29 results filtered with: Real property - England - Early works to 1800
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The particulars of an eligible freehold estate, situate at Cunningham, near Fobbing, ... consisting of fifty-five acres ... in the possession of Mr. Charles Clarence, tenant at will, ... which will be sold by auction, by Mess. Skinner, Dyke, and Skinner, on Tuesday the 5th of March, 1799, ...
Skinner, Dyke, and Skinner (London, England)Date: 1799]- Books
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An act to establish a proposal made by William Constable, Esquire to the Governors of the charity for the relief of the poor widows and children of clergymen, in relation to a piece or parcel or land, called Cherry-Cobb-Sand, in the county of York.
Great Britain. Parliament.Date: 1766]- Books
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The particulars of a valuable freehold estate, situate in Mersey Island, within ten miles of the capital market town of Colchester, in the county of Essex; consisting of the manor of Reeves Hall, with the quit Rents, Fines, and Immunities, and Reeves Hall farm, containing three hundred and eighty acres two roods and fifteen perches, of arable and marsh land, with a good farm house and suitable out-buildings; also, Eighty-Two Acres and Six Perches of Salt and Fresh Marsh Land, over which certain Persons have limited Rights of Common; and likewise rights over seventy-three acres and upwards of another Salt Marsh; on lease, which expires at Michaelmas, 1803, to Mr. Thomas Harvey, at a very low rent of only One Hundred and Eighty Pounds per Annum; also, an oyster creek, let at Five Pounds per Annum: which will be sold by auction, by Mess. Skinner, Dyke, & Skinner, on Wednesday the 31st of January, 1798, At Twelve O'Clock, At Garraway's Coffee House, 'change Alley, London.
Skinner, Dyke, and Skinner (London, England)Date: 1798]- Books
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A true and impartial narrative of the sufferings of Mr. Oliver Thorne of Whersted-Hall, near Ipswich. Who married the daughter of James Thompson, Esq; of Trompington, in Cambridgeshire, shewing how he was arrested by a base contrivance at Windsor, and carried to Reading Goal, during his confinement there his wife and only surviving child who at the time of his being arrested enjoy'd perfect health were both destroy'd in London, by which destruction Mr. Thorne lost an estate of 1500, per an. and 10,000 l. in cash.
Date: Printed in the Year MDCCLIII. [1753]