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  2. Peckover House and Garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peckover_House_and_Garden

    Alexander Peckover was created Baron Peckover in 1907. During the period in which the building was in the ownership of the Peckovers, the building was known as Bank House . During the Second World War local tradition has it that Alexandrina Peckover, the largest contributor to the Wisbech Spitfire Fund, did so in lieu of giving up the railings ...

  3. Alexander Peckover, 1st Baron Peckover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Peckover,_1st...

    The following year he was raised to the peerage as Baron Peckover, of Wisbech in the County of Cambridge. [7] In 1905 Cambridge University awarded him the honorary degree of LL.D. [ 8 ] After his death part of the estates were sold off by auction at the Alexandra Theatre, Wisbech in 1920.

  4. Wisbech & Fenland Museum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisbech_&_Fenland_Museum

    The museum holds an extensive collection of maps, which were exhibited in Cambridge in 1934, Peckover House 1954 and 1976 and the museum in 1993. [14] In 1947 the Museum Committee recommended to the trustees that the manuscript of Dickens' Great Expectations , valued at thousands of pounds, be sold.

  5. Wisbech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisbech

    Like the rest of Cambridgeshire, Wisbech was part of the Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of East Anglia.It served as a port on The Wash. [7]One of the first authentic references to Wisbech occurs in a charter dated 664 granting the Abbey at Medeshamstede (now Peterborough) land in Wisbech [8] and in 1000, when Oswy and Leoflede, on the admission of their son Aelfwin as a monk, gave the vill to the ...

  6. Municipal Borough of Wisbech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Municipal_Borough_of_Wisbech

    At the 1871 census Wisbech (Municipal Borough Limits) consisted of 6,432acres, 2,162 houses, and 9,362 persons. [2] A long, narrow tail of land was detached and given to Wisbech Rural District. In 1933 the south-western part of Wisbech MB was transferred to the parish of Elm leaving Wisbech RD surrounding the Borough on three sides. [3] [4]

  7. Jane Stuart (Quaker) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Stuart_(Quaker)

    The meeting house Stuart attended (and where she is buried) was a thatched building on the North Brink, as shown in a watercolour painting by Algernon Peckover and in use by the Friends from 1711. [11] [e] [13] [14] She died at the age of 88 on 12 July 1742. [4] [15] She is referred to in the Victoria County History. [16]

  8. Category:People from Wisbech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:People_from_Wisbech

    Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "People from Wisbech" ... Alexander Peckover, 1st Baron Peckover ...

  9. Priscilla Hannah Peckover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priscilla_Hannah_Peckover

    Priscilla Hannah Peckover (27 October 1833 – 8 September 1931) was an English Quaker, pacifist and linguist from a prosperous banking family. After helping to raise the three daughters of her widowed brother, in her forties she became involved in the pacifist movement.