be accepted below the reserve. Take into account that some of our estimated prices appear rather too modest, and may be well overbid. We don’t claim that these estimates are wholly consistent, so make allowance for this. Remember that revised auction rules, issued earlier this year, now apply. NB: See the members’ page of our website for images of this material. Items unsold in our auctions are sometimes added to the Web Offer pages that can be found at www.bookplatesociety.org/WebOffer2.htm where hundreds of exlibris owned by members are available for direct sale at fixed prices. £ 1 Irish arms: Earl of Limerick (Pery) F23376; DH Kelly, The O’Kelly, pasted on flyleaf with in MS “Denis H 11 Kelly Castle Kelly, Nov 24 1811, F16893; William Laird by Vinycomb, 1901, stain at top right. -
Cleaning House in a Suddenly Closed Society: the Genesis, Brief Life and Untimely Death of the Habitual Criminals Act, 1869 Michael W
Osgoode Hall Law Journal Article 6 Volume 21, Number 2 (September 1983) Cleaning House in a Suddenly Closed Society: The Genesis, Brief Life and Untimely Death of the Habitual Criminals Act, 1869 Michael W. Melling Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/ohlj Article Citation Information Melling, Michael W.. "Cleaning House in a Suddenly Closed Society: The Genesis, Brief Life and Untimely Death of the Habitual Criminals Act, 1869." Osgoode Hall Law Journal 21.2 (1983) : 315-362. http://digitalcommons.osgoode.yorku.ca/ohlj/vol21/iss2/6 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at Osgoode Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Osgoode Hall Law Journal by an authorized editor of Osgoode Digital Commons. CLEANING HOUSE IN A SUDDENLY CLOSED SOCIETY: THE GENESIS, BRIEF LIFE AND UNTIMELY DEATH OF THE HABITUAL CRIMINALS ACT 1869 By MICHAEL W. MELLING* PROLOGUE .................................................. 317 I. INTRODUCTION ......................................... 318 II. THE GENESIS OF THE 1869 ACT ........................... 321 A. PriorHandling of the Problem ............................ 321 B. The Changes in the Problem .............................. 324 C. ParliamentaryHistory of the Bill .......................... 331 III. THE METAMORPHOSIS OF THE BILL ..................... 334 A . The Process ............................................ 334 1. Revocation of Licences ................................ 334 2. Supervision and Reporting ............................ -
Iolanthe; Or, the Peer and the Peri
UNIVERSITY OF AT ur: The person charging this material is re- sponsible for its return to the library from which It was withdrawn on or before the Latest Date stamped below. Ihaft, mutilation, and underlining of books are reosons for disciplinary action and moy result in dismissal from the University. To renew call Telephone Center, 333-8400 UNIVERSITY OF lUINO IS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN ^^"^4^ F^8 i8m~~ DEC 1 1 m 00^^* L16I—0-1096 lOLANTHE rV;V^ Book by ^ W. S. GILBERT 1 >o Music by 4^^ ARTHUR SULLIVAN W ^J -» c rs score contains the dialogue M«i w ^i ©^ CHIRMER, INC MCTavv-. Jj-tW-- LIBRARY VjC-b I O L A S r H E DRAMATIS PERSONAE The Lord Chancellor Lord Mountararat Lord Tolloller Private Willis Of the Grenadier Guards Strephon An Arcadian Shepherd Queen of the Fairies Iolanthe A Fairy, Slrephon's Mother Celia I Leila Fairies Fleta Phyllis An Arcadian Shepherdess and Ward in Chancery Chorus of Dukes, Marquises, Earls, Viscounts, Barons, and Fairies ACT I —An Arcadian Landscape ACT II—Palace Yard, Westminster Date, between 1700 and 1882 4M89 UNIVERSITY LIBRA ARGUMENT Twenty-five years previous to the action of the opera, lolanthe, a fairy, had committed the capital crime of marrying a mortal. The Queen of the Fairies had commuted the death sentence to banishment for life—on condition that lolanthe must leave her husband without explanation and never see him again. Her son Strephon has grown up as a shepherd, half fairy, half mortal. Strephon loves Phyllis, a shepherdess who is also a ward in Chancery; she returns his love, and knows nothing of his mixed origin. -
“Harry the Ninth (The Uncrowned King of Scotland)”
“Harry the Ninth (The Uncrowned King of Scotland)” Henry Dundas and the Politics of Self-Interest, 1790-1802 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts (Honours) in History. Sam Gribble 307167623 University of Sydney October 2012 Abstract The career of Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville underscores the importance of individual self-interest in British public life during the 1790-1802 Revolutionary Wars with France. Examining the political intrigue surrounding Dundas’ 1806 impeachment, the manner in which he established his political power, and contemporary critiques of self-interest, this thesis both complicates and adds nuance to understandings of the political culture of ‘Old Corruption’ in the late-Georgian era. As this thesis demonstrates, despite the wealth of opportunities for personal enrichment, individual self-interest was not always focused on obtaining sinecures and financial windfalls. Instead, men like Henry Dundas were primarily focused upon amassing their own political power. In the inherently chaotic politics of the period, the self-seeking concerns of individuals like Henry Dundas, very quickly could, and indeed did, become the thread upon which the whole British political system turned. 2 Acknowledgments My thanks go first and foremost my supervisor, Dr Kit Candlin. His guidance, advice and expertise were vital in devising and writing this thesis, as was his unerring ability to ensure that I came away from our meetings enthusiastic about the task at hand. I would also like to thank Professor Robert Aldrich and Dr Lyn Olsen for their research seminars, both of which made me a better student and historian.