![]() ![]() The owner of this Rhino by 1754 was a Mrs Parsons who early in that year sold the animal to Christopher Pinchbeck. The rhino would have been transported in a wheeled cage drawn by eight horses. The rhino tour was covered in the Derby Mercury Finally being taken back to London where it was exhibited at several Inns by the end of 1751 – a much travelled creature. It was in Norwich in 1744, up to Edinburgh in 1747 and down to Nottingham in March 1749. The animal was toured over the whole kingdom over the next few years. From Derby it moved on to Burton-on-Trent and then Lichfield before returning to Derby in the December of 1742. ( 1 )Īuthor: Church of England.It was first known to be exhibited in London in 1740-41 it was then moved to Derby in 1742 where the Derby Mercury announced that it would be on display at the White Hart on Iron Gate in the city centre on January 6 that year. Parish register printouts of Calverton, Nottingham, England christenings, 1813-1853Įngland, Nottinghamshire, Calverton – Poorhouses, poor law, etc. Parish register printouts of Calverton, Nottingham, England (Wesleyan Methodist) christenings, 1831-1836Īuthor: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Seventeenth century parish register transcripts belonging to the peculiar of SouthwellĪuthor: Blagg, Thomas Matthews Thoroton Society of NottinghamshireĮngland, Nottinghamshire, Calverton – Church records – Indexes ( 2 ) Settlement certificate, 1705 and bastardy bond, 1710 Calverton Branch (Nottinghamshire) Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Parish Church of Calverton (Nottinghamshire) Calverton (Nottinghamshire)Īuthor: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Parish chest and poor law records for Calverton, 1720-1847Īuthor: Church of England. Parish Church of Calverton (Nottinghamshire) Nottinghamshire Archives Office Wilfrid’s Parish records, 1568-1812Īuthor: Church of England. Parish Church of Calverton (Nottinghamshire)Įngland, Nottinghamshire, Calverton, St. Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848 Parish RecordsĮngland, Nottinghamshire, Calverton – Census ( 1 )Įngland, Nottinghamshire, Calverton – Church records ( 9 )Īuthor: Wesleyan Church (Calverton, Nottinghamshire)īishop’s transcripts of Calverton, 1617-1853.Īuthor: Church of England. There are places of worship for Baptists and Wesleyans, and for a sect peculiar to the parish, founded in the latter part of the last century, by John Roe.Ī school is endowed with 6 per annum and 40 per annum, a house and garden, and four tons of coal, are also allowed by the trustees of Mr. The church, erected in 1774, is a neat and substantial edifice with a tower. ![]() The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the king’s books at 4, and in the alternate patronage of the Archbishop of York and the Prebendary of Oxton in the Collegiate Church of Southwell net income, 127: the tithes were commuted for 203 acres of land, under an inclosure act passed in 1779. The village is of considerable extent, and situated in a picturesque valley. The chief manufactures are those of stockings and lace, which afford employment to about 600 persons. The parish is separated from that of Oxton by a small stream called Dover beck, which rises in the forest of Sherwood, and runs in a south-eastern direction into the Trent it comprises by measurement 3300 acres, whereof two thirds are arable, and the rest pasture and woodland. E.) from Nottingham containing 1339 inhabitants. division of the wapentake of Thurgarton and of the county of Nottingham, 7 miles (N. Wilfrid), a parish, in the union of Basford, S. Parish History A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848ĬALVERTON (St. A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848.
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