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POST OFFICE. Cobb, Richard Storer, Dover Castle Inn
ASSURANCE OFFICE AGENTS. NORWICH UNION, (Fire & Life) Flood, James Thomas
GENTRY, CLERGY, AND PROFESSIONAL PERSONS.
Baldwin, Rev. Alfred, Vicar of Tong Barrows, Thomas Tyler, William Church, James, surgeon Nowers, the Misses, Seminary (boarding) Tracy, John William, surgeon
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TRADES AND BUSINESSES
Bottle, William, saddler and harness maker Boulding, Francis, butcher Brenchley, David, blacksmith Busby, Thomas, grocer and hatter Clapson, Daniel, butcher Cobb, Richard Storer, Dover Castle Inn Commercial Hotel, and Corn Exchange Cockell, Thomas, baker Cockell, George, glover Cornwall, Elizabeth, George Inn Cullen, Edward, painter, plumber, and glazier Duncan, James, boot & shoemaker Fairbeard, William, nurseryman and florist Flood, William, blacksmith Flood, George, grocer Furrell, George, boot & shoe maker Kemp, William, saddler and harness maker Kimmins, James, baker Masters, Ebenezer, grocer and linen draper Maytom, John, bricklayer Maytom, George, ditto Nowers, William, chemist & druggist Pain, James, carpenter Payn, James, grocer & linen draper Read, John, grocer and draper Tattnell, Daniel, the Swan Inn Terry, William, coach builder and wheelwright Vallance, Mrs., carpenter, &c. Wanstall, William, tailor
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OSPRINGE Is a hamlet and parish north-west of Sheldwich, in the hundred of Faversham, lathe of Scray. It is a large parish, five miles in extent and two in breadth, and stands on the London road, at a distance of about nine miles from Canterbury and about forty-seven from London. It appears to have been once a town of considerable importance, the manor of Ospringe, alias Queen Court, having belonged to the queens of England up to Margaret, wife of Edward 1. Bishop Odo had large possessions in Ospringe, and “King John was at his manor of Ospringe in his fifteenth and seventeenth years.” A court leet and court baron are held for the manor, and at the former a constable is chosen yearly for the jurisdiction of the liberty of Ospringe. The ancient Hospital, or Maison Dieu, established by Henry III. In 1235. Is now in ruins. The parish of Ospringe is within the jurisdiction of the diocese of Canterbury and deanery of Ospringe. The church, which stands about a mile south of Ospringe-street, is dedicated to St.Peter and St.Paul, and consists of three aisles, a chancel, and an ancient steeple at the west end, containing four bells. The living is a vicarage, in the patronage of Jesus’ College, Cambridge, and is valued in the king’s books at 10l. A fair is held in the parish on the 29th of May. The population of the parish in 1831 was 1087, with 189 inhabited houses and 2,930 acres.
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