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Place

Ipswich, Suffolk, England

Access Type

10

Type

10

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Wednesday's Post

... afforded but little accommodation, and that was pretty , fully occupied by Miss Noyes, the. children of . Thomas 'T'hurtell, a maid servant, and a boy, be- l sides Probert and his wife. It would seem that Weare had been invited, or had made an engage- i ment ...

NORFOLK LENT ASSIZES

... of a gentleman residing in Lan-bilsn-pla~c, London, in WI which service one Mar rckelaslived, in the caps- w city of lady' maid. lie hsre an excellnt character, and, th, with the sanuction of issnatr ei -eautumn of that to year was married, at MayeoeCucto ...

ASSIZE INTELLIGENCE

... the house, and having carried her into the parlour he bolted the door. He lnext went into the kitchen and took up the carving-knife and steel, and having sharpened the knife laid it on the table in the parlour, after which he seized his wvife and they ...

SUFFOLK SUMMER ASSIZES

... the premises. The defendant was an eccen- tric lady. She kept pigeons in the dairy, and, as he wtas informsed, pigs in the parlour, besides having been attend- ed by a body-guard of cats. This was independently of the damage to the gates and fences. Mr ...

LOCAL INTELLIGENCE

... for the prosecution. It appeared that the prisoner early one morning called at the prosecutor's shop and asked the servant-maid whether her master was up; being informied in the siege- tive, lie said lie wanted to he mseasured fornapair of boots, and ...

SUFFOLK SUMMER ASSIZES

... the wall. About seven o'clock on the night of the 27th of April, as the prosecutor was paving his men their wages in the parlour, one of his labourers, named Pytches, gave the alarm of fire. The prosecutor, anx- ious to save the premises, ran across the ...

THE MURDERS AT STANFIELD HALL

... was in the parlour when the closet was searched; it was searched several times. *She recollected Mr. Cann and Mr. John Cann being there. When she came down the papers were taken out, and the cash.box. She could not say they were in the parlour. Mr. John ...

SUFFOLK LENT ASSIZES

... sister-in-law she said, There's a set of ruffians I Upon this one of the men observed, Never mind, we are not'going to harm the maids ! (Laughter.) Mr. Prendergast: That did not include you, you know, because you are a married woman. (More laughter.) Cross ...

Norfolk Assizes

... recollect. Prisoner: Did I lead you to expect I wished you to remain in the parlour when I went out on the night of the 28th ? Witness: No. When I was talking to Savory, was not the parlour door open ? It might have been, but I do not know. Did I not come into ...

Norfolk Assizes

... writing, that night to my knowledge. I was not In the brown parlour, the room on the right-hand side of the staircase. The Judge: We call that the library. Prisoner: It is called the Brown Parlour in all the examinations. The Judge. Very well, let it be ...