Manchester: its political, social and commercial historyWhittaker, 1836 - 538 pages |
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Page 14
... Boroughreeve , has been published in most of the histories of the town which have since made their appearance . * It ... borough and of the courts of * The charter itself , which is in excellent preservation , lies in the Borough ...
... Boroughreeve , has been published in most of the histories of the town which have since made their appearance . * It ... borough and of the courts of * The charter itself , which is in excellent preservation , lies in the Borough ...
Page 15
... Borough- reeve ; the grant being that " the burgesses ought and may chuse a Reeve of themselves , whom they will , and to remove the Reeve ; " but the effort must prove unsuc- cessful , inasmuch as the terms of the charter are fully ...
... Borough- reeve ; the grant being that " the burgesses ought and may chuse a Reeve of themselves , whom they will , and to remove the Reeve ; " but the effort must prove unsuc- cessful , inasmuch as the terms of the charter are fully ...
Page 16
... Boroughreeve whilst his title was in abeyance , the inhabitants elected one of their own , and a collision was approaching , when the Baron sold his manorial rights for the small sum of £ 3,000 to John de Lacye , a cloth - maker in ...
... Boroughreeve whilst his title was in abeyance , the inhabitants elected one of their own , and a collision was approaching , when the Baron sold his manorial rights for the small sum of £ 3,000 to John de Lacye , a cloth - maker in ...
Page 94
... Boroughreeve , Clergy and others publicly pledged themselves , in a series of resolutions , to reduce their use of wheat - flour at least one - third . Commercial distress pressed so heavily upon the people , that though they were ...
... Boroughreeve , Clergy and others publicly pledged themselves , in a series of resolutions , to reduce their use of wheat - flour at least one - third . Commercial distress pressed so heavily upon the people , that though they were ...
Page 112
... Boroughreeve , and his colleagues , N. Wainhouse and T. S. Withington , Esq . , Constables for 1817 , as well as to the Chairman of the Quarter Sessions , silver cups , as testimonies to the zeal and decision with which they had acted ...
... Boroughreeve , and his colleagues , N. Wainhouse and T. S. Withington , Esq . , Constables for 1817 , as well as to the Chairman of the Quarter Sessions , silver cups , as testimonies to the zeal and decision with which they had acted ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards amount annual annum appointed Ardwick Ashton-under-Lyne assessment attended average Blackburn Bolton Boroughreeve Bury canal cent Charity Chat Moss Cheetham Cheshire chester coal Collegiate Church Collyhurst Commissioners Committee cotton Crumpsall Dalton Deansgate Derby Didsbury districts Ditto Droylsden Duke Earl elected employed England erected expense factories Female Hall hands Harpurhey Heaton Norris Hulme hundred Hundred of Salford improvements increase inhabitants Institution John June King labour Lancashire Lancaster land Liverpool London Lord Majesty Male manufacture meeting ment Messrs miles mills Moss Newton obtained occupied officers Oldham operation paid parish Parliament parties Peel persons poor population pounds present Prestwich prisoners railway Rector residence river Medlock Rochdale Royal Salford Hundred School shew silk Society Stockport streets Stretford subscription thousand tion total number town TOWNSHIP trade Trustees Vicar wages Warden Warrington weavers whilst Wigan yards yarn
Popular passages
Page 463 - He was a man, take him for all in all, We shall not look upon his like again: I know that statement's not original: What statement is, since Shakspere?
Page 459 - There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceased ; The which observed, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things As yet not come to life, which in their seeds And weak beginnings lie intreasured. Such things become the hatch and brood of time...
Page 414 - The hours of attendance shall be from nine to twelve in the morning and from two to five in the afternoon.
Page 149 - An eminent manufacturer in that age," said he, " used to be in his warehouse before six in the morning, accompanied by his children and apprentices. At seven they all came in to breakfast, which consisted of one large dish of water-pottage, made of oatmeal, water, and a little salt, boiled thick, and poured into a dish. At the side was a pan or basin of milk, and the master and apprentices, each with a wooden spoon in his hand, without loss of time, dipped into the same dish, and thence into the...
Page 61 - ... having of May games, Whitsun ales, and morris dances, and the setting up of maypoles and other sports therewith used, so as the same be had in due and convenient time, without impediment or neglect of divine service...
Page 364 - How are the mighty fallen in the midst of the battle ! O Jonathan, thou wast slain in thine high places. I am distressed for thee, my brother Jonathan : very pleasant hast thou been unto me : thy love to me was wonderful, passing the love of women. How are the mighty fallen, and the weapons of war perished!
Page 151 - Manchester merchants began to give out warps and raw cotton to the weavers, receiving them back in cloth, and paying for the carding, roving, spinning, and weaving...
Page 372 - But lo ! the dome — the vast and wondrous dome, To which Diana's marvel was a cell — Christ's mighty shrine above his martyr's tomb ! I have beheld the Ephesian's miracle; — Its columns strew the wilderness, and dwell The hyaena and the jackal in their shade; I have beheld Sophia's bright roofs swell Their glittering mass i...
Page 506 - I have succeeded better than many who surround me, in the different walks of life, it has been chiefly, nay, I may say almost solely, from unwearied assiduity. It is not so much from any superior genius that one man possesses over another, but more from attention to study and perseverance in the objects before them, that some men rise to greater eminence than others.
Page 511 - ... the left, and taught him to do homage to no authority before that of truth. Fixing his eye on the highest views of science, his experiments had never an insulated character, but were always made as contributions towards some important end, — were among the steps towards some lofty generalization. And with a most happy prescience of the points towards which the rays of scattered experiments were converging, he had more than once seen light, while to other eyes all was yet in darkness ; — out...