Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. The Inventory of John Tatham names seven negro. slaves, viz : Jack, Wheldon, Tom, Jo, Zathary, Jenny and. Betty, - all valued by the appraisers at £ 202 . In the In-. ventory of Elizabeth, 44 Wheldon " is called 4 4 Welldome," and 44 Zathary" 44 Zachery," though more likely it should. have been written Zachary.

  2. Nov 17, 2015 · Perhaps at this time Tatham left his post and took the name John Gray. He must have married around 1680 since he had a daughter born around 1680 to 1682. 6 In 1684 he bought land from Penn and sailed to Pennsylvania, with his family, a large library and merchant goods.

  3. Nov 4, 2017 · Tatham and Jennings. Samuel Jennings was born 1648 in Buckinghamshire, England and became a devout Quaker. Like many English Quakers at the time, Jennings suffered from persecution by local authorities and was eager to join the exodus to the unsettled lands in western New Jersey. He was well acquainted with William Penn, who urged Edward ...

  4. Jean Joseph Egg (1775-1837) was the brother of Durs Egg and worked for Henry Tatham from 1801. The two men later co-founded the company Tatham & Egg. In 1814 Joseph opened his own shop at Piccadilly Circus. In 1800 he took out a patent for a “method of bending steel without the assistance of heat, which may be applied to the manufacturing of ...

  5. Drama and Politics in the English Civil War - April 1998

  6. The smooth-bored barrels (10¾ inches) struck TATHAM & EGG within a gold-lined rectangular cartouches, gold fore-sights and gold-lined touch-holes; gold-inlaid star-bursts, laurel wreaths and panoplies-of-arms surmounted by Phrygian-type caps of liberty decorate the barrels inscribed in gold along their lengths: 1A LA CIUDAD DE BUENOS AYRES AT GENERAL BELGRANO. 2A VENCEDOR EN TUCUMAN Y SALTA ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Among the known plays by John Tatham are: Love Crowns the End (1632; printed 1646) The Distracted State (1641; printed 1651) The Scots Figgaries, or a Knot of Knaves (printed 1652) The Rump (printed 1660). Legacy. In 1682, Aphra Behn adapted The Rump as a play of her own, The Roundheads. Sources. John Tatham, The Dramatic Works of John Tatham ...

  1. People also search for