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Some records are held at the service's offsite store also in Stafford. [1] It is the principal repository for manuscript records for the county. [2] The record office is behind the William Salt Library (right), with which it co-operates. It is run as a joint service with Stoke-on-Trent as the Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent Archive Service ...
The Staffordshire Record Society is the record society for Staffordshire in England. It was originally formed in 1879 as the William Salt Archaeological Society based on the activities and collection of the antiquarian and banker William Salt .
Doddington Hall. The Broughton, later Broughton-Delves, later Broughton Baronetcy, of Broughton in the County of Stafford, is a title in the Baronetage of England.It was created on 10 March 1661 for Sir Brian Broughton, of Broughton Hall, near Eccleshall, Staffordshire, High Sheriff of Staffordshire from 1660 to 1661 and the member of an ancient Staffordshire family.
Ralph was born on 24 September 1301, the son of Edmund de Stafford, 1st Baron Stafford and Margaret Basset. [citation needed] Having lost his father at the age of seven, Ralph grew up in the midlands with his mother's relatives, including her second husband Thomas Pipe.
The county symbol, the Staffordshire Knot, is seen on an Anglian stone cross that dates from around the year 805. The cross still stands in Stoke churchyard. Thus the Knot is either i) an ancient Mercian symbol or ii) a symbol adopted from the Irish Christianity, Christianity having been brought to Staffordshire by Irish monks from Lindisfarne about AD 650.
Charles Chetwynd (1851-1895) was a magistrate of Staffordshire. In 1888 he married Mary Jane Meakin (1860-1948) who was the daughter of George Meakin of Creswell Hall, Staffordshire. He was the wealthy owner of the famous pottery firm J. & G. Meakin who were later merged with Wedgwood. [9] The couple had two daughters and one son.
This media file appears to be a single volume of a multi-volume work. Are there more volumes of this that could be (or are) hosted on Commons? This applies to single volumes of a multi-volume work, or to single issues or a single collected volume of a serial publication such as a journal, magazine, or newspaper.
Staffordshire figures of Chaucer and Isaac Newton, Ralph Wood II, c. 1790. About 12 inches (30 cm) tall. The Wood family was an English family of Staffordshire potters. [1] Among its members were Ralph Wood I (1715–1772), the "miller of Burslem," his son Ralph Wood II (1748–1795), and his grandson Ralph Wood III (1774–1801).
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