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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Rogers' Directory of Norwich and
-Neighbourhood, by Edward Dawson Rogers
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Rogers' Directory of Norwich and Neighbourhood
-
-
-Author: Edward Dawson Rogers
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 10, 2020 [eBook #64006]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROGERS' DIRECTORY OF NORWICH AND
-NEIGHBOURHOOD***
-
-
-Transcribed from the c1858 Jarrold and Sons edition, using scans from the
-British Library, by David Price.
-
-
-
-
-
- ROGERS’
- DIRECTORY OF NORWICH
- AND
- NEIGHBOURHOOD.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- (ENTERED AT STATIONERS’ HALL.)
-
- * * * * *
-
- * * * * *
-
- PRINTED FOR THE PROPRIETOR, BY
- JARROLD AND SONS, LONDON STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-IT is never pleasant to have to make apologies; and yet there are some
-circumstances under which an apology is a duty, and therefore, whether
-pleasant or not, should be tendered cheerfully. The present is a case in
-point. The work should have been published earlier, and would have been
-had it been possible. The truth is that the “Guide to Streets, &c.,” was
-a novel experiment, and the compiler—having nobody’s experience to guide
-him—thought the task an easier one than it turned out to be. It was at
-first imagined that the matter for this “Guide” could be obtained
-simultaneously with the information for the Directory itself. The
-attempt proved the mistake. It was found that to do both well they must
-be done distinctly and independently. Hence chiefly came the delay, to
-say nothing of the fact that for many “local habitations” it was very
-difficult to find the “name.” In yards and courts not a few, and in some
-out-of-the-way streets even, not one of the inhabitants could give his
-whereabouts a designation! The task, however, has been achieved at last;
-and it is trusted that upon the whole the public will think that it has
-been achieved well. A few errors have crept in, doubtless; but no labor
-and no care have been spared to avoid them. The hope is confidently
-cherished that the faults of the work will be forgiven for the sake of
-its excellencies, especially as the compiler promises to “do better next
-time.”
-
-
-
-
-HISTORY OF NORWICH.
-
-
-NORWICH, a city and county, situate in the centre of the Eastern Division
-of Norfolk, consists of 35 parishes and 10 hamlets, covers 6,638 acres,
-is nearly 14 miles in circumference, and contained, in 1851, 15,000
-houses and 68,195 inhabitants. The undisputed metropolis of the Eastern
-Counties, it has communication both by water and rail with the seaports
-of Yarmouth and Lowestoft, while it is doubly connected with London by
-the Ipswich and Cambridge lines; and has access to the midland and
-northern counties, by way of Peterborough. Having thus indicated the
-_locale_ and dimensions of the “old city,” it is but right that before
-proceeding further we should give a brief sketch of its history. And
-this we the more readily do, inasmuch as Norwich has borne a by no means
-undistinguished part in those great political and social movements which
-have made England what she is.
-
-We should, however, only trifle with our readers were we to express any
-opinion upon the origin and paternity of the East Anglian capital, for it
-would ill become us to pretend to pierce through the obscurity which
-surrounds the early history of this, as indeed of all other cities. It
-is certainly but natural to suppose that Norwich gradually rose round a
-military fortress erected on the site which the present Castle partly
-occupies; but whether that fortress was raised by some British potentate
-whose very name is mythical, or was the work of Uffa, the first Saxon
-king of the eastern counties, and whether, it being destroyed by Sweyn,
-the present structure was founded by Canute, it would profit us little to
-discuss. Declining, therefore, these bootless speculations, we find that
-in the reign of Edward the Confessor, “Northwic” contained 1300
-burgesses, boasted of 25 churches, and was already of sufficient
-importance as to constitute a “hundred;” while in 1085, as appears by the
-Doomsday Survey, its burgesses had increased in number to over 1500, and
-its churches to 45. Shortly before this, William the Conqueror had
-appointed its first Norman governor, Ralph de Guader, or Waher, who,
-however, marrying the monarch’s niece, Judith, without his consent, and
-afterwards conspiring against his sovereign, was obliged to flee to
-Brittany; his bride, after a three-months’ siege in the castle, during
-which the city suffered much damage, was compelled to capitulate. The
-office, which included the earldom of Norfolk and some considerable
-estates, was then conferred on Roger Bigod, the founder of a baronial
-house illustrious in English history. {2} In the following reign the
-city rose in importance by the translation, in 1094, of the Bishop’s See
-from Thetford—where indeed it had barely been fixed a quarter of a
-century; having, up to 1070, been located at North Elmham, then a place
-of note, and subsequently a favorite residence of the diocesans. The
-then bishop, Herbert de Lozinga, for having _purchased_ his preferment of
-William Rufus, and for other simoniacal practices, was required, after
-the fashion of the times, to prove his contrition by a substantial
-atonement. He accordingly purchased a meadow, called Cow Holme,
-extending from the castle ditches to the river; and in 1096 laid the
-foundation of a cathedral church, proceeding with such expedition, that
-in five years he was able to place 60 Benedictine monks in the new
-priory. About this period many Jews from Normandy settled in the city;
-popular prejudice, however, was strong against them, and in 1137, on a
-charge of crucifying a boy in Thorpe wood, large numbers of them were
-ruthlessly slaughtered. Carrow Abbey, we may here mention, dates its
-origin from the middle of the 12th century, the site being granted by
-Stephen for a nunnery, where the daughters of the noble and the affluent
-were wont to be educated.
-
-A century later, and we find the lay and clerical elements in rancorous
-hostility. Perpetual animosities between the citizens and the monks rose
-at last to such a height, that the priory was, in 1234, entirely
-destroyed; while 38 years subsequently, the cathedral itself was well
-nigh demolished—an offence for which the city was visited with the
-terrors of an interdict. The injury, however, was not irreparable, for
-with a fine of 3000 marks imposed on the principal inhabitants, and with
-some liberal donations, the edifice was sufficiently restored as in 1278
-to be consecrated by Bishop Middleton, in the presence of Edward the
-First and his queen, Eleanor—the first royal visit of which we have any
-reliable evidence. A wall was, moreover, raised round the Cathedral
-precincts—St. Ethelbert’s Gate being erected by the citizens; and this
-seems for a time to have prevented further dissension. Between the two
-epochs of contention above-named, arose the first recorded charitable
-institution in Norwich—Bishop Walter de Suffield founding St. Giles’
-(commonly called the Old Man’s) Hospital, for the triple purpose of
-ensuring masses for his soul’s repose, providing an asylum for
-superannuated and infirm priests, and furnishing a refuge for 13 aged
-persons; to the last object only, it is hardly necessary to say, is the
-building now devoted; and enriched by subsequent benefactions, the
-hospital accommodates 50 of each sex, who, on admission, must have
-reached 65 years of age.
-
-Another noticeable feature which must by no means be overlooked while
-dwelling on this period, is the enclosure of the city, from Conisford or
-King street to Pockthorpe, by a wall. This important work, a testimony
-to the increasing prosperity of the city, as well as to the turbulence of
-the times, was commenced in 1294 and completed in 1320; but it was not
-till two and twenty years afterwards that, through the munificence of one
-Richard Spynk, the wall was flanked with 40 towers, furnished with 12
-gates, and fortified by a broad ditch. The gates remained up to 1792,
-and the wall, though now built upon on every side, may yet be traced for
-almost its entire length, being especially prominent as the southern
-boundary of Chapel Field, and offers many a study to the antiquarian and
-the historian.
-
-In 1340 and 1342 Edward the Third held grand tournaments in the city, and
-in 1348 the heir apparent, the Black Prince, with his mother Philippa,
-also visited Norwich, and were entertained at a cost of £37 4s. 6d. A
-more unwelcome visitor quickly followed; for in seven months 37,000
-persons are said to have perished by the plague, by which the city was
-alarmingly depopulated. It was about this time that the Castle began to
-be used as a county prison, which was authorized by an Act of 14 Edward
-III., though a military governor continued still to be appointed. In
-1381, cotemporaneously with the Wat Tyler rebellion in the south, John de
-Litester, a dyer, at the head of a large body of the disaffected,
-pillaged the houses of the wealthy, but was speedily overthrown by the
-forces of Bishop Spencer. This very warlike ecclesiastic was a fierce
-enemy of the Lollards, who had acquired a strong hold in the city, and he
-imprisoned Sir Thomas Erpingham, who had shown a warm sympathy for the
-reformed doctrines; but in the parliament of 1400 the king directed them
-to “shake hands and kiss each other in token of friendship.” The
-reconciliation was apparently sincere, for the baronet became a
-munificent benefactor to the church. He erected the Erpingham gateway,
-and rebuilt the monastery of the Black friars, now known as St. Andrew’s
-Hall. This noble building was not, however, completed until the time of
-his son Sir Robert, himself a member of the fraternity. On the
-dissolution of the monasteries by our royal Bluebeard, the property was
-obtained by the Corporation for the sum of £81, and became devoted to the
-guilds and other secular purposes.
-
-In 1403, in consideration, as it appears, of a gift of 4000 marks, (for
-most of our ancient liberties were purchased) Henry IV. conferred
-municipal institutions on the city, and would also have increased its
-representatives—for Norwich had returned two members since 1296—to four,
-had not the citizens represented their inability to meet the increased
-expense which their services would have occasioned. William Appleyard
-was the first mayor, and he celebrated his year of office in the fine
-flint building then just erected, lately used as a Bridewell, and now as
-a tobacco manufactory. In 1407 the Guildhall was commenced, on the site
-of a small thatched erection, called a toll-booth, used for collecting
-the market tolls. Henry V., in 1415, visited the city, and, we are told,
-left his coronet in pawn for 1000 marks, which he doubtless required for
-his French wars; but 25 years afterwards Norwich was in sad disgrace at
-court, for as a rebuke for suing Henry VI. for £100 which they had lent,
-the charters were suspended. A few years after, however, the city was
-visited by that unfortunate monarch, and in 1469 by Edward IV., who,
-writes John Paston, “hath been worshipfully received into Norwich, and
-had right good cheer and great gifts”—with which he was so well pleased
-that he speedily paid another visit, when some grand pageants were
-performed, though interrupted by “heavy and continuous rain.”
-
-But we now come to a catalogue of disasters: the Cathedral was seriously
-injured by fire, 1463; the fatal plague ravaged the city, 1479; and in
-1505 and 1507 there were great fires, in the latter year 718 houses being
-consumed, which obliged the corporate authorities to prohibit the
-erection of thatched buildings. In 1517, disputes between the citizens
-and the monks being again rife, Wolsey came over on a mission of
-mediation, but it was not till several years afterwards that peace was
-restored by the settlement of the civil and ecclesiastical boundaries and
-jurisdictions. We must not forget to notice the burning of the martyr
-Bilney, after an imprisonment in a dungeon of the Guildhall; and scarcely
-were the lurid fires of persecution extinguished before a memorable
-political outbreak exposed the city to the ravages of contending armies,
-and excited the anxious consideration of the youthful Edward’s ministers.
-The details of Kett’s rebellion are too well known to require
-recapitulation; suffice it to say that after obtaining possession of the
-city and defeating the Marquis of Northampton in an encounter on Palace
-Plain, the insurgents were dispersed by the Earl of Warwick—Robert Kett
-being executed at the Castle, and William at Wymondham. To close a
-paragraph of casualties, persecutions, and tumults, we must record the
-visitation of the sweating sickness, striking down near 1000 victims in
-1551, and of the quartan ague six years later; the conviction of several
-citizens in 1570, for participation in a plot for assassinating the
-queen, re-establishing Popery, and expelling the strangers “out of the
-citye and realme,” of whom four suffered death, and others confinement
-for life; and the imprisonment in the Castle of certain persons
-apprehended in Suffolk for “refusing to come to the church in time of
-sermons and common prayer.”
-
-Turning from these saddening scenes, we note the foundation, in 1557, of
-Caius College, Cambridge, by a Norwich citizen of that name, (but
-sometimes spelled Keyes, whence, we suppose, the pronunciation of the
-word,) physician to three sovereigns of the house of Tudor, and a man of
-learning. He was one of the first of a long line of distinguished men
-educated at our Grammar School—an institution of ancient date, but which
-did not become located in the present venerable structure until the reign
-of Elizabeth. And this mention of “Good Queen Bess” reminds us of her
-visit to the old city in 1578, spending a week in all sorts of
-festivities, pageantries, and amusements, to the unutterable delight of
-her loyal subjects. Nearly a century was destined to elapse ere Norwich
-was honored with another sight of royalty; and as there is a back-ground
-to every picture, so all this rejoicing was followed by the dread
-calamity of the plague—introduced, indeed, it was supposed, by some of
-the Queen’s attendants—and which slew five thousand victims.
-
-The succeeding half century is chiefly characterised by ecclesiastical
-commotions, of which the fact that within little more than 60 years the
-diocese had _twelve_ bishops, may be taken as one indication. Of these,
-the first, John Parkhurst, who died about 1575, was favorably disposed
-towards the church polity of Calvin, and opposed, as far as he could, a
-passive resistance to the harsh injunctions of his Primate (Parker, a
-native of Norwich) against the Puritans; Edmund Freke, his successor,
-deprived many nonconforming ministers of their livings, and imprisoned
-Robert Brown, the first separatist from the Establishment, and whose
-ideas of church government are mainly identical with those of the present
-Congregationalists; a third—Matthew Wren, father of the famous architect,
-was censured and imprisoned by the Parliament, on a complaint by the
-people of Ipswich, that he had, in two years, suspended or deprived fifty
-ministers, and driven 3000 persons, with their manufactures, to Holland,
-to the prejudice of the trade of the kingdom; Joseph Hall, the last of
-the twelve, was a man much esteemed for his mild disposition, and for the
-purity of his style was termed the English Seneca. Though at one time
-harshly treated by the Roundhead soldiers, he was ultimately restored by
-the Commons to the full possession of his revenues, and spent the latter
-part of his life in a quiet retreat at Heigham, (now the Dolphin Inn,) in
-the church of which parish he was interred, though a passage in his will
-runs thus—“I do not hold God’s _house_ a meet repository for the bodies
-of the greatest saints.”—(_Neale’s History of the Puritans_.) Of the
-Civil War, the period in which this worthy bishop lived, there is but
-little to record. Norwich seems from the first to have given an
-unhesitating support to the Parliament, and was assessed at £53 yearly
-towards the maintenance of the Earl of Manchester’s forces. That there
-was, however, a party in the city who leaned to the King’s side, is shown
-by a tragical occurrence in 1648. John Utting, the mayor, had been
-complained of for not carrying out the ordinances against images; but
-upon a _poursuivant_ being sent to require his attendance at the bar of
-the House to answer the charge, a violent tumult arose; the rioters
-obtained possession of the military depôt, (whose site the Bethel now
-occupies,) and 98 barrels of gunpowder being accidentally fired, 200
-persons were killed or wounded by the explosion.
-
-Coming down to 1671, we must chronicle the visit of the “Merry Monarch,”
-with his Queen and brother, who were sumptuously entertained by the Duke
-of Norfolk, as well as by the civic grandees: an animated description of
-the city at this period—with its ducal palace, its prosperous
-manufactures, and the priceless cabinet and botanical gardens of the
-famous Sir Thomas Browne (whose monument may be seen in St. Peter’s
-church)—is given by Macaulay. Ten years later, James, Duke of York, paid
-a second visit; but in 1687 he had, as king, forfeited all popularity by
-his arbitrary interference with the corporation; and the representative
-of the house of Howard, riding into the market at the head of 300 knights
-and gentlemen, amid the acclamations of the citizens, declared for a free
-parliament. It was the son of this duke, who, taking umbrage at the
-mayor’s forbidding his comedians entering the city with trumpets,
-demolished the whole of his ancestral palace, said to be the largest town
-house in the kingdom out of London, and which, from Christmas to
-Twelfth-night, was wont to be open to all comers.
-
-Henceforth politics almost disappear, and the remainder of the narrative
-must be confined to matters of purely local interest, which may be very
-briefly chronicled. From 1696 to 1698, a mint was established here, and
-coined about a quarter of a million of money. In 1732 the Market and
-Charing crosses were taken down; in 1731 the St. George’s
-Company—incorporated 1416, and the principal of the city guilds—resigned
-their charters to the corporation. In 1761 a coach was started between
-Norwich and London, to run the distance in twenty hours, it having
-hitherto taken two days in summer and three in winter. An inundation in
-the following year, flooded nearly 300 houses. In 1771 the Norfolk and
-Norwich Hospital was founded, William Fellowes, Esq., of Shotesham,
-laying the first stone. In 1776 an act was obtained for making a
-turnpike to Thetford. In 1785 the first balloon ascent seen in the city
-took place, Major Money being the adventurous aeronaut. In 1791 the
-barracks were erected, at a cost of £20,000. In 1824 the first Musical
-Festival was held, and was conducted by Sir George Smart; its chief
-promoter was Mr. Edward Taylor, now Gresham Professor. The same year the
-City Gaol was built, in lieu of an old building on the site of the Public
-Library—the Shirehall is of about the same date; the Museum was founded
-in 1825, and in 1828 the Corn Exchange was erected. In 1835, June 16,
-the last guild-day celebration took place, 800 ladies and gentlemen
-dining in St. Andrew’s Hall; the late Mr. T. O. Springfield was, in the
-following January, elected the first mayor under the Municipal Reform
-Act. In 1837 Dr. Stanley was appointed bishop; this beloved prelate
-expired in 1849, about two years after the death of the equally beloved
-and philanthropic Joseph John Gurney. In 1844 the Yarmouth railway was
-opened, in the following year the Norfolk, and in 1846 the Ipswich and
-Colchester line. In 1854, the mayor, (then Mr. Samuel Bignold) was
-knighted by her Majesty, on presenting an address from the Corporation,
-on the war with Russia. In 1857 the Free Library was opened, and the
-first stone was also laid of the New Workhouse.
-
-Having thus brought down the political history of the city to the present
-time, we propose to offer a review of the origin and progress of the
-manufactures of Norwich, on which its prosperity has so materially
-depended, and indeed still depends.
-
-As a manufacturing city, Norwich first comes into notice in the reign of
-Henry I. In 1108 an inundation in Flanders induced many of the sufferers
-to try their fortunes in England; some of them settled at Worstead,
-(whence the name “worsted”) and afterwards at Norwich. In the following
-reign more Flemish emigrants came over; and they introduced the weaving
-of wool. The weavers, in Henry the Second’s reign, formed themselves
-into guilds, and obtained charters; but it was not till the time of the
-third Edward that the next great advance was made. This wise king
-invited into the kingdom a large number of the countrymen of his consort,
-Philippa of Hainault, who were skilled in weaving woollen and worsted.
-They were principally located in the eastern counties; Norwich was fixed
-as the staple for Norfolk and Suffolk; and an act was passed prohibiting
-the wearing of any but English cloth—a piece of protectionist policy at
-which we may smile, but which was no doubt then very commendable. In
-several following reigns great complaint was made of the “craft and
-deceit” practised in the making of serges, says, fustians, &c., and
-wardens were appointed to supervise the “true making thereof.” Trade in
-these articles seems to have declined about the period of the
-Reformation, and attention began to be paid to dornecks and coverlets;
-and in the reign of Mary, the manufacture of “light stuffs”—the same
-fabric as the Naples fustians, and resembling the bombazines of later
-years—was introduced. In 1565, however, there was much distress in the
-city through the decay of the worsted trade, and the corporate body
-obtained permission to “import” 300 Dutch, but too glad to avoid the
-persecution of the merciless Alva, who brought with them the art of
-weaving with a warp of silk or linen, as well as of dyeing and other
-processes. In five years their numbers increased to 3000, (in London
-there were nearly 4000) and in 1575 their elders exhibited to the
-authorities a mixed fabric of silk and worsted, termed bombazine.
-Religious persecution, however, drove many back to their fatherland, now
-liberated from the intolerant Spaniard; but Cromwell’s policy of liberty
-of conscience and unfettered trade, remedied the mischief thus
-occasioned. In Charles the Second’s reign, the lower west room of the
-Guildhall (the Criminal Court) was the Cloth Hall, and the chamber over
-(now Sword-room) was devoted to the sale of wool and yarn. Wool-combing
-was now a source of great employment, (it was carried on here until
-1808,) and the anniversary of its patron saint, Bishop Blaize, was
-celebrated with much pomp; while the manufacture was so extensive as to
-be described as “such as England never knew in any age.” Shortly
-afterwards an additional branch of industry was opened, the French
-refugees introducing the making of crape, which soon became very popular,
-and under Sir Robert Walpole’s administration, a public mourning was
-ordered to be in Norwich crape. About the middle of last century the
-trade of the city is generally supposed to be at its zenith, its
-productions being exported to all the continental markets; after this
-period the increasing use of cotton goods inflicted a heavy blow on the
-manufacture of woollen fabrics, while even in the latter, Norwich became
-exposed to the competition of Yorkshire mills, which occupied vantage
-ground from their proximity to iron and coal mines. In 1776 there were
-alarming riots on the part of the weavers, owing to lack of employment
-and the dearness of provisions. The American and French wars supervened
-in rapid succession—the latter closed most of the foreign markets, and
-thus inflicted incalculable injury on the city. Broad bombazines,
-poplins, camlets, fillover and other shawls, have been introduced at
-different periods since 1780; the bombazines are nearly superseded by
-paramattas, &c., and bareges, balzarines, &c., in every variety of
-design, are now manufactured. Of the yarns chiefly used, the wool is
-mostly from Australia, the silk from China, (though some from India and
-Italy) and the mohair from Angora; an inferior description is, however,
-obtained from Asia Minor.
-
-We must not forget to notice the opening of the shoe manufacture in the
-city, which gives employment to a considerable number of persons of both
-sexes: nor must we overlook the starch and mustard works of Messrs.
-Colman.
-
-Appended is a brief statement of the particular branches to which the
-principal factories are devoted:—Messrs. Middleton and Answorth, and
-Messrs. Bolingbroke, are famed for their poplins, and for the production
-of crinoline—the material being horsehair from South America. Messrs.
-Clabburn, for fillover long shawls, by a patented process, which gained
-the Paris Exhibition medal. Messrs. Willett and Nephew—paramattas, and
-many plain and fancy fabrics. Messrs. Grout and Co. (also of Yarmouth
-and Bungay)—silk crape. Mr. Geary and Mr. Sultzer, cotton fabrics—the
-latter establishment also carries on the winding of cotton on reels.
-Messrs. Blake and Mr. Jay—spinning of woollen and mohair yarns. Messrs.
-Towler and Co., and Messrs. Rowling and Allen—plain and fancy fabrics.
-Mr. G. Allen—woven silk for gloves. Messrs. Hinde—bareges and
-paramattas.
-
-Other important departments of trade, too numerous to be enumerated, are
-also carried on; such as sacking, tobacco, brushes, egg-flour, artificial
-manures, &c., &c.
-
-
-
-
-PLACES OF WORSHIP.
-
-
-CHURCHES.
-
-
-We have already alluded to the fact, that in the reign of William the
-Conqueror there were 45 city churches; and it appears from an inventory
-of the ornaments in the churches of the Norwich archdeaconry—commenced by
-William de Swyneflete in 1368, and continued to about 1419—that at that
-period there were 55 churches in use, exclusive of the Cathedral and
-conventual churches, besides the following which had then been desecrated
-or annexed to other parishes: St. Wyndwall, or Catherine in Newgate,
-(consolidated with All Saints, the parish being nearly depopulated by the
-plague in 1349), St. Olave’s Chapel, St. Michael Conisford, St. John the
-Evangelist, St. Cuthbert, St. Matthew, St. Christopher (united with St.
-Andrew), and St. Anne. Of the 55 then in use, the following, however,
-have long ceased to exist as parish churches; St. Botolph, St. Margaret
-Newbridge, St. Mary Combust, St. Margaret Colegate, St. Olave, (the two
-last named were taken down and consolidated with St. George at Colegate),
-St. Cross, St. Bartholomew (united with St. John at Sepulchre), St.
-Michael, (Ber Street,) St. Edward, St. Clement Conisford, St. Vedast, and
-St. Mary Parva (now the French Church). St. Mary in the Marsh was
-desecrated in 1653, and the parishioners have since used St. Luke’s
-Chapel, in the Cathedral.
-
-We append a statement of all the edifices now standing, in connection
-with the Established Church, commencing of course with
-
-
-THE CATHEDRAL.
-
-
-The present structure is considered by some to be mainly the work of
-Bishop Alnwyck, temp. 1430, and this prelate is generally supposed to
-have completed the cloisters—one of the finest quadrangles in the
-kingdom, commenced by Ralph de Walpole in 1297. The edifice is
-principally in the Norman style. The nave is divided into fourteen
-semi-circular arches; its roof is attributed to Walter Lyhart, the second
-bishop after Alnwyck. The large west window has recently been filled in
-with stained glass, as a memorial to Bishop Stanley. The nave itself
-contains the tombs or monuments of Chancellor Spencer, Bishop Nix, Bishop
-Parkhurst, Dean Gardiner, Sir James Hobart, (Attorney-General to Henry
-VIII.) and Bishop Stanley; while in the church are the monuments of
-Bishops Goldwell (1472) and Bathurst. Attached to the Cathedral were
-several chapels, but these have mostly been demolished. The interior
-generally suffered much defacement at the hands of the iconoclasts of the
-16th and 17th centuries; in 1740 the nave and aisles were repaired, and
-in 1806 the whole fabric was restored and beautified.
-
-The present bishop—appointed in 1857—is the Right Rev. J. T. Pelham, D.D.
-Dean—the Hon. and Very Rev. G. Pellew, D.D. Archdeacons—Norwich, Ven. R.
-E. Hankinson; Norfolk, Ven. W. A. Bouverie; Suffolk, Ven. T. J. Ormerod.
-Canons—Revs. M. Wodehouse, A. Sedgwick, G. Archdall, and H. Philpott;
-besides 23 honorary and 4 minor canons.
-
-ALL SAINTS, a small structure, with a square tower and three bells,
-contains an antique font with curiously carved figures of St. Paul and
-other apostles. The living is consolidated with St. Julian, and the
-joint benefices were returned in 1831 at £246 per annum. The Rev. T.
-Gurney is rector.
-
-ST. ANDREW, next to St. Peter Mancroft, the finest church in the city—was
-rebuilt in 1506. The font is massive. In the north aisle is a costly
-monument, with effigies of Sir John and Lady Suckling, of whom there is
-an annual commemoration. The curacy is in the gift of the parishioners;
-the Rev. A. C. Copeman was elected in 1857. Out of the proceeds of the
-sale of the church ornaments at the Reformation, the parish paid £17
-towards the repair of the gates and walls, and £20 to that of the Great
-Hospital—both injured in Kett’s rebellion.
-
-ST. AUGUSTINE, an unpretending edifice, with a tower and three bells.
-Rev. M. J. Rackham, rector.
-
-ST. BENEDICT, a small building with a round tower. The parishioners are
-the patrons; perpetual curate—Rev. W. Goodwin.
-
-ST. CLEMENT, one of the most ancient fabrics in the city. In the
-churchyard is the tomb of the parents of Archbishop Parker, rebuilt over
-the original, in 1823, by Caius College; and also the “Leper’s tomb.”
-Rev. R. Rigg, rector.
-
-ST. EDMUND, a small structure, founded in the time of the Conqueror, has
-a tower and one bell. Among the relics formerly preserved here, was a
-piece of the shirt of St. Edward the King and Martyr, kept in a box of
-crystal, and visited with great reverence. The Rev. G. B. Everett,
-rector.
-
-ST. ETHELDRED is a small fabric, with a short tower and one bell. In the
-burial-ground was formerly an anchorage, which continued till after the
-Reformation. Rev. J. Deacon incumbent.
-
-ST. GEORGE AT COLEGATE is a large, handsome, gothic structure, rebuilt at
-different periods, and has a lofty tower. In the chancel is a fine altar
-tomb to Robert Jannis, a great benefactor to this church; and near it a
-beautiful mural monument to John Herring, Esq. The window over the
-communion table is of stained glass. In a vault is buried the elder
-Crome, the distinguished painter, who died in 1821. The Rev. A. W.
-Durdin, incumbent.
-
-ST. GEORGE AT TOMBLAND consists of a nave, chancel, and side aisles, and
-has a handsome square tower; it was erected by the parishioners in 1445.
-In the interior are spacious galleries, and many monumental inscriptions.
-Rev. K. Trimmer, incumbent.
-
-ST. GILES, founded in the reign of William the Conqueror, by Elwyn the
-priest, who gave it to the monks of Norwich, was rebuilt in the reign of
-Richard II., and is now one of the handsomest churches in the city. The
-tower, 120 feet high, contains a clock and eight bells, and is surrounded
-by a cupola and battlement. The chancel has been demolished since 1581,
-when the dean and chapter, to quit themselves of the expense of repairing
-it, gave all the materials to the parish, for “a stock to be put out for
-the encouragement of poor trades.” There are many curious old brasses,
-and several neat mural monuments. Rev. R. Sedgwick incumbent.
-
-ST. GREGORY is a lofty gothic structure, consisting of nave, side aisles,
-and chancel, the latter built in 1395; since which, the whole pile has
-received many reparations. The font is very large, having an octagonal
-top, and on its eight sides the four evangelists, and figures emblematic
-of the four quarters of the globe. In the nave is a fine brass
-reading-desk, in the shape of an eagle with expanded wings. Among the
-monuments is one to Sir Francis Bacon, a Judge of the Court of King’s
-Bench, in the time of Charles II. Here are also some ancient brass
-inscriptions. Rev. W. R. Sharpe, incumbent.
-
-ST. HELEN—or the Great Hospital, previously mentioned as founded by
-Bishop Suffield, was originally built like a cathedral, in the form of a
-cross, with nave, tower, aisles, and transept; the tower is all that
-remains entire, but the cloisters are still almost perfect. The men’s
-apartments occupy the refectory and part of the nave and aisles, while
-the choir is appropriated to the women’s. Rev. W. F. Patteson,
-incumbent.
-
-ST. JAMES’ (with Pockthorpe), is a small building, rebuilt in 1743. The
-font has some fine panel carvings. Rev. J. Ross, incumbent.
-
-ST. JOHN MADDERMARKET, a handsome church, consisting of nave, side
-aisles, and a fine tower, was founded before the survey made in Edward
-the Confessor’s time. The lead was removed, and the roof covered with
-slate in 1835. It contains many ancient sepulchral inscriptions, with a
-few brasses and several neat mural tablets. Lady Margaret, Duchess of
-Norfolk (second wife of the duke beheaded in Elizabeth’s reign), died at
-the Duke’s Palace in 1563, and was interred with great pomp on the north
-side of the choir, where a mural monument was raised to her memory in
-1791. Rev. J. Perowne, rector.
-
-ST. JOHN SEPULCHRE was founded before the Norman conquest. Rev. T.
-Calvert, incumbent.
-
-ST. JOHN AT TIMBERHILL, so called from the timber market formerly held on
-the plain adjacent, has a small wooden steeple, in place of the tower
-which fell down in 1784. Rev. S. Titlow, incumbent.
-
-ST. JULIAN, the smallest church in the city, and one of the oldest, was
-founded before the Conquest, and had an anchorage or hermitage in the
-churchyard.
-
-ST. LAWRENCE is an ancient Gothic fabric, with a fine tower; was rebuilt
-in 1472. Over the west door are two ancient carvings, one representing
-the martyrdom of St. Lawrence. Rev. P. U. Brown, rector.
-
-ST. MARGARET has a square tower, in which were five bells till 1830, when
-four of them were sold to assist in defraying the expense of covering the
-structure with blue slate. Rev. J. W. Cobb, rector.
-
-ST. MARY AT COSLANY was built in 1477, and contains six antique stalls.
-Rev. C. Morse, incumbent.
-
-ST. MARTIN AT OAK derived the latter part of its name from a large oak,
-formerly standing in the churchyard, with the image of St. Mary in it.
-This was much visited in superstitious times, and several legacies were
-given towards repairing and _painting_ it. The oak now standing on the
-site was planted about 60 years ago. On an alabaster tomb are effigies
-of Jeremiah Ravens and his wife. Rev. C. Caldwell, incumbent.
-
-ST. MARTIN AT PALACE is an ancient structure, where, in early times, a
-boys’ singing school was kept. Rev. A. Braddell, incumbent.
-
-ST. MICHAEL AT COSLANY is a handsome structure, with a lofty embattled
-tower, containing a clock and eight musical bells. The interior of the
-church is handsomely decorated. The altar-piece represents the
-Ascension, and the four evangelists; and the floor in front is paved with
-black and white marble, from the domestic chapel of the Earl of Yarmouth,
-at Oxnead. On the south side is Thorp chapel, erected in 1508, of flint
-and freestone, and one of the finest specimens of flint-work in the
-county. The church contains a very old font, several mural monuments,
-and some ancient brasses. Rev. R. Rigg, rector.
-
-ST. MICHAEL AT PLEA, so named from the Archdeacon of Norwich holding in
-it his Pleas or Courts, is built in the form of a cross, and has a square
-embattled tower. There are some ancient paintings near the pulpit, well
-worthy of inspection. Rev. C. Morse, rector.
-
-ST. MICHAEL AT THORN—a large thorn tree still grows in the graveyard—is a
-small structure, with a tower, built in 1436. Criminals executed at the
-castle were formerly buried in the churchyard. Rev. C. T. Rust,
-incumbent.
-
-ST. PAUL is a small structure with a round tower, and is in a dilapidated
-state. Rev. B. Cook, rector.
-
-ST. PETER HUNGATE, so called from the bishop’s hounds being formerly kept
-in the parish, is built of flint and stone. Rev. S. Titlow, rector.
-
-ST. PETER OF MANCROFT, the finest church in the city, was rebuilt of
-white stone in 1455. It has a noble tower, 98 ft. high, with a splendid
-peal of twelve bells, exchanged for the old peal of ten in 1775, at a
-cost of £800. The font stands under a canopy supported by pillars,
-forming a baptistry on a raised platform, which there is room enough to
-walk round. The church was greatly beautified about twenty years ago, by
-the putting in stained glass windows, with figures of the apostles.
-Among the church plate is a beautiful large cup cover, on which is
-represented Abigail bringing presents to David, presented by Sir Peter
-Gleane, 1633. In the vestry is a portrait of Sir Thomas Browne, who was
-buried here, and whose coffin was accidentally broken open in 1840, when
-the skeleton was found in a good state of preservation. Several old
-books are also preserved in the vestry, including a manuscript bible of
-1340, and a beautifully illuminated copy of St. Paul’s Epistles, much
-more ancient. In the church are many monuments and inscriptions. The
-parishioners are patrons, and the Rev. C. Turner is incumbent.
-
-ST. PETER PER MOUNTERGATE—so named from a gate formerly adjacent—was
-erected in 1486. In the chancel are twenty-four stalls, which belonged
-to a college of secular priests that stood in the churchyard. South of
-the altar are the tomb and effigies of R. Berney, Esq., and his wife; and
-in the nave is interred Thomas Codd, mayor during Kett’s rebellion.
-
-ST. PETER OF SOUTHGATE is an ancient building, with a square tower. Rev.
-J. Deacon, rector.
-
-ST. SAVIOUR, a small fabric, dedicated to the Transfiguration, has a
-square embattled tower, and contains several neat mural monuments. In
-Bishop Oxford’s time it was appropriated to the almoner of the cathedral
-convent. Rev. W. H. Cooke, incumbent.
-
-ST. SIMON AND JUDE contains some ancient brasses, and several monuments
-and effigies of the Pettus’ family, upon one of which is a recumbent
-figure, in complete armour, of Sir J. Pettus, the first of the family who
-was knighted. The church is of great antiquity, and was held by the
-bishops before the removal of the see to Norwich. Rev. C. Holloway,
-rector.
-
-ST. STEPHEN is a commodious gothic structure, with two side chapels, and
-a square tower at the west end. The nave is divided from the aisles by
-fluted columns with pointed arches, and the east window is richly
-beautified with stained glass. There are several old brasses and many
-mural tablets. In the vestry is a manuscript description of the church,
-written by Benjamin Mackerell, author of a history of Lynn; also a
-curious old alabaster carving. The church has lately undergone repairing
-and restoration. Rev. E. Evans, vicar.
-
-ST. SWITHIN is a neat structure, with a square tower and three bells.
-During the cleansing of the church in 1834, an ancient portrait of Edward
-the Confessor was found nailed under one of the seats, where it is
-supposed to have been placed for security during the civil wars. The
-altar-piece is a painting of Moses and Aaron. On the font are carved
-emblems of the Trinity, Eucharist, and the Passion, with the arms of East
-Anglia. Here are also three stalls. Rev. R. C. Cavell, rector.
-
-The following are the churches in the hamlets of the city:—
-
-CHRISTCHURCH (New Catton), which is in the parish of St. Clement, was
-erected in 1841. It is built of brick and flint, and cost £2500. Rev.
-R. Wade, incumbent.
-
-ST. JOHN THE BAPTIST (Old Lakenham), situate on a declivity commanding a
-fine prospect; has a handsome font. The vicarage is united to Trowse
-Newton. Rev. G. Carter, incumbent.
-
-ST. MARK (New Lakenham) was erected in 1844, and has 1000 sittings. It
-cost upwards of £4000; and has a nave, tower, and three bells. Rev. G.
-I. Pellew, incumbent.
-
-ST. MATTHEW (Thorpe Hamlet) was built in 1851, of Kentish rag-stone.
-Rev. G. W. Grogan, incumbent.
-
-ST. BARTHOLOMEW (Heigham), a small edifice, contains a mural monument to
-Bishop Hall, who was buried here. Rev. G. C. Hoste, rector.
-
-TRINITY (or the Episcopal) CHAPEL, situate in Union place, Heigham, was
-originally a Baptist place of worship, but was consecrated in 1839. The
-rector of Heigham is the officiating minister.
-
-ST. ANDREW (Eaton) is an ancient edifice, having a thatched roof. It
-lies near the river Yare, which separates the county of Norwich from the
-county of Norfolk. The father of Henry Kirk White was buried here. Rev.
-G. Day, incumbent.
-
-ST. MARY (Earlham), also on the Yare, is a picturesque structure,
-bedecked with ivy. Rev. J. H. Payne, rector.
-
-ST. MARY (Hellesdon) stands just within the city boundary, part of the
-burial ground being in the county. The rectory is consolidated with
-Drayton. Rev. H. Howell, rector.
-
-
-
-CHAPELS.
-
-
-The OLD MEETING HOUSE, Colegate street, was erected in 1693 by the
-Independents, a congregation of which body had existed in Norwich since
-the Commonwealth. They had originally assembled in a brewery in St.
-Edmund’s, and afterwards in the “west granary” of St. Andrew’s Hall. The
-Old Meeting is built of red brick, fronted with four Corinthian
-pilasters. The Rev. John Hallett is the minister.
-
-PRINCE’S STREET CHAPEL, another Independent place of worship, was erected
-of white brick, with boldly-displayed cornice and pediment, and a Doric
-portico of four columns. The cost was upwards of £4500. The Rev. John
-Alexander has been the minister ever since its erection.
-
-A third CONGREGATIONAL CHAPEL, a very handsome building erected in the
-vicinity of Chapel Field, was opened in 1858. Rev. Philip Colborne,
-minister.
-
-The TABERNACLE, St. Martin’s at Palace—originally built by the
-Calvinistic Methodists—was, in 1775, purchased by the Countess of
-Huntingdon. Rev. J. J. J. Kempster, minister.
-
-ST. MARY’S (Baptist) was rebuilt in 1811 and enlarged in 1839. Its chief
-feature is a beautiful vaulted roof. The Rev. Joseph Kinghorn was for
-many years the pastor. Rev. George Gould, minister.
-
-ST. CLEMENT’S, another Particular Baptist place of worship, was built in
-1814, at a cost of £5000. Rev. T. A. Wheeler, minister.
-
-ORFORD HILL CHAPEL, also Baptist, was opened as a chapel in 1832. Rev.
-T. Corbet, minister.
-
-EBENEZER CHAPEL, Surrey Road, was built in 1854; a gallery was
-subsequently added. The congregation had previously assembled in the
-Bazaar, St. Andrew’s; the minister being the Rev. R. Govett, who, some
-years since, seceded from the Established Church.
-
-There are several smaller structures in connexion with this denomination.
-
-The GENERAL BAPTISTS, established in the city since 1686, have a chapel
-in St. James’, erected in 1812 on part of the site of the White Friary.
-Rev. Thomas Scott, minister.
-
-The OCTAGON (Unitarian) CHAPEL, St. George’s, is a handsome building, of
-the shape implied by its name. It is surmounted by a dome, supported by
-eight Corinthian pillars. It was erected in 1756, on the site of the old
-Presbyterian Meeting-house. Dr. John Taylor, and Dr. Enfield (compiler
-of the Speaker) preached in this chapel. Rev. J. H. Hutton, minister.
-
-The SOCIETY OF FRIENDS have two meeting-houses in Norwich; one of which,
-in Upper Goat Lane, is a fine white-brick structure, with Doric portico,
-and lighted by a dome lantern. It was rebuilt in 1826. The other is the
-GILDENCROFT MEETING HOUSE, St. Augustine’s, erected in 1680. There is a
-spacious burial-ground attached, in which are deposited the remains of
-Joseph John Gurney, Mrs. Opie, and other eminent Friends. This building
-is supported by two lofty oak pillars, cut out of single trees.
-
-The ROMAN CATHOLICS have also two chapels. That in St. John’s
-Maddermarket is an ancient but plain structure, rebuilt in 1794; that in
-Willow Lane, called the Chapel of the Apostles, is a handsome building,
-erected in 1828. The windows are of stained glass, and the interior
-decorations are very striking.
-
-The DUTCH CHURCH, in St. Andrew’s Hall, originally the Conventual Church
-of the Black Friars, was granted to the Walloon congregation; but they
-now have service only once a year, when a sermon is preached in Dutch and
-afterwards in English. The building is used as a chapel to the
-Workhouse, but it is expected that it will be occupied by the Free
-Christian Church when the New Workhouse, now being erected near the
-Cemetery, has been completed.
-
-CALVERT STREET CHAPEL, built by the Wesleyans in 1811. Since the recent
-disruption in that body, it has been held by the Reformers, or United
-Methodist Free Church; as is also the case with NEW CITY CHAPEL, in
-Crook’s Place.
-
-ST. PETER’S CHAPEL (Lady’s Lane), held by the Conference Wesleyans, was
-built in 1824.
-
-The PRIMITIVE METHODISTS have chapels in Heigham (St. Benedict’s Road),
-Lakenham (St. Catherine’s Plain), Cowgate Street, and New Catton.
-
-The FRENCH CHURCH, Queen Street—originally the parochial church of St.
-Mary Parva, and afterwards a cloth exchange—was granted, in 1637, to the
-French Protestant refugees. It is now leased to the receivers of the
-doctrines enunciated by Emanuel Swedenborg, and the minister is the Rev.
-David Goyder.
-
-The FREE CHRISTIAN CHURCH, St. Michael at Plea, which is unconnected with
-any particular denomination, was opened in 1852, upon its pastor, the
-Rev. Joseph Crompton, quitting the Unitarians, of which denomination he
-had been minister.
-
-The JEWS—who were formerly very numerous in this city—have a handsome
-synagogue in St. Faith’s Lane. Rev. S. Caro, minister.
-
-
-
-
-THE MONUMENTAL BRASSES OF NORWICH
-AND NEIGHBOURHOOD.
-
-
-To Archæologists visiting this ancient city, and particularly to those
-directing their attention to Monumental Brasses, the following list of
-Brasses in Norwich and the principal villages in the neighbourhood, may
-be considered useful. They are classified under their distinctive
-characters, namely—1st, Ecclesiastics; 2nd., knights; 3rd., civilians and
-ladies; 4th., miscellaneous. The list specifies those consisting of
-effigies generally perfect, with their inscriptions, unless otherwise
-mentioned.
-
-An alphabetical list of the churches, with the various brasses in each,
-is also appended.
-
-
-
-ECCLESIASTICS.
-
-1389. Richardus Thaseburgh, rector of _Hellesdon_.
- Hellesdon.
-1437. Galfridus Langley, installed Prior _St. Lawrence_.
- of Saint Faith the Virgin, at
- Horsham, 1401.
-1450. John Alnwik, in academic costume. _Surlingham_.
-1487. Roger Clarke, priest. _St. Peter at
- Southgate_.
-1497. Walter Goos, priest. _St. Swithin_.
-1499. John Smyth, priest—chalice. _St. Giles_’.
-1499. Henry Alikok—chalice. _Colney_.
- Thome Coke, rector of _St. Michael at
- Bodham.—Chalice lost, inscription Coslany_.
- only remaining.
- An individual unknown.—Chalice. _Poringland Magna_.
- Randulphus Pulvertoft; inscription _The Cathedral_,
- only (_Jesus’ Chapel_),
-1531. William Richies, vicar of _Bawburgh_.
- Bawburgh.
-1545. Thome Capp, vicar. _St. Stephen_.
-
-KNIGHTS.
-
-c1460. John Toddenham. A small figure, _St. John in
- with scroll from the mouth. Maddermarket_,
- _Norwich_.
-1499. Thome Heveningham, and Anne, his _Ketteringham_.
- wife.—This is a beautifully
- executed brass, and is placed
- under a canopy upon an altar
- tomb. He died 1499. The blank
- intended for the date of the
- death of his wife still remains.
-1559. John Corbet, and Jane, his wife. _Sprowston_.
- He died 1470. The blank left for
- the date of her death still
- remains.
-1565. Sir Edward Warner. _Plumstead Parva_.
-1568. Sir Peter Rede.—Discovered to be _St. Peter Mancroft_,
- a Palimpsest, in 1851. _Norwich_.
-
-CIVILIANS AND LADIES.
-
-c1380. Richard de Heylesdone, and _Hellesdon_.
- Beatrice, his wife.
-1384. John de Heylesdon, and Johanna, _Hellesdon_.
- his wife. An inscription only.
-1412. Walter Moneslee, and Isabella, _St. John in
- his wife. Maddermarket_.
-1432. Robert Baxter, and Christiana, _St. Giles_.
- his wife.
-1435. Robert Brasyer, and Christiana, _St. Stephen_.
- his wife. A celebrated
- bell-founder.
- Roberti Brasyer (mutilated). _St. Stephen_.
-1436. Richard Purdaunce, and Margaret, _St. Giles_.
- his wife.
-1436. John Asgar, the younger. _St. Lawrence_.
-c1445. Alice Thorndon. _Frettenham_.
-1460. Thomas Bokenham, and wife. _St. Stephen_.
-c1460. A Lady (unknown). _Frettenham_.
-1470. Jane Corbet, in Brass, of John _Sprowston_.
- Corbet, and Jane, his wife—see
- “Knights.”
-1475. William Pepyr, and Joan, his _St. John in
- wife, inscription and four Maddermarket_.
- shields lost.
-1475. William Norwiche, and Alicia, his _St. George at
- wife. A Bracket Brass. Canopy Colegate_.
- mutilated.
-1495. John Horslee, and Agnes, his _St. Swithin_.
- wife.
-1499. Anne Heveningham, in Brass, of _Ketteringham_.
- Thome Heveningham, and Anne, his
- wife—see “Knights.”
- A Lady (unknown). There are two _Ketteringham_.
- Inscriptions, with a figure of a
- Child, inserted with this Brass,
- in the wall of the church, which
- do not relate to it.
-1501. Richard Ferrers, Mayor of _St. Michael at
- Norwich, in the years 1473, 1478, Coslany_.
- 1483, 1493, 1498. Merchant’s
- mark and inscription only
- remaining.
-1502. Thomas Cok. _St. Gregory_.
-1503. Edward Ward. _Bixley_.
-1505. William Dussing, and Katherine, _Kirby Bedon_.
- his wife. In winding sheets.
-1505. Thome Tyard. In winding sheets. _Bawburgh_.
-c1510. Juliane Anyell. _Witton_.
-1514. Margaret Pettwode. _St. Clement_.
-1515. Henrici Scolows, and Alicia, his _St. Michael at
- wife. In winding sheets, with Coslany_.
- four evangelical emblems.
-1523. A Female Figure, probably of Ann _St. Edmund_.
- Hoste. Curious for head-dress
- and tippet. Now in private
- possession; formerly in the
- church of
-1524. John Terri, and Lettys, his wife. _St. John in
- An elaborate Brass, with twenty Maddermarket_.
- lines of English verse.
-c1527. John Gilbert. Fragments of _St. Andrew_.
- canopy and inscription only
- remaining.
-1528. Edwardus Whyte, and Elizabeth, _Shottisham St.
- his wife. Mary_.
-c1538. William Layer, and wife. _St. Andrew_.
- Inscription lost.
-1540. Nicholas Suttherton. An _St. John in
- inscription and shield. A Maddermarket_.
- palimpsest, now in the church
- chest, formerly at east end of
- nave.
-1546. Bel Buttry. _St. Stephen_.
-1558. Robarte Rugge, and Elizabeth, his _St. John in Madder
- wife, Mayor of Norwich. market_.
-1560. Helen Caus, wife of Thomas Caus, _St. John in
- Mayor of Norwich. This is one of Maddermarket_.
- three effigies which represented
- Thomas Caus, Mayor in 1495 and
- 1503, and Johanna and Helen, his
- wives, and is a late example of
- the pedimental head dress. The
- other effigies are lost, and this
- is partly covered by a pew.
- A Mayor of Norwich, and his Wife. _St. John in
- Name and date unknown. Maddermarket_.
- Inscription lost. The figure of
- the Lady partly covered by a pew.
-1577. Anne Rede, wife of Sir Peter Rede _St. Margare_.
- (whose Brass lies in St. Peter of
- Mancroft Church).
-1600. Mary Bussie. Lost since 1850; _St. Peter of
- formerly in the church of Mancroft_.
-1605. Mis Anē Claxton; an inscription _St. Mary at
- and shield. Coslany_.
-1649. Clere Talbot, and his wives. _Dunston_.
-1818. Mary Elizabeth, wife of Edward _The Cathedral_,
- South Thurlow. A cross, brass, (_north side of
- with a border inscription; laid Choir_).
- down within the last few years.
-
-MISCELLANEOUS.
-
-1452. Thomas Childes. A skeleton _St. Lawrence_,
- figure, inscription lost. _Norwich_.
- An individual unknown. A heart _Kirby Bedon_.
- with three scrolls.
- A small figure in winding sheet; _Bawburgh_.
- comparatively modern.
-
-LIST OF THE CHURCHES WITH BRASSES.
-
-_St. Andrew_, _Norwich_.
- John Gilbert 1527
- William Layer, and wife 1538
-_The Cathedral_, _Jesus’ Chapel_, _Norwich_.
- Randulphus Pulvertoft 1499
- Mary Elizabeth, wife of Edward South 1818
- Thurlow
-_St. Clement_, _Norwich_.
- Margaret Pettwode 1514
-_St. Edmund_, _Norwich_.
- A female figure, probably of Ann Hoste, 1523
- now in private possession
-_St. George at Colegate_, _Norwich_.
- William Norwiche 1475
-_St. Giles_, _Norwich_.
- Robert Baxter, and Christiana, his wife 1432
- Richard Purdaunce, and Margaret, his 1436
- wife
- John Smyth, priest 1499
-_St. Gregory_, _Norwich_.
- Thomas Cok 1502
-_St. John in Maddermarket_.
- Walter Moneslee, and Isabella, his wife 1412
- John Toddenham c1460
- William Pepyr, and Joan, his wife 1476
- A major of Norwich, name unknown
- John Terri, and Lettys, his wife 1524
- Nicholas Suttherton 1540
- Robarte Rugge, and Elizabeth, his wife 1558
- Helen Caus 1560
-_St. Lawrence_, _Norwich_.
- John Asgar, the younger 1436
- Galfridus Langley 1437
- Thomas Childes 1452
-_St. Margaret_, _Norwich_.
- Anne Rede 1577
-_St. Mary at Coslany_, _Norwich_.
- Mis Ane Claxton 1605
-_St. Michael at Coslany_, _Norwich_.
- Richard Ferrers 1501
- Henrici Scolows, and Alicia, his wife 1515
- Thome Coke
-_St. Peter of Mancroft_, _Norwich_.
- Sir Peter Rede 1568
- The Brass of Mary Bussie, date 1600,
- has been lost since 1850.
-_St. Peter at Southgate_, _Norwich_.
- Roger Clarke 1487
-_St. Stephen_, _Norwich_.
- Robert Brasyer, and Christiana, his 1435
- wife
- Thomas Bokonham and wife 1460
- Roberti Brasyer
- Thome Capp, vicar 1545
- Bel Buttry 1546
-_St. Swithin_, _Norwich_.
- John Horslee, and Agnes, his wife 1495
- Walter Goos, priest 1497
-_Bawhurgh_.
- Thome Tyard 1505
- William Richeis—chalice 1531
- A small figure, in winding sheet
-_Bixley_.
- Edward Ward 1503
-_Colney_.
- Henry Alikok
-_Dunston_.
- Clere Talbot, and his wives 1649
-_Frettenham_.
- Alice Thorndon c1445
- Lady (unknown) c1460
-_Hellesdon_.
- Richard de Heylesdone, and Beatrice, 1380
- his wife
- John de Heylesdone, and Johanna, his 1384
- wife
- Richardus Thaseburgh 1389
-_Ketteringham_.
- Thome Heveningham, and Anne, his wife 1499
- Lady (unknown)
-_Kirby Bedon_.
- William Dussing, and Katherine, his 1505
- wife
- An individual unknown. A heart with
- three scrolls
-_Plumstead Parva_.
- Sir Edward Warner 1565
-_Poringland Magna_.
- An individual unknown—chalice
-_Shottisham St. Mary_.
- Edwardus Whyte, and Elizabeth, his wife 1528
-_Surlingham_.
- John Alnwick 1450
-_Sprowston_.
- John Corbet, and Jane, his wife 1470
-_Witton_.
- Juliana Anyell c1505
-
-DIRECTORY OF NORWICH.
-
-
-ALPHABETICAL LIST.
-
-
- _The letter_ “h” _indicates Private Residence_.
-
-Abbott, Edward Jesse, draper and silk mercer, Exchange street
-Abbott, William, boot and shoe manufacturer, 22, Magdalen street
-Abel, Cain, saddler and whip maker, Golden Ball street
-Abel, Daniel, upholsterer and cabinet maker, Bedford street, St.
-Andrew’s; h Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Abel, Frederick, brush maker, Unthank’s road
-Abel, John, horse dealer, Rising Sun, Chapel field road
-Abel, Mrs., day school, Unthank’s road
-Able, William, green grocer, &c., Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Aberdeen, William Charles, coffee and pie house, 3, Dove street
-Abraham, Benjamin and S. S., watch and clock makers, 1, Bethel street
-Abray, Isaac, Black Horse, St. Giles’ road
-Adams, Miss Frances, Seymour place, St. Stephen’s square
-Adams, Mrs. Sarah, Earlham road
-Adams, William, Plumbers’ Arms, Cowgate street
-Adams, William, auctioneer’s clerk, Rupert street, Union place
-Adcock, Richard, pork butcher, St. Benedict’s street
-Addison, Benjamin, wheelwright and carpenter, Magdalen street
-Adkin, William, plasterer, &c., Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Aggas, Captain James, (late of the army) Upper Westlegate street
-Aikin, Francis, draper and tea dealer, St. Benedict’s road
-Ainslie, Charles, jobbing gardener, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Alborough, Thomas, farmer, Trowse
-Alden, Edward, baker, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Alden, James, last and boot-tree maker, Alden’s court, Ber street
-Alden, Robert, brazier and tin-plate worker, St. Stephen’s plain
-Alden, William, schoolmaster at Norman’s school, Cowgate street
-Alden, Wm. Marshall, National school-master, Lothian street, Heigham
-Alderson, William Henry, bricklayer and plasterer, St. Andrew’s hill
-Alderman, Henry, French polisher, Ber street
-Alden, Joseph, shoemaker, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Aldham, James, messenger, Tabernacle street
-Aldis, Mrs. Jane, stay and corset maker, Prince’s street
-Aldis, Miss Rebecca, dressmaker, 1, Unthank’s road
-Aldous, John T., Windham Arms, Trory street, Lakenham
-Aldous, James, grocer and draper, Trafalgar street, New Lakenham
-Aldous, John Fuller, joiner and builder, St. Stephen’s street
-Aldred, Mr. Robert, 1, Seymour place, St. Stephen’s square
-Aldrich, John, grocer and draper, West Pottergate street
-Aldhouse, Hannah, furniture broker, St. Augustine’s
-Aldridge, Mrs. Susan, lodging-house keeper, 4, Grapes’ hill
-Aldridge, Mrs. Susanna, grocer, Church walk, New Lakenham
-Alexander, Benjamin, shoemaker, Southgate street
-Alexander, Henry, baker, Heigham str.
-Alexander, Rev. John, Independent minister, Gildengate street
-Alger, John Goldworth, reader for the press, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Allam, Thomas, 4, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Allcock, Trivett, lodging-house keeper, Tombland
-Allen, Bryant, dyer, Scole’s green
-Allen and Co., woollen drapers, tailors, and hatters, Bank plain
-Allen, Francis, market gardener, Dereham road
-Allen, George, manufacturer of elastic cloths for gloves, clothing, and
-silk and lisle webs, St. Stephen’s factory
-Allen, Henry, flour dealer, 1, Distillery street
-Allen, John, green-grocer, Lower Westwick street, St. Swithin’s
-Allen, John Boufield, watch and clock maker, silversmith, jeweller, and
-optician, 40, London street
-Allen, Mrs. Marianne and Co., boot and shoe warehouse, 14, Briggs’ street
-Allen, Park, Cadogan place, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Allen, Robert, nurseryman and seedsman, Grove place, Lakenham
-Allen, Robert, confectioner, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Allen, Robert, fishmonger, Newbegin’s yard, St. Mary’s plain
-Allen, Thomas, shopkeeper, Golden Ball street
-Allen, William, stone mason, St. Stephen’s back street
-Allen, William, hair dresser, Magdalen street
-Allen, William, bill poster, Farnell’s yard, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Allman, William, shoemaker, Coburg st.
-Allmer, George, green grocer, King street
-Allum, James, inspector, Thorpe station, Mousehold
-Allison, Mrs. Sophia, working cutler, St. Peter’s steps, Market place
-Allured, James, tailor, hatter, and cap manufacturer, Timber hill street
-Allwood, Thomas, Lower close
-Alven, Frederick, 1, St. Swithin’s villa, Catton road
-Ames, Mrs. Edward, milliner, Distillery street
-Ames, Mrs. Willow place, Lakenham
-Ames, Edward Cooper, photographic artist, Distillery street, Heigham
-Ames, Robert, Bear Inn, Market place
-Ames, Mrs. Mary, Willow place, Southwell street, Lakenham
-Ames, Frances, green-grocer, Dereham road
-Amies, Benjamin, hair dresser and glover, St. Catherine’s plain
-Amies, John, carpenter and builder, Hall road, Lakenham
-Amies, John, carpenter, Southwell street, Lakenham
-Amies, John, The Hoop, St. Stephen’s rd.
-Amies, John, Old Lobster Inn, Pottergate street
-Amies, Mary Ann, tailoress, Timberhill street
-Amiss, Stephen, Inspector of Police, Barrack street
-Amy, William, cooper, Spitalfields, Thorpe hamlet
-Anderson, Joseph, baker, Pump street
-Anderson, William, general shopkeeper, Old Church street, New Lakenham
-Andrews, Brothers, wholesale druggists, and manufacturers of baking
-powder, 1 and 2, Colegate street, St. George’s
-Andrews, Charles, fishmonger, Crow’s yard, Upper Westwick street
-Andrews, Mrs. Emily, milliner and dressmaker, West Pottergate street
-Andrews, George, chemist and druggist, 1 and 2, Colegate street, St.
-George’s
-Andrews, James, Two Necked Swan, Upper walk, Market place
-Andrews, Richard, wire worker, Coslany street
-Angell, Robert, beer retailer, Coburgh street
-Angell, Susannah, milliner and dressmaker, Calvert street
-Annison, Robert, general shopkeeper, Little Globe street, Union place
-Answorth, William, manufacturer, (see Middleton and Answorth)
-Anthony, William, wine and spirit merchant, 12, Upper market
-Applegate, James, timber dealer, Pottergate street; h St. Swithin’s
-Appleton, Mrs. Anna, day school, St. Augustine’s street
-Appleton, Christopher, green-grocer, Gildengate street
-Appleton, Thomas, fish dealer, St. Augustine’s street
-Appleton, William, fish curer, St. Augustine’s street
-Archdall, Rev. George, D.D., The Close
-Archer Henry, furniture broker, Ber street
-Archer, Jesse, butcher, Pitt street
-Archer, Samuel, currier, Peacock street, St. Paul’s
-Archer, William, rope, twine, and sacking maker, New Catton
-Armes, Daniel, Queen Adelaide, West End street, Heigham
-Armes, Frederick Thomas, The Rose and Thistle tavern, Barn road
-Armes, Robert, currier and leather cutter, Dove street; h West Pottergate
-street
-Armes, Mrs. Sarah, Cow and Hare, Heigham street
-Armes, William, cow keeper, Parry’s buildings, Philadelphia
-Armiss, Thomas, shopkeeper, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Armstrong, Mr. Henry, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Armstrong, Henry, draper, &c., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Armstrong, Mrs. Mary, draper, Dereham road
-Arnup, Charles, Jolly Gardeners, Paddock, Silver street
-Arnold, Edward, wholesale and family chemist and druggist, Orford hill
-Arnold, George, and Alfred Robert, brewers, and wine and spirit
-merchants, agents for Meux and Co., St. Margaret’s plain
-Arnold, Mrs. Maria, St. Giles’ road
-Andrews, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Andrews, Thomas William, (see Andrews, Brothers) 1 and 2, Colegate
-street, St. George’s
-Andrews, Thomas, shopkeeper, St. Faith’s lane
-Andrews, William, soap manufacturer, Fishgate street
-Andrews, William, horse breaker, livery stable keeper, and horse clipper,
-Westlegate street
-Andrews, William, soap manufacturer and tallow chandler, &c., Magdalen
-street
-Arnott, Robert, lodging-house keeper, Distillery street
-Artis, Francis, baker, Castle meadow
-Arundel, Mrs., Albert terrace, Unthank’s road
-Ashen, Robert, brazier and tin plate worker, St. Stephen’s street
-Ashton, James, whip maker, Ber street
-Asker, Elizabeth, the Swan hotel, Upper market
-Asker, George Henry, perfumer, &c., 21, The Walk
-Asker, George Henry, glove manufacturer and hosier, 20, The Walk
-Asker, Samuel Hurry, solicitor, St. Giles’ street; h The Grove, Chapel
-field
-Asker, Mrs., 11, Chapel field
-Asker, Mrs., Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Asquith, William, Two Quarts, Pottergate street
-Aston, Isaac, fishmonger, St. James street
-Athow, Edward John, wine and spirit merchant, Castle street
-Atkin, Mr. Kennett M., All Saints green
-Atkins, Mrs. Dimmer, St. Catherine’s plain
-Atkins, Elizabeth, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Atkins, Henry, Free Trade tavern, St. Augustine’s
-Atkins, Richard, builder, 27, Bethel street
-Atkins, Thomas, beer retailer, Heigham street
-Atkinson, John Goldsmith, solicitor, and agent to the Church of England
-Fire and Life Office, Post Office street
-Atkins, Matthew, Sussex street
-Atkinson, James, lay clerk at cathedral, Sussex street
-Attle, Samuel, beer retailer, Ber street
-Attle, Hannah, green grocer, Finket street
-Atwood, Thomas, writer and grainer, Pottergate street
-Augood, Henry, fishmonger, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Auker, John, boot and shoe maker, 71, St. Stephen’s
-Austin, Owen, coal dealer, Oak street
-Austin, William, Wheat Sheaf, St. Stephen’s street
-Austrin, Mrs. Ann, linen draper, hosier, and haberdasher, 5, Orford hill
-Avey, Thomas, grocer and tea dealer, Ber street
-Aylmer, John, Black Horse, Wensum street
-Ayris, John, manager of City of Norwich Water Works; Office, Surrey st.
-Ayton, James, clerk to the Corn Exchange, Little London street
-Ayton, John, baker, St. Augustine’s street
-Ayris, John, civil engineer, 10, Nelson terrace, Grove road, New Lakenham
-Back and Co., grocers, tea dealers and Italian warehousemen, and wine and
-spirit merchants, 3 and 4, Haymarket
-Bacon, Charles, cabinet maker, Muspole street
-Bacon, Josiah Newbegin, rope, twine, and sack manufacturer, 3, Davey
-place
-Bacon, Nicholas, Esq., Bracondale
-Bacon, Richard Noverre, printer, bookseller, and stationer, and
-proprietor and publisher of the “Norwich Mercury,” 12, London street; h
-Intwood hall
-Bacon, Thomas, messenger at East of England Bank, Rampant Horse street
-Bacon, William, shopkeeper, All Saints’ green
-Baddeley, The Misses, Somerleyton street
-Bagshaw, George, game dealer, Coslany street
-Bagshaw, George, rag merchant, bone crusher, artificial manure
-manufacturer, poulterer and herring curer, Coslany street
-Bagshaw, Joseph, fish merchant and game dealer, St. Stephen’s street
-Bailey, Isaac, joiner and builder, West Pottergate street
-Bailey, Anthony, cashier at East of England Bank, Heigham cottage,
-Newmarket road
-Bailey, Elijah Crosier, solicitor, clerk to the Corporation of Guardians
-of the Poor, and secretary to the Norfolk Agricultural Association,
-Toll’s court, Briggs’ street
-Bailey, Mrs. Jemima, Dereham road
-Bailey, Simon John, hairdresser, West Pottergate street
-Baker, Charles, grocer, and register office for servants, Redwell street
-Baker, Henry, accountant, Brazen Doors’ road
-Baker, James, Bess of Bedlam, and butcher, Oak street
-Baker, John, 16, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Baker, John, Point cottage, Surrey road, St. Catherine’s plain
-Baker, Mrs. Maria, Newmarket road
-Baker, Mrs. Martha, Newmarket street
-Baker, Robert, Carpenters’ Arms, Thorn lane
-Baker, Mrs. Susan, corset maker, Willow lane, St. Giles’
-Baker, William, beer retailer, Windmill tavern, Mill lane, New Catton
-Baker, William, warehouseman, Dereham road
-Baker, William Osborn, boot and shoe maker, St. Augustine’s Church alley
-Baldry, George, land agent, Newmarket road
-Baldry, William, land surveyor and agent, Priest’s buildings, St.
-Stephen’s road
-Baldry, William, Rope Makers’ Arms, Hellesdon road
-Baldson, William, blacksmith, Chalk hill, Thorpe hamlet
-Baldwin, Charles, and Co., St. Mary’s Grist Mill, Pitt street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 21)
-Baldwin, Henry, baker, Oak street
-Baldwin, James, Mount Pleasant
-Baldwin, William, time keeper, Rose lane
-Baldwin, William, wheelwright, Thorpe hamlet
-Bale, George, butcher, St. Benedict’s street
-Bales, James Cheastney, accountant, Mount Pleasant
-Bales, Mrs. Rebecca, Matron of Girls’ Home, Heigham causeway
-Bales, Thomas, commercial traveller, Sussex street, St. Augustine’s
-Bales, William, shoemaker, Hall road, Lakenham
-Ballard, Edmund, pawnbroker, All Saints’ green
-Balls, Hannah, milliner, Pitt street
-Balls, Daniel, builder (see Curtis and Balls)
-Balls, Frederick, beer retailer, St. Benedict’s street
-Balls, Jonas, coal salesman, City road, Heigham fields
-Balls, James, tailor, the Green Dragon, Little London street
-Balls, Mrs. Rebecca, St. Benedict’s road
-Balls, Robert, clothier, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Balls, William, umbrella maker, Bull close
-Bancalari, Dominico, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Bane, William, auditor to E. C. Railway C., St. Faith’s terrace
-Banister, John, coal dealer, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Bangay, George, chair maker, Oak street; h Sussex street
-Banham, Francis, grocer and tea dealer, Old Haymarket
-Banham, George, wine and dry cooper, and brewer, King street
-Banham, Henry, general smith, Hall’s lane
-Banham, John, shoe manufacturer, Botolph street
-Banham, Richard, beer retailer, Northumberland street
-Banks, Mrs. Mary, 1, Grove road, New Lakenham
-Banks, William, West parade, Earlham road
-Barber and Sons, corn merchants, Old Haymarket
-Barber, Alexander, Crystal Palace, Dereham road
-Barber, Alfred Willsea, and Co., general merchants, Duke’s palace
-Barber, Mr. Alfred Willsea, Bracondale
-Barber, Benjamin, butcher, Adelaide street
-Barber, Benjamin, tailor, Lower King street
-Barber, Charles James, clerk, Seymour place, St. Stephen’s square
-Barber, Mr. George, Thorpe hamlet
-Barber, George, tailor, St. John’s terrace, Ber street
-Barber Henry, shipping agent and broker, (Robert Waller Pope, agent)
-Lower Westwick street
-Barber, John, Esq., Philadelphia
-Barber, John Lee, and Co., cotton manufacturers, St. Martin’s lane
-Barber, —, merchant’s clerk, Catton road
-Barber, John Lee, (see Barber and Sons) corn merchant, Dereham road
-Barber, Joseph, beer retailer, Ber street
-Barber, Miss H., 22, Castle meadow
-Barber, Miss Sarah, Sussex street
-Barber, Samuel, dyer, Timberhill street
-Barber, Thomas, shoe manufacturer, No. 6, the General’s buildings, near
-the Barracks
-Barber, William, bricklayer, White Lion, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Bardwell, Miss Adlian, school-mistress, St. Stephen’s gates
-Bardwell, Ann, baker, Trafalgar street, New Lakenham
-Bardwell, Everett, solicitor, Lower close
-Bardwell, George, commercial traveller, 4, John street, Rose lane
-Bardwell, George Syder, accountant, rent and debt collector, estate
-agent, agent to the St. George Insurance Company, and St. George Loan
-Advance Fund, St. Stephen’s road, opposite the Norfolk and Norwich
-Hospital (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 5)
-Bardwell, Marcus Gill, printer and bookbinder, Prince’s street
-Bardwell, Sarah, baker, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Barker, Benjamin, and Co., wholesale shoe manufacturer, York Tavern
-passage, Orford hill: h Lakenham
-Barker, Benjamin, shoe manufacturer, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Barker, Mrs. Eliza, boarding school, Windsor terrace, Grove road, New
-Lakenham
-Barker, Mr. George, Thorpe hamlet
-Barker, Harriet, baker, St. Benedict’s street
-Barker, James, tailor, and bottle merchant, Muspole street
-Barker, John, beer retailer, Magdalen st.
-Barker, Joseph, surgeon dentist, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Barker, Mrs. Mary, Chapel field
-Barker, Mrs. Mary, register office for servants, Orford hill
-Barker, Robert, plumber, Orford hill
-Barker, Samuel, baker, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Barker, Samuel, waiter, Grove place, New Lakenham
-Barker, Mrs. Sarah, Magdalen street
-Barker, Thomas, hotpresser and packer, Rosemary lane, Distillery street
-Barley, Mrs. Mary, Fleece Inn, Bridewell alley
-Barlow, Richard A., St. Margaret’s street
-Barnard, Alfred, grocer, King street
-Barnard, Bishop, and Barnard, iron-founders and engineers, and wire
-netting manufacturers, Norfolk Iron Works, St. Miles’ and Market place
-Barnard and Boulton, stove, grate, and range manufacturers,
-manufacturing, furnishing, and general ironmongers, oil and color
-merchants, London and Castle streets
-Barnard, Charles, Gildengate street
-Barnard, Charles, Champion Inn, Chapel field road
-Barnard, John, corn and hay merchant, and licensed to let horses, Golden
-Ball street
-Barnard, John, game dealer, Fye Bridge
-Barnard, John, last manufacturer, Coslany street
-Barnard, John, commercial traveller, St. Benedict’s road
-Barnard, John Cuthbert, accountant, Lower Westwick street
-Barnard, John Hilling, Upper Surrey st.
-Barnard, Miss Maria, St. Stephen’s road
-Barnard, Stephen, patten and last maker, Oak street
-Barnard, William, inspector of fire brigade, Kimberley street, Unthank’s
-road
-Barnes, Charles, printer and bookbinder, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Barnes, Edward R., baker, Thorn lane
-Barnes, Fiddy, farm steward, Earlham road
-Barnes, Jacob, bricklayer, West Pottergate street
-Barnes, James, cabinet maker, Surrey grove; h Bartholomew street
-Barnes, John, iron and brass founder, Hank’s yard, St. Miles’
-Barnes, John Edward, West End Retreat, Holl’s lane, Heigham
-Barnes, Maria, straw bonnet maker, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Barnes, Mrs. Mary, All Saints’ green
-Barnes, Mary, Woolpack, St. George’s plain
-Barnes, Robert, green grocer, Foundry bridge
-Barnham, Mrs. Elizabeth, 7, Newmarket road
-Barnham, James, Grove Cottage, St. Stephen’s road
-Barnham, Miss Louisa, 28, Newmarket road
-Barnsdale, Ann Frances, tea dealer, Curtis’ buildings, West Pottergate
-st.
-Barrow, Henry, grocer and tea dealer, 24, White Lion street
-Barrow, Mr. James, Mount Pleasant
-Barstead, Ann and Esther, havel makers, Alms’ lane
-Bartram, Henry, market gardener, Cherry street
-Barwell and Son, wine, spirit, ale, and porter merchants, No. 7, St.
-Stephen’s street
-Barwell and Son, wine, spirit, ale, and porter merchants, London street
-and St. Andrew’s hill
-Barwell, Mr. John, Surrey street
-Base, Samuel, postmaster, Post Office street; h Bixley Lodge
-Basey, Mrs. Lydia, infant school, Oak street
-Basey, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Calvert street
-Bassingthwaighte, William, boot and shoe maker, Upper market
-Batchelder, Miss, Bracondale
-Batchelder, Thomas, green grocer, Ber street
-Batchelor, Rev. T. John, Cook’s lane, King street
-Bateman, Benjamin, grocer, Magdalen street
-Bateman, Benjamin, and Co., tea and coffee dealers, London street and
-Lower Goat lane
-Bateman, J., and Son, wool, silk, yarn, and cotton merchants, and general
-commission agents, Gildengate street
-Bateman, Frederick, Esq., M.D., 19, St. Giles’ street
-Bateman, James George Joseph, (see Bateman and Son) agent for the Royal
-Farmers’ Fire and Life Office; h Cringleford
-Bateman, Mrs. Mary, day school, St. Stephen’s road
-Batley, Charles, timber merchant’s commission agent, Thorpe hamlet
-Batley, Richard, confectioner, St. Catherine’s plain, Lakenham
-Batley, Mrs. Susan, Thorpe St. Andrew
-Batley, William, chair manufacturer, Lower Westwick street, St. Lawrence
-Batson, Edward, corn merchant, Magdalen street
-Batson, John, shopkeeper, Barrack street
-Batterbee, John, shoemaker, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Battley, Mrs. Mary, laundress, Trowse Millgate
-Baxter, John, cattle dealer, Ber street
-Baxter, Mrs. Maria, baker, Brazen Doors road
-Baxter, Neville P., firework maker, Brazen Doors road
-Baxter, Robert, Wheat Sheaf, Bethel street
-Baxter, William, coal merchant, King street
-Baxter, Benjamin, dyer, St. Paul’s street
-Bayes, Elizabeth, and Sons, clothiers, &c. Orford hill and Red Lion
-street
-Bayes, William, hair dresser and furrier, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Bayfield, Ann, and Sons, ironmongers, oil and color merchants, 34,
-Magdalen street
-Bayfield, Francis, Victoria terrace, Synagogue street
-Bayfield, Mrs. John Freeman, register office for servants, 7, Bank street
-Bayfield, William Henry, hotpresser, Gildengate street, St. George’s
-Colegate
-Bayfield, William, merchant’s clerk, 6, Richmond place, Lakenham
-Bayliss, Andrew, cowkeeper, New Lakenham
-Bayne, Alexander D., 4, Portland place, Holl’s lane
-Baysby, —, 7, St. Giles’ road
-Bealby, Robert, grocer and tea dealer, William street, Heigham
-Beales, Mrs. Mary, basket and sieve maker, Wensum street
-Bean, Frank, Grapes hill, St. Giles’
-Bean, W., commercial traveller, Somerleyton terrace, Unthank’s road
-Beaney, John, lath render, Dial yard, Coslany street
-Beare, Samuel Shalders, currier and leather merchant, Bridge street, St.
-George’s; h Town Close, Ipswich road
-Beart, Robert Hayward, commercial agent, 26, Bethel street
-Beatley and Son, hat and cap manufacturers, 16, London street
-Beatley, Henry, accountant, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Beaton, John, blacksmith, King street
-Beauchamp, Miss Ellen, teacher of music, Heigham road
-Beaumont, John, pork butcher, Finket street
-Beazley, John, commercial traveller, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Beck, Samuel, The Chequers, Castle meadow
-Beckham, John Rix, baker, Cowgate street
-Beckham, Mrs. Mary, Thorpe hamlet
-Beckham, Robert John, coal dealer, Magdalen street
-Beckwith, Augustus Adolphus Hamilton, solicitor, Palace street
-Beckwith Benjamin, Shoulder of Mutton, St. Stephen’s street
-Beddingfield, John, commercial traveller, Newmarket road
-Beddingfield, Nelson, hackney master and livery stable keeper, Westlegate
-street
-Bedford, Philip, coppersmith, brazier, and tin-plate worker, Bedford
-street, St. Andrew’s
-Beecheno, Frederick, grocer, tea dealer, and provision merchant, 38,
-London street
-Beeton, John, the Wild Man, St. Andrew’s hill
-Beha, Lickart and Co., watch and clock-makers, silversmiths, and
-jewellers, St. Stephen’s plain
-Belden, Miss Susanna, milliner, Ber street
-Belding, William, wholesale grocer and tea dealer, 1, Magdalen street
-Belding, William, grocer, Point House, New Catton
-Bell, Charles, shoemaker, Botolph street
-Bell, George, builder, Peacock street
-Bell, James, shoemaker, Muspole street
-Bell, John Crawford, Esq., surgeon, Prince’s street
-Bell, John, horticulturist and seedsman, Exchange street and Bracondale;
-h at the Nursery, Bracondale
-Bell, Mary, Cat and Fiddle, Botolph street
-Bell, Michael, shoemaker, Botolph street
-Bell, Miss Louisa, day school, Mountergate place, Synagogue street
-Bell, Mary, beer retailer, Botolph street
-Bell, Matthew, Lock and Key, and grocer, Ber street
-Bell, Robert, watch and clock maker, silversmith and jeweller, 11, Davey
-place
-Bell, Rebecca, carpenter, Peacock street
-Bellamy, William national schoolmaster, Lower close
-Bellin, Benjamin, Windsor terrace, Grove road, New Lakenham
-Bellman, Rev. Edmund, New Catton
-Bellman, Mrs. Fanny, Lower close
-Beloe, Henry, silk finisher, Coslany street; h 5, Heigham terrace
-Belson, Robert, plumber and glazier, King street
-Benest, Edward Everett, city surveyor, Castle Meadow; h Clare House, New
-Catton
-Benest James (see Benest and Newson) h St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Benest and Newson, architects and surveyors, Bank chambers, Bank place
-Bennett, Austin, shoemaker, Cowgate street
-Bennett, Edward, Esq., 5, Newmarket road
-Bennett, Mrs. Emily, baker and grocer, Mariner’s lane
-Bennett, Emily, baker, Ber street
-Bennett, Henry, baker, Orford hill
-Bennett, Henry, tailor, St. Augustine’s
-Bennett, Horace, lay clerk at Cathedral; h Magdalen street
-Bennett, Jabez, market gardener, Infirmary road
-Bennett, James, grocer and importer of leeches, Tombland
-Bennett, John, the Allies’ Tavern, Upper Heigham
-Bennett, John, shopkeeper and shoemaker, St. Miles’ Church street
-Bennett, Maria, baker, Wellington street
-Bennett, Robert, baker, West Pottergate street
-Bennett, Robert, baker, City road, Heigham
-Bennett, Samuel, baker, Cowgate street
-Bensley, John, lodging-house keeper, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Bensley, John, beer retailer, Oak street
-Bensley, Thomas, Thorpe hamlet
-Bensley, William, grocer, Union place
-Benslyn, Thomas, baker and confectioner, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Bensted, William, agricultural machine maker, Castle meadow
-Berry, George John, baker, Ber street
-Berry, Josiah, town crier, Pottergate street
-Berry, Richard, manufacturer, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Berry, Swithin, beer retailer, Brazen Doors’ road
-Berry, William Mills, St. Paul’s terrace, Cowgate street
-Berwick, Mrs. Mary, lodging-house keeper, Nelson place, Mount Pleasant
-Berwick, William, bricklayer and builder, Suffolk street, Union place
-Betts, Charles A., Lord John Russell, Dereham road
-Betts, Emanuel, Nelson Tavern, Upper market
-Betts, Henry, grocer, Southwell street
-Betts, James, wheelwright, Julian place; h Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Betts, James George, Two-necked Swan, St. Stephen’s street
-Betts, John, bricklayer, 21, West Pottergate street
-Betts, John Samuel, baker, Baker’s Arms, Coslany street, St. Mary’s
-Betts, John, The Chequers, the Ditches, Castle hill
-Betts, John, register office for servants, 63, Bethel street
-Betts, John, linen and woollen draper, silk mercer, Market place
-Betts, Osborn, willow pill-box manufacturer, Waterloo road, New Catton
-Betts, Thomas, hair dresser, French Horn, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Bexfield, Richard, grocer, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Bexfield, Thomas, cabinet maker, Bethel street
-Bexfield, James, grocer, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Bianchi, Giovanni, figure and model maker, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Bidett, Jonathan, Dial, Dereham road
-Bidwell, Henry, agent for the National Provident Institution, Atlas Life
-and Fire Insurance Offices, and agent for Blackmore’s Patent Bolting
-Cloths, Pitt street
-Bidwell, James, shopkeeper, St. Faith’s lane
-Bidwell, John, Colegate street
-Biggs, Mrs. Mary, 7, St. Stephen’s square
-Bignold, Edward Samuel, Esq., (see Field and Bignold) 23, Victoria street
-Bignold, Sir Samuel, knt., Surrey street
-Bignold, Thomas, Esq., 9, Lakenham terrace, City road
-Bilby, Thomas, clerk, and agent to the People’s Provident Life Assurance
-Guarantee Society, and the Travellers’ and Marine Insurance Company,
-Lakenham place, St. Catherine’s plain
-Bilby, Walter, cattle dealer, Islington house, New Catton
-Bilby, William, hairdresser, Pitt street
-Bilham, Charles, St. George’s plain
-Billham, John, clerk to the Water Works Comp., 3, John street, Rose lane
-Bingham, Samuel Hart, engineer, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Bingham, Thomas, tailor and woollen draper, Post Office street
-Birch, Benjamin, cabinet maker, Timberhill street; h St. Catherine’s
-plain
-Birch, Isaac, clerk to the Unity Fire Office; King Street gates
-Bircham, Mrs. C., Mount Pleasant, Newmarket road
-Bircham and Pyle, corn merchants, Wensum street
-Bird, Bailey, saw mills, Philadelphia
-Bird, Henry, hosier and glover, 3, Briggs’ street; h West Wymer street,
-Heigham
-Bird, Miss Jane, shirt maker, Timberhill street
-Bishop, George, linen and woollen draper, 5, Old Haymarket
-Bishop, James, property tax collector, Coburg street
-Bishop, John, Thorpe hamlet
-Bishop, William Amis, builder, Magdalen street
-Bishop, Rev. William, 5, Dereham Road terrace, Dereham road
-Blackburn, James Berry, currier and leather seller, St. Stephen’s plain
-Blackburn, Robert, city missionary, Keyzor’s place, Holl’s lane
-Blackburn, Samuel, toll collector, Thorpe hamlet
-Blackburn, Edward, shoemaker, Upper walk
-Blackburn, James, currier, Castle Meadow
-Blackburn, William Berry, Victoria Tavern, St. Stephen’s gates
-Blackie and Son, publishers and booksellers, 48, Upper St. Giles’
-street—George Wakerley, agent
-Blackmore, Alfred, willow pill-box manufacturer, West Wymer street,
-Heigham
-Blake and Everett, hotpressers, Gildengate street, St. George’s Colegate
-Blake, Edward, and Robert Wiffin, mohair and worstead-yarn spinners,
-Fishgate street
-Blake, Francis John, solicitor, and commissioner for Administering Oaths
-in Chancery in England, commissioner for taking acknowledgment of deeds
-of married women, superintendent registrar for districts of Norwich,
-clerk and treasurer of the County Lunatic Asylum, at Thorpe, and clerk of
-St. Faith’s Union, &c., Upper King street
-Blake, George, brickmaker, Brazen Doors road; h Newmarket road
-Blake, Hannah, St. Benedict’s plain, Pottergate street
-Blake, James, Pheasant Cock, Ber street gates
-Blake, John Joseph, Esq., solicitor, (see Blake, Keith, and Blake)
-Theatre st.
-Blake, Mrs. Jonathan, 21, Mount Pleasant
-Blake, Joseph, The Hermitage, City road, Lakenham
-Blake, Keith, and Blake, solicitors, the Chantry
-Blake, Mrs. Mary, Lower Close
-Blake, Robert, brickmaker, Brazen Doors road; h Golden Dog lane
-Blake, Robert, butcher, Lower Westwick street, St. Lawrence
-Blake, Samuel, butcher, 3, Bridewell alley
-Blakely, the Misses, boarding school, Paragon Lodge, St. Giles’ road
-Blakely, Edward, silk mercer, West Parade, Earlham road
-Blakely, William, manufacturer, Pitt street
-Blakeney, Joseph, city missionary, Alma place, St. Augustine’s
-Blanden, Henry, Morning Mail, Pottergate street
-Blandon, Miss Caroline and Matilda, grocers, Ber street
-Blazeby, William, portrait painter, Bethel street
-Blazeby, James, artist, 16, Bethel street
-Blazeby, John, turner, Globe lane, Golden Ball street
-Blazeby, Henry, butcher, Westlegate street
-Blazeby, William, whitesmith, Scole’s green
-Bleakley, Mrs. Elijah, 4, Newmarket road
-Blinkinsop, Mrs. Alice, Cadogan place, 2, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Bliss, Joseph James, chemist and druggist, Magdalen street
-Bloch, Israel, jeweller, 47, Pottergate street
-Blogg, Mr. Stephen Money, Holl’s lane
-Blogg, William (day school) Upper King street
-Bloom, Thomas (see Plummer and Bloom); h 2, Paragon street
-Bloomfield, Amelia, milliner and dress maker, Botolph street
-Bloomfield, George, Norfolk and Norwich chop house, Market place
-Blomfield, Mrs. Sarah, 30, Victoria street
-Bloy, Mrs. Elizabeth, Mount Pleasant
-Blunderfield, Mrs., 11, Newmarket terrace, Newmarket road
-Blyth, James, green grocer, Julian street
-Blyth, John, bricklayer, John street
-Blyth, John, grocer, St. Martin’s gates
-Blyth, John, timber and coal merchant, Quay side
-Blyth, John, sen., coal merchant, Quay side
-Blyth, John, shoemaker, Earlham road
-Blyth, Josiah, baker and shopkeeper, Adelaide street, Heigham
-Blyth, Sarah, greengrocer, Coslany street
-Blyth, William, timber merchant, St. Faith’s lane
-Blyth, William, timber merchant, St. Julian’s street
-Blyth, William, beer retailer, Ber street
-Blyth, William, clothes’ salesman, Coach and Horses road, Union place
-Blyth, William Bates, boot and shoe maker, Bethel street
-Blythe, Eldred, Nursery Tavern, and painter, plumber and glazier, Nelson
-street, Heigham
-Blythe, Joshua, shopkeeper, World’s End lane
-Blythe, Louisa, dress maker, St. Augustine’s
-Blythe, Thomas, wheelwright, St. Augustine’s
-Boardman, James Theobald, wholesale tea, coffee, and spice dealer,
-Cundall’s court, Gentleman’s walk
-Boardman and Sursham, hop, corn, and coal merchants, Wensum street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 14)
-Boardman, Mrs. Mary Ann, Pottergate street
-Boatwright, James, joiner, Fishgate street
-Boatwright, James, cap maker, St. Saviour’s, Church alley
-Boatwright, Richard, pork butcher, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Bocking, Thomas, builder, St. Benedict’s plain, Pottergate street
-Boddy, John, tailor, William street
-Body, Elizabeth Murrey, day school, Adelaide street, Heigham
-Bolingbroke, Charles and Frederick, manufacturers, St. Clement’s Church
-alley
-Bolingbroke, Charles N., Esq., Upper St. Giles’ street
-Bolingbroke, Horatio, Esq. (magistrate) 23, St. Giles’ street
-Bolingbroke, Woodrow and Co. (Norwich Wine Company) importers of foreign
-wines and spirits, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Bollison, William, blacksmith, Thorpe hamlet
-Botton, Ann Elizabeth, milliner, New Catton
-Bolton, William (inspector on E. C. railway) Synagogue House
-Bond, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Duke street
-Bond, George, shopkeeper, Quakers’ lane
-Bond, Joseph Daynes, tailor, Upper Goat lane
-Bond, Mrs. Juliet, Lakenham place, St. Catherine’s plain
-Bond, Thomas William, publisher of the “Norfolk News,” Broad street, St.
-Andrew’s
-Bond, William, tailor and woollen draper, 30, London street
-Bone, Francis, baker, St. Benedict’s street
-Bone, Nicholas, water bailiff, Lady’s lane
-Bone, Thomas, boot and shoe maker, St. Benedict’s street
-Booth, Miss Frances, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Booth, George, accountant, Richmond place, Bracondale
-Booth, Thomas Rising, Shakespeare, Colegate street
-Booty, John, gardener and seedsman, St. Stephen’s road
-Booty, Horace John, British schoolmaster, Thorpe hamlet
-Borking, James, boot and shoe maker, Upper Westwick street
-Borking, Thomas, tailor, Willow lane
-Borking, Thomas Patrick, shopkeeper, Upper Westwick street
-Borrett, William, confectioner, Lower Westwick street
-Bostock, Edwin and Thomas, boot and shoe top manufacturers, and leather
-merchants, Swan lane, and 39, Pottergate street
-Boston, William, pawnbroker, and boot and shoe manufacturer, Orford hill
-Boswell, James Freeman, wine and spirit merchant, Chatham place, St.
-Augustine’s
-Boswell and Bishop, whitesmiths, Luckett’s court, St. Andrew’s Broad
-street
-Boswell, Thomas, perambulator, toy, and invalid’s carriage manufacturer,
-Birmingham and Sheffield warehouse, 9, St. John’s Maddermarket (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 24)
-Boswell, William, carver and gilder, and looking-glass manufacturer,
-Magdalen street
-Botwright, the Misses Martha and Eleanor, Theatre street
-Boughen, Hugh, chemist and druggist, St. Augustine’s
-Boughen, Robert, Cross st., Unthank’s road
-Boughen, William, hosier, glover, shirt maker, and general outfitter,
-Bank plain
-Boughton, Richard, greengrocer, St. Stephen’s street
-Boughton, Samuel, hairdresser and glove maker, Red Lion street
-Boulger, Mr. John Joseph, Heigham rd.
-Boulger, Patrick Joseph, surgeon dentist, Willow lane
-Boult, Benjamin Grimmer, sail maker, Barge yard, King street
-Boult, The Misses, Chalk Hill Cottage, Thorpe hamlet
-Boulton, Mr. Benjamin, Paragon street
-Boulton, Edward, earthenware dealer and shopkeeper, Gildengate street
-Boulton, Robert, Saint Julian’s street, manager to Albion mills, Lower
-King street
-Boulton, William, ironmonger, 9, The Crescent, Chapel-field road
-Bourt, John, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Boutelle, Mrs. Harriet, Gloucester place, St. Catherine’s plain, Lakenham
-Bowden, James, accountant, Bank street
-Bowgen, John Hart, Victoria spirit vaults, Lower Westwick street
-Bowgen, John Hart, coal merchant, chimney sweeper, &c., Lower Westwick
-street
-Bowen, Alfred, merchant’s clerk, 2, John street
-Bowen, William, plumber, painter and glazier, Pottergate street; h 23,
-Paragon street
-Bower, James, wood carver, Devonshire place, Holl’s lane
-Bower, James Garton, accountant, St. Martin’s lane
-Bower, John A., 3, Newmarket terrace, Newmarket road
-Bowes, William, harness maker, Upper Westwick street
-Bowhill, Henry, boot and shoe maker, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Bowhill, O., 39, Pottergate street
-Bowles, Caleb, watch manufacturer, Bedford-street, Unthank’s road
-Bowthorpe, William, Unthank’s road
-Boyce, George, Ship Inn, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Boyce, Mrs. Harriet, dress maker, Redwell street
-Boyden, the Misses Eliza and Charlotte, (boarding and day school)
-Pottergate street
-Bradey, Mrs. Mary, St. Julian’s street
-Brady, Alfred T., painter, plumber and glazier, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Bradfield, Frederick, patten and clog manufacturer, Little London street
-Bradfield, Mrs. Rose, cloak maker, West Pottergate street
-Bramwell Daniel Kellard, stationer, bookseller, news agent, and
-librarian, 9, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Branch, George, manufacturer of surgical and dental instruments, Golden
-Ball street
-Branch, James, accountant, 65, Pottergate street
-Brandling, Major John James, Mount Pleasant, Newmarket road
-Bradford, Mrs. Elizabeth, Thorpe hamlet
-Bray, Charles, plumber, glazier and painter, Timberhill street and Castle
-hill (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 15)
-Bray, Mrs. John, Catton road
-Bray, Joseph, wool sorter, St. Paul’s terrace, Cowgate street
-Bray, Richard, tailor and woollen draper, 30, Pottergate street
-Bray, Robert, beer retailer, Ber street
-Brazell, Richard, Half Moon Inn, Upper Market
-Bream, Charles John, wholesale grocer and tea dealer, Upper Market; h
-Town close
-Breese, Robert, saddler and harness maker, Magdalen street
-Breeze, Christmas, dyer, Infirmary road
-Breeze, Henry, dyer, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Breeze, H. S., Miss, dressmaker, Rupert street, Union place
-Breeze, Mrs. Mary, greengrocer, Cross lane, St. George’s
-Brett, Alethsa, Portland Arms, Old Church road, Lakenham
-Brett, Isaac, boot and shoe manufacturer, Upper King street
-Brett, Sophia, dressmaker, Union place
-Brett, Thomas, shopkeeper and dealer, Old Church street, Lakenham
-Brewster, James, butcher, Upper Heigham
-Bridges, John, butcher, Heigham street
-Bridges, Robert, Princess Royal, Rampant Horse street
-Bridges William, marine store dealer, Coslany street
-Bridgeman, William K., surgeon dentist, 69, St. Giles’ street
-Briggs William Henry, dyer and beer retailer, New Catton
-Briggs, John, The Waterman, St. Margaret’s plain
-Briggs, Mrs. Margarette, West Pottergate street
-Briggs, Robert, ventriloquist, Ber street
-Briggs, Sampson, tailor and secondhand clothes dealer, Golden Ball street
-Briggs, William, Queen Caroline, Oak street
-Brigham, John, St. Catherine’s plain
-Bright, John, coal merchant, Lower Westwick street
-Brightwell and Son, solicitors, Surrey street
-Brightwell, Thomas, Esq., jun., solicitor, 71, St. Giles’ street
-Brightwell, Thomas, medical botanist, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Brightwell, Thomas, Esq., sen., solicitor to the Charity Trustees of
-Norwich, and clerk to the Corn Hall, Surrey st.
-Bright, Zachariah, beer retailer, The Hero of the Redan, Thorpe hamlet
-Brighten, Charles George, confectioner, St. Stephen’s gates
-Brighton, Robert, butcher, Heigham st.
-Brinkley, James, Southwell Arms, Front row, Lakenham
-Britcher, Charles, plasterer, Pitt street
-Britcher, John, boat builder, Carrow Abbey; h Bracondale
-Britcher, Thomas, bricklayer, Pottergate street
-Brittain, George, collector for the Water Works Compy., Southgate street
-Britton, John, pill box manufacturer, Oak street
-Brock, George, soap and candle manufacturer, Alma terrace, St.
-Augustine’s gates
-Brock, Samuel, baker and confectioner, St. Augustine’s street
-Brock, William, baker, &c., Oak street
-Brogden, Thomas, Magdalen road
-Brook, Edmund, dyer, King street
-Brook, Isaac, Oak street
-Brook, Thomas Verlander, tea and coffee dealer and tobacconist, Bethel
-street
-Brooke, William, Grey Friars’ school, Priory lane
-Brooks, Anthony and James, coal merchants, Barn road
-Brooks, Cooper, leather merchant, St. Stephen’s plain
-Brooks, David, greengrocer, Lower Westwick street
-Brooks, Henry, bricklayer and plasterer, Hall road, Lakenham
-Brooks, James, carpenter and builder, Tabernacle street
-Brooks, John, blacksmith, All Saints’ street; h Magdalen place
-Brooks, John, whitesmith and marine store dealer, Golden Ball street
-Brooks, Thomas, joiner and builder, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Brooks, William, shopkeeper, Oak street
-Brownfield, John, surgeon, Magdalen street
-Browes, James, green grocer, Lower King street
-Browes, Miss Pamela, milliner and dressmaker, Chapel street, Crook’s
-place
-Brown, Mr. Alfred, Tamworth terrace, Unthank’s road
-Brown, Miss Ann, dressmaker, Sherbourne place, Mariner’s lane
-Brown, Miss Anna Maria, milliner and dressmaker, Muspole street
-Brown and Bailey, builders, &c., West Pottergate street
-Brown, B., baker, city road, New Lakenham
-Brown, Benjamin, dyer, Robson’s yard, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Brown, Christopher, bricklayer and plasterer, Hall road, Lakenham
-Brown, Eliza, dressmaker, Rochester buildings, Norfolk street
-Brown, Elizabeth, butcher, Bishopgate street, St. Helen’s
-Brown, Mr. Frederick, Bracondale
-Brown, Frederick, corn merchant and malster, Lower King street
-Brown, Frederic William, Hope Brewery, joiner and builder, pump maker and
-well sinker, St. Saviour’s lane
-Brown, George, merchant, King street; h Bracondale
-Brown, George, tailor, Upper King street
-Brown, George, Unicorn, St. Stephen’s street
-Brown, Henry, grocer and tea dealer, and agent for the Alliance Fire and
-Life Assurance office, 14, Gentleman’s walk
-Brown, Henry, Ten Bells, wood carver, Upper Westwick street, St.
-Swithin’s
-Brown, Henry, lodging-house keeper, William street
-Brown, James, green grocer, Colegate street
-Brown, Rev. James Landy, M.A., the Grove, Chapel field
-Brown, John, architect and surveyor, county surveyor, and surveyor to the
-Dean and Chapter, King street
-Brown, John, bricklayer, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Brown, John, builder, William street
-Brown, John, baker, Muspole street
-Brown, John, grocer, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Brown, John, carpenter and builder, Clarence Harbour, Thorpe Hamlet
-Brown, Mrs. Maria, milliner and haberdasher, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Brown, Maria, baker, Lower Westwick street, St. Margaret’s
-Brown, Mary Anne, Royal Oak, St. Augustine’s street
-Brown, Peter, carpenter, &c., City road, Heigham fields
-Brown, Philip, Esq., Thorpe Hamlet
-Brown, Mr. Robert, Grove terrace, Unthank’s road
-Brown, Robert, bone crusher, St. Benedict’s lane
-Brown, Rose Ann, Corn Exchange tavern, Little London street
-Brown, Sophia, baker and shopkeeper, Philadelphia
-Brown, Thomas, clerk, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Brown, Thomas, fishmonger, Fishmarket
-Brown and Wright, millwrights, engineers, stone builders, and workers of
-brass, &c., King street, near Rose corner (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 14.)
-Brown, William, blacksmith, Lower King street
-Brown, William, Lower Close
-Brown, William, lodging-house keeper, John street, Rose lane
-Brown, Mrs. William, lodging-house keeper, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Browne and Barker, hatters and hosiers, 10, London street
-Browne, Charles, provision dealer, 57, St. Stephen’s street
-Browne, David, nursery, florist and seedsman, 41, London street, and
-Sprowston
-Browne, George, Esq., 3, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Browne, George, clothier, Orford hill
-Browne, Hall, grocer, Ber street
-Browne, John, The Adelphi, White Lion street
-Browne, John, and Sons, ironmongers and color merchants, 4, Upper market
-Browne, Joseph, tobacco-pipe maker, St. Stephen’s street
-Browne, Lovick Anstead, Foundry Bridge Tavern, Rose lane
-Browne, Samuel, grocer and tea dealer, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Browne, Mrs. Sarah, dyer and dresser, Tombland
-Browne, William, and Co., lithographers, engravers, and copperplate
-printers, and land surveyors, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Browne, William, Heigham road, Earlham road, (see W. Browne and Co.)
-Browne, William John Utten, Esq., barrister, Heigham grove, St. Giles’
-road
-Brownson, Miss Ann and Sarah, the Chantry
-Browsell, William, Pope’s Head, Upper market
-Bruce, Mrs. Jane Scott, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Bruff, Robert, Lord Camden, Charing Cross
-Brundell, Mrs. Mary Ann, dressmaker, Upper King street
-Brunning, John, fly proprietor, St. Catherine’s plain, Lakenham
-Brussey, Benjamin, grocer, St. Augustine’s street
-Bryant, Samuel, beer retailer, Thorn lane
-Buck, Charles Harrison, boot and shoe maker, Back of the Inns
-Buck, John, agricultural implement maker, Grove place, New Lakenham
-Buck, George, beer retailer, Mill street, Lakenham
-Buck, Zachariah, doctor of music, Upper Close
-Buckenham, John Charles, watch and clock maker, Tombland
-Bugden, Thomas and Edward, wholesale tea dealers and grocers, St. Mary’s
-plain
-Bugden, Thomas, grocer, (see Bugden, Thomas and Edward); h Gildengate
-street
-Bugg, Mrs. Hannah, milliner and dressmaker, St. Augustine’s street
-Bugg, Isaac, solicitor, commissioner to administer oaths in Chancery in
-England, and perpetual commissioner for taking acknowledgements of deeds
-by married women, (see Miller, Son, and Bugg); h Newmarket road
-Bulgin, Henry, wholesale mourning milliner, Freeman’s Villas, Unthank’s
-road
-Bull, Miss Jane, the Crescent, Chapel field
-Bull, George, willow pill-box manufacturer, Silver street
-Bullard, John, waterman, Lower King street
-Bullard, Mrs. John, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Bullard, Maria, shopkeeper, Trowse
-Bullard, Richard, brewer, malster, wine and spirit merchant, and corn and
-coal merchant, Bridge street, St. Miles’; h 24, St. Giles’ street
-Bullard, Robert, brewer’s clerk, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Bullard, Robert, fruiterer, Swan lane
-Bullard, William, flour dealer, 17, Suffolk street, Union place
-Bullard, William, tailor and woollen draper, 14, Exchange street; h
-Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Bullen, Miss Elizabeth, eating house, Bridewell alley
-Bullen, George, ticket writer, Catton rd.
-Bullen, William Vincent, hairdresser, confectioner, and fruiterer, Golden
-Ball street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 14)
-Bullimore, Mary Ann, tailoress, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Bullock, John, bird preserver, Lower Westwick street, St. Swithin’s
-Bultitude, Edward, cabinet maker, Charing cross
-Bungay, Elizabeth and Ann, grocers and tea dealers, Trowse
-Bunn, Charles, bricklayer and plasterer, Vauxhall Tavern, Julian street
-Bunn, John, architect and surveyor, 20, Pottergate street
-Bunn, Robert, watch and clock maker, Timberhill street
-Bunn, Samuel, Heigham grove, St. Giles’ road
-Bunnett, Edward, professor of music, the Close
-Bunnett, Thomas C., butcher, Distillery street
-Bunting, James, shopkeeper, Coslany street, St. Miles’
-Bunting, John, plumber, painter, and glazier, St. Giles’ road
-Bunting, Richard, French polisher, Lower Westwick street
-Burch, Conrade, fruiterer and green grocer, West End street, Heigham
-Burcham, Samuel, corn and coal merchant, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Burdett, Jonathan, The Dial, Dereham road
-Burgess, John, artist, Willow Cottage, Lower close
-Burgess, Richard, The Eagle tavern, Lower Westwick street
-Burgess, Robert, plumber, painter, and glazier, Chapel field; h Rose
-valley, Unthank’s road
-Burgess, William, shoemaker, Coslany street, St. Miles’
-Burman, Henry, basket maker, Oak st.
-Barrage, Edward, baker, Julian street, Julian place
-Burrage, Edwin, confectioner, &c., Church street
-Burrage, Frederick Joseph, boarding and day school, Golden Dog lane
-Burrage and Jeffries, tailors and outfitters, 2, Davey place
-Burrage, John, clothier, Davey place; h Dereham road
-Burrage, John Charles, boarding and day school, Castle hill; h 2, Little
-Orford street
-Burrage, Mrs. Joseph James, ladies’ boarding and day school, Golden Dog
-lane
-Burrage, William, Plasterer’s Arms, Cowgate street
-Burrell, Benjamin, builder, Lower King street
-Burrell, Elizabeth, beer retailer, Church street, St. Miles’
-Burrell, Mr. James, Magdalen street
-Burrell, John, horsehair manufacturer, Gildengate street
-Burrell, Robert, Rose Tavern, St. Martin’s at Oak street
-Burrell, William, general shopkeeper, Cowgate street
-Burroughes, Randall Ellis, solicitor, (see Foster, Son, Burroughes, and
-Robberds;) h Thorpe Hamlet
-Burroughs, George, shopkeeper, Magdalen street
-Burrows, Barnard Lemon, chemist and druggist, Ber street gates
-Burrows, Edward, shoemaker, Oak street
-Burrows, George, coal merchant, St. Edmund’s square, Water lane, Fishgate
-street
-Burrows, George C., agency office, Post Office street
-Burrows, John, The Cock, Upper St. Giles’
-Burrows, Lewis, coal dealer, Cowgate street, St. Paul’s
-Burrows, Mrs. Mary, beer retailer, Colegate street
-Burrows, Robert, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Burrows, William, wholesale boot and shoe manufacturer, St. Clement’s
-Church alley
-Burrows, William, boot and shoe maker, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Burrows, William, Duncan Arms, Magdalen street
-Burt, Miss Priscilla, Chapel field grove
-Burton, Emma, dressmaker, Trafalgar street
-Burton, Frederick Charles, professor of music, St. Stephen’s road
-Burton, George, coffee and eating house, Castle hill
-Burton, Gent, provision merchant, 12, Dove street
-Burton, Thomas, hawker, Trafalgar street
-Bush, Edward, clock maker, St. Mary’s plain
-Bush, George, toy and fancy warehouse, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Bush, George W., foreman at Fletcher’s printing office; h Chapel Field
-road
-Bush, John, bricklayer, Union place
-Bush, John, beer retailer, Fishgate street
-Bush, Mrs. Mary Ann, Princes’ street
-Bush, Rebecca, The Alma Tavern, Pottergate street
-Bush, Mr. Robert, 2, Earlham Road terrace
-Bushell, George, clerk, Gas hill, Thorpe hamlet
-Bushell, William, butcher, Norfolk street, Union place
-Bushnell, Joseph, wood carver, Suffolk street, Heigham
-Bussey, Henry, reporter for the “Norwich Mercury,” Leicester place,
-Vauxhall street
-Butcher, Brothers, paper manufacturers, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Butcher, Mr. John M., Mount Pleasant
-Butcher, James, Goose and Gridiron, and blacksmith, St. Stephen’s street
-Butcher, Jeremiah, Esq., 11, Newmarket road
-Butcher, Robert, Crown and Anchor, St. Augustine’s street
-Butcher, Robert, and Nephew, wholesale grocers, Bank plain and Queen
-street
-Butcher, Mr. Robert Edward, Theatre street
-Butcher, Simon, green grocer, St. Augustine’s street
-Butcher, Simon, furniture broker, St. Augustine’s
-Butcher, Walter Whitton, Red House, Timberhill street
-Butcher, William, green grocer, Elm hill
-Butcher, William, and Sons, auctioneers, land agents, and surveyors,
-Theatre street, and 37, Bedford row, London
-Butcher, Mr. William, sen., Theatre street
-Butter, Caroline, green grocer, Bull close
-Butler, Charles, merchant’s clerk, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Butler, Edward, solicitor’s clerk, Ber Street gates
-Butler, Henry, tailor, Russell street
-Butler, James, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Butler, James, Finket street
-Butler, Mary, coal dealer, Lower Westwick street, St. Margaret’s
-Butler, John, coal dealer, Lower Westwick street
-Butler, Robert, rent collector, Ber street
-Butler, Thomas, shopkeeper, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Butler, Thomas Bulwer, attorney’s clerk, John street, Rose lane
-Butler, William, clothes’ dealer, St. Lawrence
-Batterbee, James, clothes’ dealer
-Buttifant, Davis, hairdresser, Golden Ball street
-Buttifant, Henry, ironmonger, Grapes’ hill
-Buttifant, Henry and Josiah, ironmongers, and oil and colour merchants,
-William street, Heigham
-Buttifant, John, cabinet maker, and picture-frame maker, 2, St. Ann’s
-terrace, Synagogue street
-Buttifant, Josiah, Conservative Registration Rooms, and secretary to the
-Provident Building Society, Bethel street
-Buttifant, Thomas, shoe manufacturer, Adelaide street, Heigham
-Buttle, Richard, coal merchant, and beer retailer, Quay side
-Button, Edward John, accountant, 1, Albion place, Mount pleasant
-Button, Mr. John, 7, Newmarket terrace, Newmarket road
-Buxley, James, Marquis of Gransby, Bishopgate street
-Buxton, John, tobacconist, St. Stephen’s street
-Buxton, Joseph, (inland revenue office) 3, Heigham road
-Buxton, Stephen, baker, Thorpe hamlet
-Byles, Robert, “Jubilee,” Ber street
-Cadge, William, surgeon, All Saints’ green
-Caldwell, Rev. Charles, 3, Heigham terrace, Dereham road
-Caley, Albert J., pharmaceutical chemist, London street
-Caley, Nathaniel Henry, draper, silk mercer, and shawl manufacturer,
-London street
-Caley, John Thomas, tailor, St. Benedict’s street
-Callow, William Julian, brazier, and tin-plate worker, Golden Ball street
-Calton, John Dixon, Club-house Tavern, Old Post Office court
-Calver, John, boot and shoe maker, Church street, St. Simon’s
-Calver, John, harness maker, All Saints’ green
-Calver, John French, Old Crown, Oak street
-Calver, Josiah, warehouseman, Infirmary road
-Calver, Thomas, wholesale and retail boot and shoe manufacturer, St.
-Giles’ street
-Calvert, Rev. Thomas, Upper Surrey street
-Campling, Abraham, commercial traveller, St. Saviour’s lane
-Campling, Alfred, dyer, Botolph street
-Campling, Miss Ann, laundress, Gildengate street
-Campling, Mrs. Eliza Jane, boarding and day school, Castle hill
-Campling, George, greengrocer, Magdalen street
-Campling, George, Two Brewers, Magdalen street
-Campling, James, millwright, engineer, ironfounder, agricultural
-implement manufacturer, and commission agent; repository, Golden Ball
-street
-Campling, James, engineer, millwright, and boiler maker, Buff Coat lane
-Iron Works (see also repository, Golden Ball street); h Castle hill,
-Prospect place
-Campling, James, bookbinder, Westlegate street
-Campling, Jeremiah, Rifleman tavern, Cross lane
-Campling, Jessie, Postman, Chatham street, Sussex street, St. Augustine’s
-Campling, John, fishmonger, Magdalen street
-Campling, Paul, shopkeeper, West Pottergate street
-Campling, Peter, coal dealer, West Pottergate street
-Campling, Robert, governor of City gaol, St. Giles’ gates
-Campling, Samuel, Fortune of War, Calvert street
-Campling, Thomas, plumber, glazier, and gas fitter, Coslany street
-Campling, Thomas, Bloomsbury street, Rose lane
-Campling, William, Bull (Snow’s chop house) Market place
-Candler, Miss Elizabeth, 5, Foundry terrace, Thorpe hamlet
-Candler, John, plumber, St. Saviour’s lane
-Candler, John, wholesale stationer, and brush manufacturer, 5, Rampant
-Horse street
-Canham, Mrs. Emma, baby linen warehouse, 68½, St. Stephen’s street
-Canham, Isaiah, clerk, Heigham road
-Canham, Mrs. Margaret, 1, Jay’s terrace, Rose lane
-Canham, Sarah, furniture broker, Ber street
-Canham, Thomas, assistant draper, Gloucester place, St. Catherine’s plain
-Canham, William, boot and shoemaker, Lower Westwick street
-Cann, Mrs. Mary, stay maker, Fisher’s lane
-Cann, Samuel, Philadelphia saw mills
-Cann, Watling, Philadelphia
-Cannell, Albert Francis, tailor and woollen draper, Lower Goat lane
-Cannell, Benjamin, pork butcher, St. James’ street
-Cannell, Elizabeth, lodging-house keeper, Unthank’s road
-Cannell, George Symonds, boot and shoe maker, Ber street
-Cannell, Hannah, grocer and tea dealer, and ale, porter, and spirit
-merchant, Unthank’s road
-Cannell, Mr. Henry, Newmarket road
-Cannell, James, grocer and tea dealer, Upper Westwick street
-Cannell, Mr. Nunn, Newmarket road
-Cannell, Peter, miller, Mousehold heath
-Cannell, Robert, baker, King street
-Canner, John, Prince of Wales, Upper Westwick street
-Cannon, Goss William S., fish merchant, Fisher’s lane
-Capes, George, wholesale and retail tea dealer, Nelson street, Heigham
-Capon, James, merchant’s clerk, John street, Rose lane
-Caprani, Lewis and Co., hardware dealers, and importers of toys and fancy
-goods, White Lion street
-Capp, Ellen, Napier tavern, Castle hill
-Carley, Mrs. C., Douro terrace, Heigham grove, St. Giles’ road
-Carpenter, Mrs. Philip Samuel, 3, Langham place, Dereham road
-Carpenter, Robert, cooper, Oak street
-Carr, Charles, Briton’s Arms, Elm hill
-Carr, Mrs. Harriett, matron of “Orphan’s Home,” Pottergate street
-Carr, William, clicker, Muspole street
-Caro, Rev. Simon, linguist, Ber street
-Carter, Rev. George, M.A., (rector of Trowse and Lakenham) Lower Close
-Carter, John, commercial traveller, 29, Newmarket road
-Carter, John, dyer, All Saints’ street
-Carter, John, cowkeeper, Catton road
-Carter, John, shoemaker, Peacock street
-Carter, Henry, shopkeeper, Cowgate street
-Carter, Mrs. Henry, St. Helen’s square, Bishopgate street
-Carter, Miss Sarah, 19, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Carter, Thomas, general shopkeeper, St. James street
-Carter, William, Barley Mow, Haymarket
-Cartwright, Frederick, bill poster, Broad street, St. Andrew’s
-Cartwright, Henry, gunmaker, Rampant Horse street
-Cartwright, Mrs., haberdasher, Magdalen road
-Carver, Charles, shoemaker, Wellington street
-Carver, Miss C. E., teacher of music, Douro terrace, Heigham grove
-Carver, Rebecca, general shopkeeper, 12, Surrey terrace, Lakenham
-Carver, Mrs. Ruth (ladies’ seminary) West Pottergate street
-Carver, William, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Carver, William, Bull’s Head tavern, Ber street
-Carver, Wm., beer retailer, shopkeeper, and shoemaker, Trowse Millgate
-Case, Philip, Esq., the Town Close
-Casson, Daniel Bell, Jolly Farmers, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Casper, George, and Co., shoe manufacturers, Wensum street; h Lower Close
-Castle, W., hairdresser, Upper Market
-Castleton, William S., tailor, Howard street, Lakenham
-Caston, William, Rose lane
-Caston, John, grocer, tea dealer, ale, porter, and spirit merchant, St.
-Benedict’s gates
-Catchpole, John, shopkeeper, and beer retailer, Cowgate street
-Catling, Alfred, baker, Carrow hill
-Cattermole, David, Coach and Horses, Thorpe road
-Cattermole, William, baker, Front row, Lakenham
-Cattermoul, Mrs. Esther, lodging-house keeper, St. Benedict’s plain
-Cattermoul, Everett, Esq., Pitt street
-Cattermoul, James, Eagle tavern, Newmarket road
-Cattermoul, John Overton, builder, Pitt street
-Cattermoul, Thomas Mathews, Bridge tavern, Wensum street
-Cattermoul, William, bookbinder, 22, White Lion street
-Cattermoul, William, The Allies, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Cattermoul, William, Chapel Field road
-Cattermoule, Thomas, beer retailer, Ber street
-Cavendish, Mrs. Mary, 3, Crescent place, Chapel Field road
-Cawdron, Henry, shopkeeper and lodging house, Bethel street
-Cawdron, Jonathan, turning lathe and tool maker, and turner in general,
-Duke street
-Cettermer, Isaac, baker, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Chalker, Elizabeth (day school) Tills’ court, Ber street
-Chalker, Mary Ann, beer retailer, Coslany street
-Challis, John, Bracondale
-Challis, Thomas, boot maker, London street
-Chambers, Miss Grace, Upper Close
-Chambers, Mrs. Mary, Theatre street
-Chambers, Sarah, dressmaker, Ber street gates
-Chamberlin, James, grocer and tea dealer, Post Office street
-Chamberlin, William, cabinet maker, Calvert street
-Chamberlin, Sons and Co., wholesale and retail drapers, silk mercers,
-Market place
-Champlin, George, wool dealer, St. Mary’s Church alley
-Chandler, Miss H., dressmaker, St. Stephen’s road
-Chandler, Samuel, cowkeeper, St. Stephen’s road
-Chapman, Abel, butcher, Magdalen street
-Chapman, Mrs. Jane Emery, Pottergate street
-Chapman, John, greengrocer, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Chapman, John, greengrocer, Union place
-Chapman, Luke, market gardener, Dereham road
-Chapman, Matthew, fellmonger, Upper Heigham
-Chapman, Mrs. Mary Ann, shopkeeper, Palace street
-Chapman, Philip, Gardeners’ Arms, Tinkler’s lane
-Chapman, Samuel, butcher, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Chapman, Thomas, tea dealer, 4, Keyzor’s terrace, Unthank’s road
-Chapman, Thomas Robert, butcher, Market place
-Chapham, George Henry, chairmaker, and fancy cane worker, Ber street
-Chaplin, George, woolstapler, Muspole street; h St. Mary’s Church alley
-Chaplin, George, lodging-house keeper, Lower Close
-Chase, Charles, 8, Surrey terrace, Surrey road
-Chatfield, Francis Joseph, locomotive engineer, 1, Foundry terrace,
-Thorpe hamlet
-Chesteney, Richard, fruit, and green grocer, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Chettleburgh, Henry, lodging house, 55, St. Giles’ street
-Chettleburgh, Robert, saddler and harness maker, Tombland
-Chettleburgh, Thomas, Kimberley Arms, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Chettleburgh, William, carter, Mousehold
-Chettock, S., Mr., Somerset place, Holl’s lane
-Chiddick, Francis J., baker and confectioner, Magdalen street
-Child, Henry, grocer and tea dealer, St. Benedict’s street
-Child, Stephen, blacksmith, Chapel Field road
-Childs and Curry, photographers, Golden Ball street
-Chilvers, Albert, railway clerk, Thorpe hamlet
-Chilvers, James, professor of music, Pitt street
-Chipperfield, Charles, flyman, St. Stephen’s gates
-Chittock, Mrs. Ann, Portland place, Holl’s lane
-Christie, Thomas, pawnbroker, Colegate street
-Church, Charles, bill poster, Theatre street
-Church, Mrs. Matilda, lodging house, Theatre street
-Churchill, William, commission agent, Pitt street
-Churchman, Mrs. Elizabeth, matron of the “Stanley Home,” St. Paul’s Back
-lane
-Churchyard, John, greengrocer, Coburg street
-Clabburn, James, plumber, glazier, and painter, Oak street
-Clabburn, Mrs., Pitt street
-Clabburn, Sons, and Crisp, manufacturers of shawls, poplins, paramattas,
-and every description of fancy dresses, Pitt street
-Clabburn and Sparks, wine, spirit, and corn merchants, Magdalen street
-Clare, Caroline, straw bonnet maker, Magdalen street
-Clark, Ann, greengrocer, Ber street
-Clark, Frederick and Son, rope, twine, and sack manufacturers, St.
-Clement’s
-Clark, Maria, grocer, Lower Westwick street
-Clark, Mrs. S., dressmaker, Vauxhall street
-Clark, William, beer retailer, Timberhill street
-Clarke, Mrs. Ann, 7, The Crescent
-Clarke, Charles, brewer, maltster, spirit and London porter merchant,
-Coslany street
-Clarke, David, boot and shoe maker, and shopkeeper, Golden Ball street
-Clarke, Eliza, dressmaker, King street
-Clarke, Eliza M., and C., milliners and dressmakers, Pottergate street
-Clarke, Elizabeth, milliner and dressmaker, 37, Pottergate street
-Clarke, Frederick, clerk, Rose lane
-Clarke, Frederick Edward, tunist, Prince’s street
-Clarke, Mrs. Hannah, 3, West End Cottage, Chapel Field road
-Clarke, Mrs. Hannah, Coldstream terrace, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Clarke, Henry and George S., boot and shoe manufacturers, Gildengate
-street; and Prince’s street, Ipswich
-Clarke and Hunter, cabinet makers and upholsterers, carpet warehouse,
-auctioneers, and undertakers, Dove street and Pottergate street
-Clarke, Isaac, butcher, St. Augustine’s
-Clarke, James, The Grapes Hotel, St. Giles’ gates
-Clarke, John, Infirmary road
-Clarke, John, wholesale shoe factor, Distillery street, Heigham
-Clarke, John, accountant, Lame Dog road
-Clarke, Mr. James, Peacock street
-Clarke, John, commercial traveller, Jubilee place, Heigham road
-Clarke, John, market gardener, Heigham causeway
-Clarke, John, manufacturer, Calvert street
-Clarke, John Friar, solicitor’s clerk, Charles street
-Clarke, Mr. John Welham, (see Clarke and Hunter) Town Close road
-Clarke, Miss Maria, tuscan and straw bonnet manufacturer, St. Gregory’s
-Church alley
-Clarke, Mary Ann, milliner and dressmaker, Upper King street
-Clarke, Matthew, stone and marble mason, Distillery street, Heigham
-Clarke and Reeve, wharfingers, carriers, and merchants, Duke’s palace
-Wharf
-Clarke, Richard, blacking manufacturer, Muspole street
-Clarke, Robert, city missionary, Infirmary road
-Clarke, Robert, commercial traveller, Coach and Horses road, Union place
-Clarke, Robert N., shoemaker, Tuns tavern, White Friars’ street, St.
-Martin’s at Palace
-Clarke, Royal, general shopkeeper, William street
-Clarke, Samuel, butcher, Unthank’s road
-Clarke, Samuel, clerk, Distillery street
-Clarke, Samuel, inspector of nuisances, Castle meadow
-Clarke, Thomas, British Lion; and shoemaker; Coburg street
-Clarke, William, boot closer, St. Benedict’s street
-Claxton, Elizabeth, hay and corn dealer, St. Augustine’s
-Claxton, George, cowkeeper, Baker’s road, St. Augustine’s
-Claxton, Mr. Robert, Prospect place, Horn’s lane
-Claxton, George Amond, beer retailer, Fishgate street
-Claxton, Louisa, milliner and dressmaker, Fishgate street
-Claxton, Walter, baker and shopkeeper, New Catton
-Claxton, William and George, skin merchants and furriers, Horn’s lane,
-King street
-Clayton, George, fishmonger, Fishmarket
-Clayton, Thomas, beer retailer, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Cletheroe, James, green grocer, Oak street
-Cletheroe, James, painter, plumber, and glazier, City road, Heigham
-Clitheroe, William, boot and shoe maker, Botolph street
-Clements, John, attorney’s clerk, West Pottergate street
-Clements, Robert John, Duke of Wellington, Chapel street, Union place
-Clements, William, carter, Nelson street
-Clifford, Mrs. Ann, 3, Earlham Road terrace
-Clifford, Thomas, tailor, Magdalen street
-Climpson, Edward, tailor, Hall road
-Clowes, Charles, merchant’s clerk, St. Julian street
-Clowes, Francis, (see Clowes and Flowerdew); h Bank place
-Clowes and Flowerdew, auctioneers, valuers, and land agents, Bank
-Chambers, Bank place
-Coalman, Mrs. Sarah Ann, Chalk Hill cottage, Thorpe hamlet
-Coaks, Richard, Esq., Golden Dog lane Magdalen street
-Cobb, Leggatt, Rose inn, St. Augustine’s
-Cobb, Rev. John William, Newmarket road
-Cobb, Robert Leggatt, butcher, Magdalen street and St. Augustine’s
-Cobb, Mrs. Susan, laundress, Essex street, Union place
-Cobb, Rev. William, catholic priest, catholic chapel, Willow lane
-Coble, the Misses Christiana and Lydia Louisa, dressmakers, Elm hill
-Cobin, William, lodging-house keeper, Pottergate street
-Cock, William, blacksmith, Ber street gates
-Cockburn, Col. James, Bracondale
-Cocks, Dennis, tailor and hatter, Magdalen street
-Cocks, Mary, tailoress, Elm hill
-Codling, Arthur John, boarding and day school, Magdalen street
-Coe, Edward, store-keeper to the Cooperative Provision Compy., Lower Goat
-lane
-Coe, George, firework artist, Bull close
-Coe, Mark, The Plough, Golden Ball street
-Coe, Robert, shoemaker, Philadelphia
-Cogman, Benjamin, boot and shoe maker, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Cogman, James, green grocer, Oak street
-Cogman, Mrs. Emma, dressmaker, &c., Prince’s street
-Cogman, Frederick, tailor, Prince’s street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 20)
-Cohen, Mrs., letter founder, Scole’s green
-Cohen, Philip, fruiterer, Swan lane; h Distillery street
-Colby, John, boot and shoe manufacturer, King’s buildings, Union place
-Colby, Richard, printer and bookbinder, Golden Dog lane
-Colby, Samuel, beer retailer, St. Giles’ hill
-Coldham, Alfred, wine and dry cooper, Dereham road
-Coldham, Henry, butcher, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Coldham, James, The Barn tavern, St. Benedict’s
-Coldham, John, tailor, Bartholomew street
-Coldwell, Miss Amelia, boarding and day school, St. Clement’s Church
-alley
-Cole, Mrs. Ann, Thorpe Hamlet
-Cole, Edward, accountant, Douro terrace, Heigham grove, St. Giles’ road
-Cole, Elijah, Wheat Sheaf, Castle ditches
-Cole, Mrs. Harriet, milliner and straw bonnet maker, Lower King street
-Cole, Mrs. James, Thorpe hamlet
-Cole, John B., tailor and woollen draper, Post office street
-Coleby, Mrs. Elizabeth, 4, St. Stephen’s square
-Coleman, Abraham, attorney’s clerk, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Coleman, Robert, Trowse Eye
-Coleman, Mrs. Ruth, linen and woollen draper and silk mercer, London
-street; h Bracondale
-Coleman, George Lovick, wholesale and retail Manchester and Scotch
-warehouse, opposite the Guildhall, Market place; h Unthank’s road
-Coleman, Henry Bevely, draper, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s; h Mousehold,
-Thorpe hamlet
-Coleman, Mrs. Mary, Ipswich road
-Coleman, Samuel, Albert Tavern, Ber street
-Coleman, Timothy, beer retailer, White Horse, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Colman, Charles, fish and game dealer, Fishmarket
-Colman, John Daniel, carpenter, Magdalen street
-Colman, Sarah, milliner and dressmaker, Bethel street
-Collett, Robert George, beer retailer, White Friars’ street, St. Martin’s
-at Palace
-Collier, Mrs. Charlotte, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s
-Collins, James, boot and shoe warehouse, 4, Davey place
-Collyer, Col. William, Tombland
-Colman and Glendenning, furnishing and general ironmongers, Rampant Horse
-street
-Colman, James, Peacock, St. Stephen’s plain
-Colman, Jeremiah James, (see Colman and Glendenning); h Carrow house,
-Carrow Abbey
-Colman, J. and J., mustard, starch, and blue manufacturers, Stoke Mills,
-and Carrow Works, Norwich, and 26, Cannon street, London
-Colman, Mrs. James, Town close
-Colman, Mrs. Jeremiah, Newmarket road
-Colman, Mr. Robert, 9, Newmarket terrace, Newmarket road
-Colman, Samuel, merchant’s clerk, Lakenham terrace, City road
-Colman, William, farmer, St. Giles’ road
-Colsey, Mr. Francis, (see Darken and Colsey); h 25, Victoria street
-Coman, Henry, and Co., wholesale and retail grocers, &c., St. Benedict’s
-street
-Comer, Ann, clothier, St. Benedict’s street
-Comer, James, glover, Magdalen street
-Comer, Robert, shopkeeper, Thorpe hamlet
-Compere, Thomas Bond, card maker, Norwich Card Works, St. Martin’s at
-Palace
-Cook, Ann, lodging-house keeper, St. Faith’s lane
-Cook, Ann, corn and flour dealer, and livery and bait stables, Pitt
-street
-Cook, Benjamin, warehouseman, Muspole street
-Cook, Miss Charlotte, 6, Foundry terrace, Thorpe hamlet
-Cook, Charlotte, dressmaker, 59, St. Giles’ street
-Cook, Edward, corn merchant, Infirmary road
-Cook, Edward Thomas, boot and shoe maker, 21, White Lion street
-Cook, Miss Harriet, Newmarket road
-Cook, James, blacksmith, Pitt street; h Calvert street
-Cook, James, clerk, 21, Victoria street
-Cook, John, blacksmith, Dial yard, Coslany street
-Cook, John, beer retailer, Ber street
-Cook, John, cooper, Botolph street
-Cook, Joseph, gilder, St. Faith’s lane
-Cook, Robert, boot and shoe manufacturer, Pottergate street
-Cook, Samuel, brush, patten, and clog manufactory, 6, Davey place
-Cooke, Rev. Bell, Unthank’s road
-Cooke, Edward, leather seller, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Cooke, Edward Robert, clerk, St. John’s terrace, Ber street gates
-Cooke, Mrs. Eliza, register office for servants, St. Stephen’s gates
-Cooke, Rev. George, Upper King street
-Cooke, Hannah, dyer, Coslany street, St. Miles’
-Cooke, Mrs. Harriet, dyer, St. Augustine’s street
-Cooke, Henry, 7, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Cooke, Henry, boot and shoe maker, Magdalen road
-Cooke, Henry John, merchant’s clerk, John street, Heigham
-Cooke, James, plumber, glazier, and painter, Blazeby’s buildings, Scole’s
-green
-Cooke, Miss Mary H. (day school) Distillery street, Heigham
-Cooke, Philip, boot and shoe maker, Fishgate street
-Cooke, William, Church street, St. Miles
-Cooke, William, chemist and druggist, St. Giles’ street
-Cooke, Rev. William, M.A., Thorpe hamlet
-Cooper Carlos, barrister, Orford hill
-Cooper, Mr. Daniel, Keyzor’s terrace, Unthank’s road
-Cooper, Emanuel, surgeon, Tombland
-Cooper, Mrs. Honor, dressmaker, Stepping lane
-Cooper, James Daniel, shopkeeper, Rampant Horse street
-Cooper, Mr. James George, Unthank’s road
-Cooper, Jane, milliner, Magdalen street
-Cooper, Jeremiah, Keel and Wherry, Lower King street
-Cooper, Mr. John, 4, Richmond place, Lakenham
-Cooper, John Norton Valentine, solicitor, 3, The Crescent
-Cooper, Miss L., Thorpe hamlet
-Cooper, Mrs. Mary, St. Mary’s alley
-Cooper, Robert, Orchard tavern, St. Faith’s lane
-Cooper, Rev. Robert Henry, 5, Grove Place terrace, Grove road, Lakenham
-Cooper, Robert, solicitor, Private Road villas, Unthank’s road
-Cooper and Son, silversmiths and jewellers, 20, London street
-Cooper, Samuel, Cow inn, Cow hill, St. Giles’
-Cooper, Mrs. Sarah, lodging-house keeper, Lower Close
-Cooper, Thomas, Gardeners’ Arms, Timberhill street
-Cooper, Thomas, grocer, St. Augustine’s
-Cooper, William, The Plough (house and furniture painter) St. Benedict’s
-street
-Cooper, William, furniture broker, Baker’s road, St. Augustine’s
-Cooper, William N., railway clerk, Albert place, Paragon street
-Copeman, Rev. Charles Arthur, M.A., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Copeman and Bell, milliners, and straw bonnet warehouse, St. Gregory’s
-Church alley
-Copeman, Edward, Esq., M.D., St. Giles’ plain
-Copeman, Edward, shoemaker and shopkeeper, Union street, Crook’s place
-Copeman, Edward Robert, merchant’s clerk, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Copeman, George, chimney sweeper, St. Stephen’s plain
-Copeman, Mr. John, Surrey grove, Surrey road
-Copeman and Sons, grocers and tea dealers, 12, The Walk
-Copeman, William, agent to the Legal and Commercial Life, and Manchester
-Fire offices, 12, The Walk
-Copman, William, bootmaker, Lower King street
-Copestake, Moore, Crampton, and Co., lace and muslin manufacturers;
-manager, William Gibson, the Chantry
-Copland, William S., solicitor’s clerk, Prince’s street
-Copley, George, greengrocer and shoemaker, Pottergate street
-Coppenwheat, Charles, boot and shoe manufacturer, Back Mill street,
-Crook’s place
-Coppin, Edward, shoe manufacturer, 8, York place, Chapel Field road
-Corbitt, Rev. John, baptist minister, St. Catherine’s plain
-Corbyn, Hartwell, tailor, Duke street
-Cordean, William, cabinet and chair maker, 7, Crescent place, Chapel
-Field road
-Cordran, William, cabinet maker, Chapel Field row
-Cork, Andrew Thompson, shoemaker, Waddington street, Heigham fields
-Cork, Henry, shopkeeper, Magpie road
-Cork, John, gardener and florist, Brunswick road, Newmarket road
-Cork, Mary Ann, butcher, St. Augustine’s gates
-Cork, William, butcher, Botolph street
-Corrick, William, cabinet manufacturer, and paper hanger, 62, St. Giles’
-street
-Corsbie, Mr. Dennis Stoke, accountant, Mount Pleasant
-Corsbie, Joseph, accountant, Surrey terrace
-Corsbie, Samuel Webster, accountant, Distillery street, Heigham
-Cory, Christmas, tailor, Calvert street
-Cosgrove, Thomas Rolfe, Old Steam Packet tavern, Rose lane
-Cossey, John, estate agent, Gildengate street
-Cossey, Robert, beer retailer, Oak street
-Cott, Thomas, pawnbroker, Pottergate street
-Cott, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Julian street, Julian place
-Cottingham, Joseph John, dispensing chemist, and wholesale druggist, 1,
-St. Giles’ street
-Cottom and Brewster, butchers, Market place
-Cottom, Thomas, butcher, Upper Heigham
-Cousens, James, trunk maker, Fishgate street
-Cousens, John, shoemaker, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Cousins, James, fruiterer, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Cousins, Thomas, shoe manufacturer, 61, Bethel street
-Cousins, William, plumber, painter, and glazier, Lady’s lane
-Covell, John, ginger beer manufacturer, Elm hill
-Cowan, Alexander, travelling draper, Lady’s lane
-Cowan, Mrs. Charlotte, Tuns tavern, All Saints’ green
-Cox, Alfred, blacksmith, St. Stephen’s; h Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Cox, Mrs. Ann, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Cox, Edmund, Sons of Commerce, Thorn lane
-Cox, John, boot and shoe maker, Magdalen street
-Cox, Mary, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Cox, Sarah, midwife, Oak street
-Cox, Samuel, shoemaker, Wellington street
-Cox, William Henry, teacher of music, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Cozens, James, and Son, maltsters, corn and coal merchants, Upper
-Westwick street
-Cozens, Mary Ann, Pitt street
-Cozens, Richard, Esq., Eva Cottages, Catton
-Cracknel 1 Richard, Mount Pleasant
-Crane, Miss Sophia, Vauxhall street
-Crane, Commander Pointer, R.N., 6, Dereham road terrace
-Crask, Henry, hair dresser, Coburgh street
-Craske, James, cabinet maker and upholsterer, Lower Goat lane
-Craske, Josiah John, commercial traveller, 2, Heigham terrace, Dereham
-road
-Craske, William, merchant’s clerk, Keyzor’s place, Holl’s lane
-Crawfoot William, cabinet maker, Ber street
-Crawford William, boot maker, Bank plain
-Creake, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Coburgh street
-Creasby, Edmund, commission agent, and wholesale hosiery, elastic, web,
-and belt manufacturer, Colegate street
-Cremer, Robert, resident medical officer at the Guardians’ dispensary,
-Elm hill
-Cresswell, Harrison John, banker’s clerk, Bracondale
-Crickmay, Edward, surgeon, Magdalen street
-Crickmore, Henry, chop house and commercial boarding house, Exchange
-street
-Crickmore, William, furniture broker, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Crisp, Miss Elizabeth, Newmarket street
-Crisp, George, shoe manufacturer, Vauxhall street, Julian place
-Crisp, Lieut. James, R.N., Earlham cottage, West parade, Earlham road
-Crisp, John, boot lace manufacturer, Heigham causeway
-Crisp, John, corn merchant, cinder ovens yard, King street; h Beccles
-Crisp, John W., tailor and draper, Castle meadow
-Crisp, Thomas Dawson, manufacturer, Pitt street
-Crisp, William, chimney sweeper, Lower Westwick street
-Critchfield, Samuel, professor of music, Upper King street
-Croker, Mr. John, 13, Newmarket road
-Crook, John, surgeon, Tombland
-Crook, Madame Oury, and Miss Clarissa, professors of dancing and singing,
-Tombland
-Cross, Daniel, solicitor’s clerk, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Cross, Daniel, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Cross, Mrs. Elizabeth, 3, Grove place, St. Giles’ road
-Cross, John, solicitor’s clerk, 5, Trafalgar place, Dereham road
-Cross, William, butcher, Rose lane
-Crosse, Mrs. Dorothy, Orford Hill
-Crosse, Thomas William, surgeon and registrar of births and deaths for
-the Mancroft district, 22, St. Giles’ street
-Crosskill Robert, greengrocer, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Crosskill, Robert, jun., cork manufacturer, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Crosskill William, greengrocer, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Crotch, John, general shopkeeper, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Crotch, Matthew, hair dresser, St. James’ street
-Crotch, William, fowl dealer, Oak street
-Crotch, William, beer retailer, Oak street
-Crow, Edward, beer retailer and coal merchant, Lower Westwick street
-Crowe, Ann, dressmaker, Ten Bell lane
-Crowe, Charles, dining rooms, Elm hill
-Crowe, Miss Elizabeth, boarding school, Calvert street
-Crowe, Elizabeth, general shopkeeper, Elm hill
-Crowe, Edward, coal merchant, Balloon, Lower Westwick street
-Crowe, John, and Son, cabinet makers and upholsterers, carvers, gilders,
-and paper hangers, St. Stephen’s street
-Crowe, Robert, cabinet maker, St. Stephen’s street, h Newmarket road
-Crowfoot, George, baker, Prince’s street
-Crowfoot, William, furniture broker, Ber street
-Crowther, Rev. Henry Martin, M.A., sub-master of Grammar School, St.
-Andrew’s Broad street
-Croxford, Edward, agent for the London Printing and Publishing Compy.,
-33, Magdalen street
-Croxford, Henry, bookseller, stationer, and fancy repository, hon. sec.
-to the Art Union of London, and agent for the Westminster and General
-Life, and Westminster Fire Assurance Compys., Tombland
-Cubitt, George, and Son, wholesale and retail chemists and druggists,
-agents to the Clerical, Medical, and General Life Assurance Society, and
-the Norwich Equitable Fire Association, 17, The Walk
-Cubitt, James, shopkeeper and beer retailer, Lower King street
-Cubitt, John, pork butcher, The Royal Exchange, Julian street, Julian
-place
-Cubitt, Samuel Durrant, Wholesale ironmonger, Mitchell’s court, Market
-place; h 2, Victoria street
-Cubitt, Stannard, manufacturer, St. George’s plain
-Cubitt, Thomas, glove maker, Coslany street
-Cubitt, Thomas, The Jolly Brewers, Magdalen street
-Cubitt, Thomas, furniture broker, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Cubitt, William Jary, wine and spirit merchant, Magdalen street
-Cudbard, Charles, machine maker, Theatre street
-Cudden, Mrs. Ann, The Rifleman, All Saints’ green
-Cullen, Mr. Thomas Barsham, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Culley, John Baldwin, solicitor, Upper King street
-Culley and Hart, general merchants, Duke’s palace
-Culley, Henry Utting, miller; manager, John Davy, Lower Westwick street
-Culley, Richard, Esq., Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Cullingford, Frederick, rag merchant, St. Benedict’s street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 26)
-Cullingford, Thomas, rag merchant, Botolph st. (_see Advertisement_, _p._
-26)
-Cullingford, William, rag merchant, Ber street (_see Advertisement_, _p._
-26)
-Cullington, Mary Ann, boot and shoe manufacturer, Queen street
-Cullington, William, tailor, Lady’s lane
-Cullyer, Christmas and George, white and lock smiths and bell hangers,
-Cow hill
-Cullyer, George, whitesmith, St. Benedict’s plain, Pottergate street
-Cullyer, William Frederick, glass stainer, &c., Ten Bell lane
-Culyer, Mrs. Ann, lodging-house keeper, Grapes’ hill
-Culyer, Charles Arthur, cooper, Rampant Horse street
-Culyer, Erasmus Stannard, slate works, Lower King street
-Culyer, Thomas, ecclesiastical and cabinet carver, 1, Castle meadow
-Cundall, Benjamin, and Son, linen drapers, silk mercers, and shawl
-manufacturers, The Walk
-Cundall and Miller, (late Priest) booksellers, stationers, printers, book
-binders, and engravers, Rampant Horse street
-Cundall, Miller, and Leavins, printers and publishers, Rampant Horse
-street
-Cundall, Richard, (see Cundall, Benjamin, and Son) The Walk
-Cunningham, Edward, artist, &c., Ber street
-Cunningham, Emily, straw bonnet maker, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Cunningham, Edwin, shoe manufacturer, Ebenezer street
-Cunningham, Mrs. Mary Ann, dressmaker, 4, Duke street
-Cunningham, Thomas, Eight Ringers, Coslany street
-Cunnington and Co., general wood turners, Cow hill, St. Giles’
-Cupper, James, coal merchant, 5, St. Stephen’s Back street
-Curle, Robert, shoemaker, King street
-Curme, Elizabeth, milliner and dressmaker, Magdalen street
-Curme, George, butcher, Magdalen street
-Curson, William, The Old Star, Quay side
-Curson, William, Steam Packet, St. Catherine’s plain
-Curtis and Balls, builders and contractors, West Pottergate street
-Curtis, David, carrier and shopkeeper, Philadelphia
-Curtis, Francis, builder, West Pottergate street
-Curtis, George, bricklayer and plasterer, Scoles’ green
-Curtis, Mr. George William, Thorpe hamlet
-Curtis, Mr. John T., Islington house, New Catton
-Curtis, John, last and boot tree maker, Fishgate street
-Curtis, Joseph, carpenter, Botolph street
-Curtis, Lambert G., teacher of music and singing, 57, St. Giles’
-Curtis, Mrs. Mary, Union place
-Curtis, Rebecca, general shopkeeper, Upper Regent street, Union place
-Curtis, Sarah, lodging-house keeper, White Friars’ street
-Curtis, William, currier and leather seller, Upper Westwick street, St.
-Lawrence
-Curtis, William, police sergeant, Somerleyton street
-Cushing, Charles, wood turner, St. Lawrence lane
-Cushing, John, basket and sieve maker, Magdalen street
-Cushing, William, beer retailer, Magdalen street
-Cushing, William, Wellington place, Grove road
-Cushion, William, timber dealer, Lothian street
-Cushion, Jonathan, carpenter, Magdalen street
-Cutting, William, Hampshire Hog, St. Swithin’s Church alley
-Dabson, Thomas, ornamental painter, Botolph street
-Dack, Jonathan, fishmonger, Fishgate street
-Dade, Charlotte, milliner, 3, Swan lane
-Dade, Miss, Somerset place, Holl’s lane
-Dady, Daniel, fruiterer and green grocer, St. Stephen’s street
-Dady, Mrs., Walnut Tree Shades, wine and spirit merchant, Old Post Office
-court
-Dady, Henry, coal carter, St. Stephen’s back street
-Dadson, William, clerk, Thorpe hamlet
-Daines, Elizabeth, Coach and Horses, Bethel street
-Daines, James, boot and shoe maker, Holl’s lane
-Daines, Mrs. Mary, glover, Church street, St. Julian’s
-Daines, Richard, sugar boiler, &c., St. Gregory’s church alley
-Daines, Robert, carpenter, Hall road, Lakenham
-Dakin and Co., wholesale and family tea dealers and coffee roasters, 7,
-Davey place
-Dallinger and Son, engravers, printers, and lithographers, 12, Davey
-place
-Dallinger, Joseph, sen., (see Dallinger and Son) engraver, 12, Davey
-place
-Dallinger, Joseph A., (see Dallinger and Son) engraver, and agent for the
-Unity Fire and English Widows’ Fund and General Life Offices, 12, Davey
-place, Norwich
-Dalrymple, Arthur, solicitor, St. Giles’ street
-Dalrymple and Cadge, surgeons, Surrey street
-Dalrymple, Donald, M.D., Surrey street
-Dalton, Samuel, solicitor, St. Giles’ terrace
-Dambrock, John, musical instrument maker, Jolly Butchers, Ber street
-Daniels, Benjamin, butcher, Colegate street, St. Clement’s
-Daniels, Miss Hannah, milliner and dressmaker, Magdalen street
-Daniels, Joseph, Buff Coat inn, Buff Coat lane
-Daniels, Richard, The Grapes inn, Red Lion street
-Daniels, Robert, baker, Rosemary lane
-Daniels, Robert, general smith, Trowse Newton
-Daniels, Thomas, Prince Albert, Dove street
-Daplin, Mark, gig builder and carpenter, Lothian street, Heigham
-Daplyn, Mrs. Mary, baker, St. Augustine’s
-Darken and Colsey, pianoforte and music warehouse, and musical
-circulating library, 6, London street
-Darken, James, news agent, Little London street
-Darkins, Canuel, builder, Magdalen street
-Darsley, William, hackney master, George inn, St. Stephen’s street
-Dann, Thomas Richard, merchant’s clerk, Hall’s road
-Dann, Isaac, The Whitefriars’ tavern, Whitefriars’ street, St. Martin at
-Palace
-Dashwood, George, Heigham road
-Dashwood, Lancelot, surgeon, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Daveney, Colonel Burton, Heigham grove, St. Giles’ road
-Daveney, Charles Burton, solicitor, agent for the Royal Fire and Life
-Office, Bethel street
-Davey, Miss, Magdalen street
-Davey, Mrs. Eliza, Union place
-Davey, Thomas, and Son, silk merchants, Pitt street
-Davidson, William, green grocer, Cowgate street
-Davies and Son, wholesale boot and shoe manufacturers, Calvert street
-Davis, Rev. David, B.A., (Unitarian) Tamworth terrace, Unthank’s road
-Davis, Edward, boot and shoe maker, Youell’s buildings, New Lakenham
-Davis, James, fishmonger, Fishgate street
-Davis, John, and Co., surgeons, Pottergate street
-Davis, Mrs. Harriet, Trafalgar place, Hall road
-Davis, Mark, working jeweller, Ber street
-Davis, Thomas, shopkeeper, Hall road
-Davison, Matthew, Garden street, St. John’s Sepulchre
-Davison, Matthew, baker, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Davy, Miss Jane, milliner, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Davy, John, printer, St. Clement’s church alley
-Davy, William Purdy, Esq., Thurso place, Dereham road
-Dawbarn, James, shipowner, coal and salt merchant, Castle meadow
-Dawdy, Mr. Edward, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Dawes, Lawrence, carver and gilder, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Dawes, Lawrence, green grocer, William street
-Daws, Charles Willimot, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Daws, Robert, joiner and builder, Hampden place, Dereham road
-Dawson, Edward, tailor, Scoles’ green
-Dawson, George, brickmaker and farmer, Brazen Doors’ road
-Dawson, George, Black Eagle, grocer and tea dealer, Wellington terrace,
-Union place
-Dawson, George, 4, Kent place, Vauxhall street
-Dawson, Jabez, cabinet and chair maker, 17, Distillery street
-Dawson, William, city missionary, 16, Distillery street
-Dawson, John, tailor, Ber street
-Dawson, John, cattle dealer, Magdalen street
-Dawson, Jonathan, butcher, Magdalen street
-Dawson, Philip, jun., butcher, Magdalen street
-Dawson, Robert, shoemaker, Lame Dog road
-Dawson, Samuel, grocer, Oak street
-Dawson, Sarah, Vauxhall street, Julian place
-Dawson, William, baker, St. Martin’s lane
-Dawson, William, shopkeeper, Magdalen street
-Dawson, William, Punch house, Upper Market
-Day and Son, solicitors, Upper Surrey st.
-Day, Miss Harriet, Pottergate street
-Day, Rev. George, Ber street gates
-Day, Thomas Starling, silk merchant, Sussex street
-Day, William Hankes, surgeon, All Saints’ green
-Day, Mr. William Starling, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Day, William, clerk to magistrates; h Trowse
-Daynes, George, blacksmith, Oak street
-Daynes, John, shoemaker, Lord Nelson, Trafalgar street
-Daynes, John, news agent, Back of the Inns
-Daynes, John, watch and clock maker, Pitt street
-Daynes, Mrs. Maria, Crown and Angel commercial inn, St. Stephen’s street
-Daynes, Robert, beer retailer, St. Margaret’s street
-Daynes, Samuel, printer, St. Stephen’s street; h Mile End lane
-Daynes, William, clerk at telegraph office, St. Paul’s terrace, Cowgate
-street
-Deacon, Rev. James, A.M., Pottergate street
-Dean, Alfred, eating and coffee house, Upper market
-Dean, James, wholesale shoe manufacturer, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s; h
-17, Victoria street
-Deane, Thomas Lanley, agent for the British Industry Life Assurance
-Compy., Duke street
-Dearle, George, surgical and mechanical dentist, Exchange street
-Dearly, William, boot and shoe maker, Thorpe hamlet
-Death, John, cooper, Bishopgate street
-Debbage, James, The Fountain, St. Benedict’s gates
-Debbage, Miles, wood turner, Charing Cross
-De Carle, Henry, stone and marble mason, Chapel Field road
-De Carle, William, commercial traveller, 15, Victoria street, St.
-Stephen’s road
-Decaux, David, beer retailer, St. Augustine’s street
-Decaux, Shakspeare, shoemaker, St. Augustine’s
-Decoe, William, Bell Hotel Tap, Castle meadow
-Deeks, Mrs. Christiana, Gildengate street
-Deeks, John, watchmaker, George the Fourth, Ber street
-Deighan, Peter, travelling draper, Duke street
-Deighan, Mrs. Sophia, dressmaker, Duke street
-Delf, John, whitesmith, Golden Ball street
-Delf, Susan, butcher, Rupert street, Union place
-Delf, William Stannard, draper, Tombland house
-Delph, Thomas, Flower in Hand, Pitt street
-Delph, William, plumber, painter, and glazier, St. Augustine’s
-Delph, William, Prince of Wales, St. Augustine’s
-Denham, John, agent for Sir R. J. H. Harvey, bart., Mousehold
-Dennington, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Silver street
-Dennis, Charles, whitesmith and bell-hanger, Bull lane, St. Stephen’s
-gates
-Dent, Dowson, butcher, Ber street
-Dent, Thomas, butcher, Ber street
-Denmark, John, tailor, New Catton
-Denmark, Rebecca, milliner and dressmaker, New Catton
-Denmark, William, shoemaker, Seven Stars, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Denny, John, green grocer, Union street, Crook’s place
-Denny, Thomas, butcher, Trowse
-De Vear, Mrs. Emma D., Cow hill
-Devereaux, Edmund, plumber, painter, and glazier, Gildengate street
-Devereaux, Cottingham, accountant, 3, Adelaide buildings, Dereham road
-Dew, Edmund Britiffe, superintendent of Rosary cemetery, Thorpe hamlet
-Dew, Edmund Britiffe, hairdresser, Upper market
-Dewing, Edward, Jolly Maltsters, King street
-Dewing, Mrs. William, Grove house, St. Giles’ road
-Dewing, William, messenger at Gurney’s bank, Prince’s street
-Dexter, Mr. Robert, Bracondale
-Diamond, Mrs. Mary, Mount Pleasant, Newmarket road
-Dickerson, Richard, harness maker, Castle hill
-Dickerson, William Benjamin, Thorn Tavern, Ber street
-Dickinson, Mrs. Sarah Clarke, milliner and straw bonnet maker, St.
-Stephen’s road
-Didwell, William, house agent, Catton road
-Diggens, George, linen and woollen draper, silk mercer, &c., Bedford
-street, St. Andrew’s
-Ding, James, baker, 45, Pottergate street
-Diver, Mr. Owen Albert, Chapel Field road
-Diver, Mrs. Mary Ann, beer retailer, Gildengate street
-Dix Miss C., Chapel field
-Dix, Mrs. Mary, Calvert street
-Dixon, Benjamin, pharmaceutical chemist, Rose corner, King street
-Dixon, Edward Lister, linen draper, Magdalen street
-Dixon, Fuller, gig-maker, John street, Rose lane
-Dixon, Joseph, tonnage collector, Carrow
-Dixon, Richard, butcher, Upper Westwick street
-Dixon, Thomas, watch and clock maker, optician, gold and silver smith,
-jeweller, &c., 6, Bridewell alley
-Dobson, James, millwright, Calvert street
-Dobson, Robert, shoemaker, Rose valley terrace, Unthank’s road
-Dobson, Sarah, straw bonnet maker, St. Benedict’s street
-Dodd, E. J., governor of the Bethel, Bethel street
-Dodd, Miss Harriet, teacher of music, 8, Crescent place, Chapel Field
-road
-Dodman, Mr. John, auctioneer’s clerk, 19, Distillery street
-Dodson, William Robert, gold and silversmith, 27, London street
-Dodsworth, Thomas, overseer at Chronicle office, Unthank’s road
-Don, John, draper, Golding street, Heigham
-Donne, Miss Anna Maria, Lower close
-Doughty, John, carpenter, Mill street, Union place
-Doughty, Richard, King’s Head, Davey place
-Douglass, John, gardener and cowkeeper, Silver road
-Dove, Anne, dressmaker, Bexfield’s buildings, Rupert street
-Dove, Harry, M.D., Tombland
-Dover, Charles, Angel, New Catton
-Dowde, Mrs. Mary Eve, midwife, St. Margaret’s church alley
-Downes, Catherine, milliner, Cowgate street
-Downes, Henry, tailor, Cowgate street
-Downes, Maria, milliner, &c., Duke street
-Downes, Thomas, artist, Bethel street
-Downing, Joseph, china, glass, and earthenware warehouse, 22, the Walk
-Downman, John Thomas, Barrack master, Mount Pleasant
-Dowson, Arthur H., resident surgeon of Norwich Dispensary, St. John’s
-Maddermarket
-Dowson, Benjamin Utting and Sons, coal and corn merchants, Duke’s palace
-Dowson, Edward, writer, grainer, and plumber, Duke street
-Dowson, John, tailor and clothier, Ber street
-Dowson, John Withers, solicitor; office, Castle meadow; agent to the Sun
-Fire and Life office; h Priory lane, King street
-Drake, Barzillar, Duke of York, Church path, Lakenham
-Drake, Charles, surgeon and registrar of births and deaths for the
-Conisford district, All Saints’ green
-Drake Francis, shoemaker, Coslany street
-Drake, John, green grocer, Ber street
-Drake, Mrs. Caroline, pork butcher, New Catton
-Drake, Mrs. Mary, milliner, &c., All Saints’ green
-Drake, Mrs. Mary, Chatham place, Chapel Field road
-Drake, Mary, shopkeeper, Church path, Lakenham
-Drake, Robert, shoemaker, King street
-Drake, Samuel, shopkeeper, &c., Lower Westwick street
-Drake, Thomas, tailor, Rose lane
-Drakes, Benjamin, butcher, New Catton
-Draper, Henry, manager of the National and International Telegraph
-office, The Walk
-Drege, William, shopkeeper, World’s End, World’s End lane
-Dreury, John Henry, barrister, Mousehold
-Drew, Mrs. Mary Ann, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Drew, William, whitesmith, Twiddy’s court, Ber street
-Drew, William and John, steelyard makers, Ber street
-Drewell, George Webster, Palace plain
-Drewell, Mrs. Mary Ann, All Saints’ green
-Driver, Mr. William Charles, banker’s clerk, 6, Heigham terrace, Dereham
-road
-Driver, William, accountant, Valentine street
-Ducker, James Frostick, grocer, Lower Westwick street
-Duffield, Miss Abigail, fancy repository, Gildengate street
-Duffield, Henry, tailor and woollen draper, 12, Exchange street; h Museum
-court, Broad street, St. Andrew’s
-Duffield, John, shoemaker and leather cutter, Timberhill street
-Duge, Isaac, Waddington street, Heigham
-Duge, John, 1, Trafalgar place, Dereham road
-Dugdale, Robert, beer retailer, Cowgate street
-Dunham, John, grocer, Trory street, Lakenham
-Dunmore, Robert, corn and seed merchant, St. Benedict’s street
-Dunmore, Thomas, corn merchant, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Dunn, James, boot and shoe maker, Pitt street
-Dunn, James, coal merchant, Quay side
-Dunn, James, Queen’s Head, Quay side
-Dunn, John, baker, West Pottergate street
-Dunn, Richard, painter, plumber, and glazier, Surrey grove
-Dunn, Samuel, hairdresser, Magdalen street
-Dunn, William, pill-box manufacturer, Silver road
-Dunn, William Frederick, collector of water rates, &c., 10, Oxford
-street, Unthank’s road
-Dunnett, Mrs. Mary, boarding and day school, Surrey street
-Dunsford, James, surgeon dentist (see Suggate and Dunsford); h Rose
-Valley terrace, Unthank’s road
-Dunthorne, John, Magpie, Magpie road
-Dunthorn, William, Sawyer’s Arms, St. Paul’s plain
-Durdin, Rev. Alexander W., B.A., rector of St. George’s, Bedford street,
-Unthank’s road
-Durrant and Brock, wholesale soap boilers and tallow chandlers, St.
-Miles’ soap works, Dial yard, St. Miles’
-Durrant, Elizabeth, grocer, &c., Mariner’s lane, King street
-Durrant, George, solicitor, and director of Norwich Union Fire and Life
-office, Surrey street
-Durrant, Henry, grocer and tea dealer, Ber street (_see Advertisement_,
-_p._ 10)
-Durrant, Mrs. Michael, shopkeeper, Upper King street
-Durrant, Robert, grocer and tallow chandler, Church street, St. Miles’
-Durrant, Zachariah, furniture broker and beer retailer, Coslany street
-Duxberry, Thomas, Lower close
-Dyball, Mrs. Emily, Bracondale
-Dye, Christopher, plumber, Barrack street
-Dye, George, tailor, &c., Prince’s street
-Dye, George Arthur, solicitor, Broad street, St. Andrew’s
-Dye, Miss Harriet, school, 5, Grapes’ hill
-Dye, Henry, shopkeeper and beer retailer, Upper King street
-Dye, Lydia, grocer, St. Augustine’s Church alley
-Dye, Mary, tea dealer, &c., Little London street
-Dye, William, farm bailiff, Mousehold heath
-Dye, William, tanner and fellmonger, St. Martin’s gates
-Dyer, John Jephunneh, tobacconist and cane-worker, Ber street
-Dyer, Thomas, shopkeeper, Union street, Crook’s place
-Eade, Peter, M.D., Queen street
-Eagleton, Elizabeth, green grocer, Pump street
-Eagleton, George, watch and clock maker, 9, City road, Lakenham
-Earle, James, national schoolmaster, Hall road, Lakenham
-Earl, John, beer retailer, and shopkeeper, Magdalen street
-Eastaugh, Mrs. Mary, York tavern, Castle meadow
-Easto, George, Church Style, Upper Market
-Eastoe, Mr. Robert, New road, Town close
-Easton, Haylett, beer retailer, Magdalen street
-Easton, Isaac, Unicorn, St. Mary’s plain
-Easton, Isaac, fishmonger, St. James’ street
-Eaton, Mr. Thomas D., Chapel field
-Edgar, Mrs. Elizabeth, 2, Grove place, St. Giles’ road
-Edgar, Thomas, brush manufacturer, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Edwards, Miss Ann, furrier, 22, Castle meadow
-Edwards, Benjamin, city missionary, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Edwards, Charles, Earl of Leicester, Brazen Doors road
-Edwards, Edward Manning, haircutter and perfumer, 40, London street
-Edwards, James, cooper, Infirmary road; h Long row, Catton
-Edwards, James, shopkeeper, St. Paul’s plain
-Edwards, Miss Mary Ann, St. Stephen’s road
-Edwards, William P., linen and woollen draper, and silk mercer, St.
-Stephen’s street
-Egan, Richard, hat and clothes’ cleaner, Ber street
-Egmore, Randle, sup. of the Norwich City Mission, 6, Grove road
-Eldridge, James Upton, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Ellingham, Henry, plumber, glazier, and painter, Elm hill
-Elliott, Mr. John, 2, The Crescent
-Elliott, Miss Mary, milliner, Bank street
-Ellis, Benjamin, the Dove tavern, Lower Westwick street
-Ellis, John, joiner and builder, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Ellis, John, land agent and surveyor, Bank plain
-Ellis, Mary, green grocer, St. Mary’s
-Ellis, Mrs. Mary, All Saints’ green
-Ellis, Mrs. Priscilla, lodging-house keeper, 15, and 16, Chapel Field
-Ellis, Rev. Robert Stanton, Wesleyan minister, Calvert street
-Ellis, Samuel, beer retailer, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Ellis, Thomas, green grocer, Cubitt’s court, Bethel street
-Ellis, Thomas Richard, The Wilderness, Bracondale
-Ellis, William, green grocer, Oak street
-Ellis, William, green grocer, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Ellison, Mrs. Francis, barometer and thermometer maker, and fancy
-repository, Dove street
-Ellison, Robert, wood turner, Upper Goat lane
-Ellison, William, beer retailer, King street gates
-Elmer, Mrs. Ann, Chapel Field grove
-Elmer, Edmund, merchant’s clerk, Hall road, Lakenham
-Elmer, John, market gardener, Lower close
-Elmer, John, accountant, St. Catherine’s plain
-Elvin, Mary, midwife, Ber street
-Elwes, Jonathan, boot and shoe maker, St. Stephen’s road
-Ellwood, Francis, Victoria terrace, Synagogue street
-Ellwood, Henry, butcher, Timberhill street
-Ely, Hannah, grocer, Pitt street
-Emery, George, farmer, Coach and Horses’ road, Union place; farm, Eaton
-Emms, Charles, Wine Coopers’ Arms, West Pottergate street
-Emms, William, Star and Crown, Timberhill street
-Empson, Ezra, baker, St. James’ street
-Emslie, James and Son, engravers, chromo-lithographers, lithographers,
-and copperplate printers, Back of the Inns
-Engall, Joseph, game dealer, St. Augustine’s street
-Engall, Thomas, Fleckered Bull, Ber st.
-England, William, coal merchant, St. Ann’s terrace, Synagogue street
-English and Son, drapers and silk mercers, London street
-English, John, (see English and Son); h 1, London terrace, St. Stephen’s
-road
-English, Joseph, woollen draper and tailor, 45, London street
-English, Joseph, chemist and druggist, St. Giles’ street
-English, Mr. Richard, Holl’s lane
-English, Mrs. Sarah, Albion House, Market place
-English, William, (see English and Son) h 1, Lakenham terrace, city road
-Espenett, William Henry, architect and surveyor, house and estate agent,
-Distillery street
-Etheridge, Mrs. Elizabeth, Thorpe hamlet
-Etheridge, George and William Ellis, watch and clock makers, goldsmiths,
-silversmiths, and jewellers, 10, The Walk
-Etheridge, Thomas William, Carrow road, Thorpe hamlet
-Evans, Bernard, solicitor’s clerk, Lower close
-Evans, Charles, counsellor, King street
-Evans, Rev. Edward, B.A. (vicar of St. Stephen’s) Surrey street
-Evans, George, shopkeeper, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Evans, Misses Lucy and Emma, dressmakers, Lower close
-Evans, Mrs. Lacy, Upper Surrey street
-Everard, John, commercial traveller, 10, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Everett, James, drill-master, Coldstream terrace, Bedford street,
-Unthank’s road
-Everett, John, wool warehouse, Thorpe hamlet
-Everett, Joseph, wool stapler, Bishopgate street
-Everett, Mr. Robert, Mount Pleasant, Newmarket road
-Everett, Thomas, merchant, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Everett, William Wilson, tailor and hatter, Red Lion street
-Everitt, Miss Ann, Prince’s street
-Ewing, John William, nurseryman, seedsman, and florist, and lime burner,
-Exchange street, and Eaton
-Ewing, Mr. William Charles, Post Office street
-Fabb, Sarah, Nelson street, Heigham fields
-Fair, Thomas, general shopkeeper, Bishopgate street
-Fairchild, Mary Ann, linen draper, Spitalfields, Thorpe hamlet
-Fairhead, Maria, upholsteress, West Pottergate street
-Fairhead, Louisa, dealer in British wines, milliner and dress maker,
-Pottergate street
-Fairman, Thomas, builder, 5, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Fairman, William, hairdresser, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Fairweather, Mrs. Lydia, linen-draper, silk mercer, hosier, and
-haberdasher, London street
-Fake, John, the Wrestlers, St. James’ street
-Farman, George, general dealer, Blazeby’s buildings, Scole’s green
-Farmer, Benjamin, British school-master, Colegate street
-Farnell, James Thomas, boarding and day school, Tuck’s court, St. Giles’
-street
-Farnell, William Keeling, classical and mathematical boarding school,
-Theatre-street house school
-Farrow Maria, corset and stay maker, Grapes’ hill, St. Giles’
-Farrow, Thomas, general shopkeeper, Chapel street, Union place
-Farrow, Thomas, market gardener, Newmarket road
-Farrow, William, Scripture reader, Oak street
-Faulke Robert, baker, Queen street, Crook’s place
-Fawcett, Mr. Samuel, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Fearnside, Benjamin, furniture broker, Coach and Horses, Red Lion street
-Featherstone, Thomas, accountant, Distillery street
-Feek, William, horse breaker, West Pottergate street
-Felstead, Miss Charlotte, straw bonnet maker and furrier, 20, Castle
-meadow
-Felstead, James, grocer, Regent street, Union place
-Felstead, Robert, Catherine Wheel, St. Augustine’s
-Feltham, Barnabas, miller, New Lakenham
-Feltham, Charles, ferry boat owner, Lower close
-Fenn, James, French polisher, Cogman’s yard, Ber street
-Fenn, John, merchant’s clerk, 5, Langham place, Dereham road
-Fenn, Mrs., stay maker, Julian street
-Fenn, Mrs., St. Giles’ terrace, Bethel street
-Fenn, Robert, grocer and tea-dealer, Magdalen street
-Fenn, Thomas, boot and shoe maker, 35, Pottergate street
-Fenn, Thomas, Hen and Chickens, St. Mary’s plain
-Ferra, John, hairdresser, King street
-Ferron, Mrs. Ellen Jane, Unthank’s road
-Fickling, Harriet, stationer and haberdasher, Kensington place, St.
-Catherine’s plain
-Fickling Robert, solicitor, Prince’s street
-Fiddament, James, green grocer, Ber street
-Fidgett, Miss Henrietta, 38, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s
-Field and Bignold, solicitors, Upper Surrey street
-Field, Edward, (see Field and Bignold) Surrey street
-Field, Robert, King street
-Field, William C., commercial traveller, Brunswick road, Newmarket road
-Fife, James, Inland Revenue officer, Baxter’s gardens, King street
-Figg, George, Boar’s Head Inn, Surrey street
-Finch, James, chimney sweeper, St. Miles’ church alley
-Finch, John, carpenter, Trowse
-Finch, Walter, locksmith, Elm hill
-Finch, William, horse-hair seating and crinoline manufacturer, Prince
-Regent, Weaver’s lane
-Finch, William, chimney sweeper, St. Miles’ church street
-Finch, William H., blacksmith, Wagon and Horses lane, Tombland
-Finegan, Mrs. Ann, ladies’ school, Cow hill
-Finegan, Thomas William, linguist, Cow hill
-Firth, George Warren Watts, surgeon, registrar of births and deaths for
-the Wymer district, 66, St. Giles’ street
-Fish, John, shoemaker, Grout’s thoroughfare, Timberhill street
-Fish, Mrs. Lucy, shirt maker, 51, Pottergate street
-Fish, Thomas, hosier, glover, and shirt maker, Orford hill
-Fish, Thomas, boot and shoe maker, 51, Pottergate street
-Fish, William, professor of music, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Fisher, Daniel, school-master, 6, Lakenham terrace, City road, Lakenham
-Fisher, Edward, butcher, Fisher’s yard, Ber street
-Fisher, Mrs. Elizabeth, 4, Lame Dog road
-Fisher, Francis, boot and shoe maker, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Fisher, George, last maker, Union place
-Fisher, James, solicitor, Lower close, (see Steward and Fisher)
-Fisher, James, boat builder, Oak street
-Fisher, James Cracknell, grocer and tea-dealer, 62, St. Stephen’s street
-Fisher, Joseph, boot and shoe maker, Lower King street
-Fisher, Mary Ann, butcher, Distillery street, Heigham
-Fisher, Robert, grocer and tea-dealer, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Fisher, Robert, grocer and tea dealer, Sussex street
-Fisher, Mrs. Sarah, shopkeeper, Oak street
-Fisher, Thomas, joiner and builder, Museum court, St. Andrew’s; h
-Crescent, Chapel field
-Fisher, William, carpenter, St. Paul’s terrace, Cowgate street
-Fishwick, Rev. John, Catholic priest, Catholic chapel, Willow lane
-Fisk, Adam, Phœnix brewery, Magdalen street
-Fiske, Francis Robert, draper, silk mercer, &c., London street
-Fisk, Mrs. Mary Margaret, The Chantry
-Fiske, Mrs. Harriet, 3, Foundry terrace, Thorpe hamlet
-Fitch and Chambers, dispensing and family chemists, Market place
-Fitch, Charles, grocer and tea dealer, Coslany street, St. Miles’
-Fitch, Robert, chemist and druggist, (see Fitch and Chambers) Market
-place
-Fitt, Edward, beer retailer, Duke of Wellington, Wellington street
-Fitt, Eliza, The Gin Shop, Castle meadow
-Fitt, Mr. George, Town close, Newmarket road
-Fitt, James, butcher, Ber street
-Fitt, Miss Jane, Cowgate street
-Fitt, John Mason, baker, Coburg street
-Fitt, John, green grocer, Botolph street
-Fitt, Nathaniel, tobacco-pipe maker, Cherry street, Lakenham
-Fitt, Richard, farmer, Earlham road
-Fitt, Robert, tobacco-pipe maker, Ber street
-Fitt, William, butcher, Ber street
-Fitzgerald, Abraham, coal dealer, Cowgate street
-Fitzgerald, Charles, musician, Rose lane
-Fitzgerald, Louisa, dressmaker, Cowgate street
-Flatt, John, ironmonger, Magdalen st.
-Flatt, William, ironmonger, 52, St. Stephen’s street
-Flaxman, Martha, Richmond terrace, Bracondale
-Fleet, James Robert, commercial traveller, Dereham road
-Fletcher, Josiah, printer, publisher, bookseller, binder, and wholesale
-stationer, and agent for the National Mercantile Life Assurance, 8, The
-Walk; h Unthank’s road
-Fletcher, Joseph, Red Lion, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Fletcher, Sarah, furrier, Finket street
-Flood, Francis, shopkeeper, St. Martin’s lane
-Flood, Harriet, draper, St. Benedict’s st.
-Flower, Jonathan, wholesale draper, Wensum street
-Flowerdew, Richard J., auctioneer, (see Clowes and Flowerdew); h Heigham
-grove, St. Giles’ road
-Foley, Mrs. Susan, milliner, &c., Union place
-Folk, Charles, baker, St. Augustine’s street
-Folk, Charles, butcher, Gildengate street
-Folkard, George, green grocer, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Ford, Miss Ann, straw bonnet and dress maker, Wellington lane, St. Giles’
-Ford, Elizabeth, milliner, Pitt street
-Ford, John, gardener, Pitt street
-Ford, Mrs., 9, St. Stephen’s square
-Ford, Robert, carpenter and builder, St. George’s plain; h St. Helen’s
-cottages, Thorpe hamlet
-Ford, William, and Son, wholesale boot and shoe manufacturers, Colegate
-street
-Ford, William F., (see Ford, William and Son); h Earlham road
-Forder, James, blacksmith, Chapel Field road
-Forrester, Mr. George, Tombland
-Forster, Edward, umbrella maker, Chapel Field road
-Forster, John, umbrella, parasol, and straw hat manufacturer, 28, London
-street
-Forster, Samuel, grocer and provision dealer, Pockthorpe
-Forster, Thomas, grocer, &c., Queen street, Crook’s place
-Foster, Francis Gostling, solicitor, St. Giles’ road
-Foster, George, Norfolk Commercial Inn, family hotel and posting house,
-and omnibus and fly proprietor, St. Giles’ street
-Foster, John, shopkeeper, Wellington street
-Foster, Joseph, tea dealer, Sussex street
-Foster, Samuel, 11, Nelson terrace, Grove road, New Lakenham
-Foster, Thomas, general shopkeeper, West Pottergate street
-Foster, (Sir William) Sons, Burroughes, and Robberds, solicitors, Crown
-Bank plain
-Foster, Sir William, bart., 54, St. Giles’ street
-Foulger, Horatio, builder and shop-keeper, Chapel Field road
-Foulger, Robert, gig maker, Ber street
-Foulger, Rev. William, Upper King street
-Foulsham, Francis, draper, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Foulsham, Henry, leather merchant, Magdalen street
-Foulsham, Mrs. Susan, Lame Dog road
-Foulsham, Thomas, auctioneer and appraiser, &c., Westlegate street, (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 28)
-Foulsham, Thomas, Lame Dog road
-Foulsham, William, tobacconist, Orford hill
-Fountain, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Heigham street
-Fountain, Mrs. Mary Ann, dining and luncheon rooms, London street
-Fountain, Mary Ann, beer retailer, King street
-Fountain, Thomas, accountant, Seymour place, St. Stephen’s square
-Fox, Edward and William, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Fox, Frederick, solicitor, Surrey court, Surrey street
-Fox, George Washington, accountant, St. Leonard’s hill, Thorpe hamlet
-Fox, Henry, tailor, Dereham road
-Fox, Henry, Lime Kiln inn, Trowse
-Fox, Isaac, The Queen’s Head, Upper St. Giles’
-Fox, James, Little John, Alms’ street, Heigham
-Fox, Joel, wholesale and retail fur manufacturer, 11, The Walk
-Fox, John, surgeon, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Fox, John, carpenter and builder, Heigham causeway
-Fox, Maria, tailoress, Tinkler’s lane
-Fox, Mrs. Mary, baker, Lower Close
-Fox, Mr. Samuel Henry, St. Stephen’s gates
-Fox, Thomas, carpenter and contractor, Heigham street
-Fox, Thomas Colman, solicitor, 22, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Fox, William, baker, Cowgate street, St. Paul’s
-Fox, Mr. William, Lame Dog road
-Fox, William, shoemaker, Russell street
-Foyson, Robert, Pump street
-Foyson, Robert B., builder, (see Minns and Foyson); h Pump street
-Foyson, William, commercial traveller, Green Hills, Aylsham road
-Francis, W. Bransby, surgeon, registrar of births and deaths for the
-Coslany district, Colegate street
-Francis, George, general shopkeeper, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Francis, Henry Clark, station master, Thorpe station; h Rose lane
-Francis, Joseph, general clothier, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Francis, Thomas, estate agent, Newmarket road
-Francis, Thomas, green grocer, Timberhill street
-Franklin, Mr. Charles, All Saints’ green
-Franklin, Charles, wheelwright and blacksmith, Cardigan street, Heigham
-Frary, Richard, piece broker, St. Andrews’ hill
-Frary, Valentine William, watch and clock maker, Back of the Inns
-Fraser, James Edward, solicitor, Bank chambers, Bank place, and Wisbeach,
-Cambridgeshire; h St. Giles’ road
-Fraser, John, linen draper, Dereham road
-Fraser, William, woollen cloth and Manchester warehouse man, Exchange
-street; h Ipswich, Suffolk
-Frazer, Charles, saw mills, (see Saul and Frazer); h Golden Ball lane
-Freeman, Mrs. Ann, Earlham road
-Freeman, Charles J., cabinet manufacturer, London street; h Bracondale,
-(see Freeman and Wells)
-Freeman, Charles Robert, corn and flour cellar, Upper Market; h Eaton
-Freeman, Edward, wholesale shoe manufacturer, St. Martin’s lane, St.
-Martin’s at Oak
-Freeman, James, baker, 15, St. Giles’ street
-Freeman, Mr. James, Holl’s lane, Heigham fields
-Freeman, James, jun., professor of music, Caledonia terrace, Dereham road
-Freeman, Mr. James, Caledonia terrace, Dereham road
-Freeman, Jeremiah, blacksmith, Barn road
-Freeman, John, bricklayer and builder, Nelson street, Heigham
-Freeman and Nash, cheese factors, wholesale grocers and tallow chandlers,
-Upper market
-Freeman, Richard, boot and shoe maker, Upper Westwick street
-Freeman, Samuel, beer retailer, Quay side
-Freeman and Wells, upholsterers, decorators, and undertakers, cabinet and
-chair manufacturers, 37, London street
-Freeman, William, carver and gilder and artist, St. Benedict’s plain,
-Pottergate street
-Freeman, William, baker and shopkeeper, Chapel street, Union place
-Freeman, William, jun., carver, gilder, and photographic artist, Rampant
-horse street
-Freestone, Anthony, baker, Fye bridge
-Freestone, Edward, solicitor, Little Orford street
-Freestone, Robert, merchant’s clerk, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Freestone, Samuel, baker, Old Church road, New Lakenham
-Freestone, William, Wellington Tavern, Muspole street
-French, Robert, (see Kitton, French and Co.); h Tombland
-French, Robert, tailor, Tabernacle street
-Froggett, Ellen, boarding school, Sussex street
-Frohawk, Nicholas, Priest’s buildings, St. Stephen’s road
-Fromow, John, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Fromow, Stephen, cattle salesman, 5, Grove place, Surrey road
-Frost, Charles, builder and carpenter, Chapel Field road
-Frost, George, accountant, St. Faith’s terrace, St. Faith’s lane
-Frost, Hezekiah, market gardener, Lower close
-Frost, Mrs. Mary, portmanteau, trunk, and carpet bag manufacturer, and
-stay and corset maker, 15, Davey place
-Frost, Mary Ann, shopkeeper, Magdalen street
-Frost, Samuel Johnson, agent to the Friend in Need Life and Sick
-Insurance Compy., Howard street, Grove place, Lakenham
-Frost and Son, carpenters, builders, and cabinet makers, 7, Chapel Field
-road
-Frost, Thomas, tallow chandler, Fishgate street
-Frost, Rev. William, B.A., Thorpe lodge
-Frost, William, coffee and eating house, 2, Upper Walk
-Fryer, William, sawyer, Union place
-Fryer, William, wholesale boot and shoe manufacturer, Ber street; h Union
-place
-Fulcher, Christmas, watch and clock maker, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Fulcher, Mr. James, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Fulcher, William, millwright, millstone builder, &c., Mousehold heath
-(_see Advertisement_, _p._ 34)
-Fuller, Benjamin, commercial traveller, 37, Victoria street, St.
-Stephen’s
-Fuller, E., dressmaker, Pitt street
-Fuller, Edward, tailor, Red Lion street, St. Stephen’s
-Fuller, Henry Nicholas, musician, Trafalgar street
-Fuller, James, saddler and harness maker, 23, Old Haymarket
-Fuller, John, shoemaker, Quay side
-Fuller, John, jobbing gardener, Thorpe hamlet
-Fuller, Maria, midwife, Ber street
-Fuller, Robert, The Trumpet, St. Stephen’s street
-Fuller, Thomas Benjamin, printer, bookseller, and stationer, St.
-Stephen’s street
-Fuller, William, tobacconist and news’ agent, Red Lion street
-Fuller, William H., confectioner, Theatre street; h Red Lion street
-Furse, James Thomas, cabinet maker and upholsterer, Prince’s street
-Furse, Mrs. Maria, dyer, St. Augustine’s street
-Furse, William, dyer and scourer, Peacock street
-Furze, Robert, green grocer, Heigham street
-Fussey, Susan, butcher, Ber street
-Gadge, Sarah, St. Miles’ Coslany
-Gaffer, Samuel, Paul Pry hill, Heigham
-Gallant, George, Mousehold saw mills, Thorpe hamlet
-Gandy, George, merchant’s clerk, Thorpe hamlet
-Ganly, James, designer for embroidery, trimming, wool, and fancy
-repository, London street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 34)
-Gardiner, Charles, waiter, Rose lane
-Gardiner, Maria, green grocer, Upper Westwick street, St. Swithin’s
-Gardiner, William, chemist and druggist, Dove street
-Gardiner, William, Red Lion, London street
-Gardiner, William, rag merchant, St. Paul’s street
-Gardner, Maria, pork butcher, Barn road
-Gardner, Thompson, boot and shoe maker, Mount Pleasant
-Garner, Mrs. Sarah, tailoress, Gildengate street
-Garnham, William, grocer, and clerk of St. Mark’s church, Hall road, New
-Lakenham
-Garrett, John, draper, Pottergate street
-Garrod, Edward, editor of the “Norfolk Chronicle,” Private Road villas,
-Unthank’s road
-Garrod, Mrs. Mary Sophia, Thorpe hamlet
-Garthon, James Slapp, surgeon, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Garwood, Mrs. Sarah Ann, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Gaul, Edward John, shuttle maker, Magdalen street
-Gaul, Mrs. Maria, Prince’s street
-Gay and Co., brush, basket, sieve, mat, and matting manufacturers, Upper
-Market
-Gay, Edward, shopkeeper, Heigham street
-Gay, James, shoemaker, City road, Heigham fields
-Gay, Samuel, green grocer, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Gayford, William George, station master, Trowse station
-Gaze, George, timber merchant, Grapes’ hill, St. Giles’
-Gaze, James, shoemaker, Playford’s court, Pottergate street
-Gaze, Matthew, carpenter and builder, King street
-Gaze, Richard, clerk, Golding street, St. Benedict’s road
-Gaze, Samuel, hairdresser, Lower Westwick street
-Gaze, Susan, 63, St. Giles’ street
-Gaze, William, engineer, Pitt street
-Gaze, William, merchant’s clerk, Lower Close
-Gaze, William Hammond, register office for servants, Wrestlegate street
-Gaze, William, millwright and engineer, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Gazeley, James, green grocer, Lower Westwick street, St. Margaret’s
-Gearing, James, The Bee Hive, St. Stephen’s gates
-Geary, William, manufacturer, Gildengate street
-Gedge, Edward Peter, shopkeeper, Brazen Doors road
-Gedge, Frederick, Caledonia terrace, Dereham road
-Gedge, George, dyer, finisher, and hot-presser, Coslany street
-Gedge, Robert, plumber, Wounded Hart lane
-Gedge, Robert, shoemaker, Ber street
-Gedge, William, baker, Chapel street, Union place
-Gedge, William, hairdresser, Upper Westwick street
-Geldart and Son, wine merchants, Wensum street
-Geldart, Herbert D., Esq., Thorpe hamlet
-Geldart, Robert, Esq., Thorpe hamlet
-Gent, David, St. John’s Head, Coslany street
-Gent, Eliza, straw bonnet maker, Muspole street
-Gent, George, boot and shoe maker, Coslany street
-Gent, George, shopkeeper, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Gent, Thomas William, merchant’s clerk, Dereham road
-George, John, tailor, Muspole street, St. Mary’s
-George, Michael Richard Dunn, coal merchant, Quay side
-George, Robert Mills, bricklayer and plasterer, and shopkeeper, St.
-Benedict’s street
-George, Robert, fish merchant, St. Benedict’s street
-George, Robert, builder, Muspole street
-George, William Morris, carpenter and builder, Pottergate street
-Gerard, William Sinclair, jeweller, dealer in coins and medals, and
-hairdresser, Botolph street
-Gibbs, Richard, The Rose and Crown, Bishopgate street
-Gibbs, Rudd William, butcher, Palace street
-Gibbs, William, glass and china mender, Meadows’ yard, Coslany street
-Gibson, Alfred, general shopkeeper, Botolph street
-Gibson and Bateman, surgeons, 19, St. Giles’ street
-Gibson, Charles M., Bethel street (see Gibson and Bateman)
-Gibson, George, The White Horse, Crook’s place
-Gibson, The Misses, Lower Close
-Gibson, Mr. Isaac, Upper Heigham
-Gibson, John, boot and shoe maker, and tobacconist, Pitt street
-Gibson, Robert, leather merchant and shoe manufacturer, St. Stephen’s
-street
-Gibson, Mrs. Rosamond, Mount Pleasant, Newmarket road
-Gibson, Samuel, butcher, Gildengate street
-Gibson, William, baker, St. Catherine’s plain
-Gibson, William, (see Copestake and Co.) commercial traveller, The
-Chantry
-Giddens, Miss Susanna, circulating library, St. Stephen’s street
-Gidney, Frederick, Hospital school, Fishgate street
-Gidney, Robert, watch and clock maker, Orford hill
-Gidney, Samuel, The Bushel, St. Augustine’s
-Gilford, Samuel, general shopkeeper, St. Benedict’s street
-Gifford, Thomas, tailor, Magdalen street
-Gilbeigh, Mrs. Caroline, Spread Eagle tavern, Old Haymarket
-Gilbert, George, coachsmith, patent axle-tree and spring maker,
-Timberhill street
-Gilbert, Mrs., day school, Gildengate street
-Gilbert, Samuel James, plumber, painter, and glazier, Grapes’ hill
-Gilbert, William, builder, St. Augustine’s
-Gill, James, baker and grocer, Lower Westwick street
-Gill, John, earthenware dealer, St. Giles’ street
-Gilham, Miss Judith, West Pottergate street
-Gilman, Charles Rackham, solicitor, secretary to the Norfolk Farmers’
-Cattle Insurance Society, and agent to the City of Glasgow Life Insurance
-Compy., St. Giles’ street; h Unthank’s road
-Gilman, Charles Suckling, solicitor and share broker, secretary to the
-General Hail Storm Insurance Society, secretary to the Chamber of
-Commerce, and manager of the Norwich and London Accident and Casualty
-Insurance Association, St. Giles’ street
-Gilman, John, carver and gilder, publisher and printseller, gallery of
-fine arts, 26, London street
-Gipson, James, carter, Mousehold
-Gipson, Samuel, carter, Mousehold
-Girdlestone, Reuben, hair dresser, branch post office, 8, Upper St.
-Giles’ street
-Girdlestone, Thomas, Three Horse-shoes, Palace street
-Girling, Elizabeth, baker, (opposite the church) New Catton
-Girling, Miss Maria, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Girling, Robert, butcher, St. Benedict’s street
-Girling, Sherwood, grocer, Lower Westwick street
-Girling, William, Golden Ball inn, hay, corn, and straw merchant, Golden
-Ball street
-Glasspoole, Mr. George, Rose valley, Unthank’s road
-Glendenning, John Brown, (see Colman and Glendenning); h St. Stephen’s
-road
-Goading, William, milliner, Red Lion street
-Goat, Charles, The Old Goat inn, Upper Goat lane
-Godbold, Henry, clerk, Paragon street
-Goddard, Thomas, Black Prince, Upper Walk
-Godfery, Elizabeth, dressmaker, Duke st.
-Goffin, Mrs. Mary, dressmaker, &c., Golden Dog lane
-Goffin, Mrs. Matilda Elizabeth, boot and shoe warehouse, Palace street
-Goggs, Matthew, Esq., Curfew cottage, Earlham road
-Goggs, William, grocer, tea and coffee dealer, foreign fruit, British
-wine, and provision merchant, St. Giles’ gates
-Gold, James Charles, news’ agent, Baker’s road, St. Augustine’s
-Golden, William, coal dealer, Twiddy’s court, Ber street
-Golder, Edward, grocer, Oak street
-Golder, Mrs. Hester, toy dealer, Upper Westwick street
-Golding, John, Cellar House, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Golding, Mary Ann, day school, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Goldsmith, Charles, grocer, &c., Surrey street
-Goldsmith, James, grocer and tea dealer, 34, St. Stephen’s street
-Goldsmith, James, boot and shoe maker, Back of the Inns
-Goldsmith, Mary, tailoress, Upper King street
-Goldsmith, Sarah, tailoress, Duke street
-Goldsmith, Thomas, corn merchant and confectioner, St. Stephen’s
-Goldspring, Mary Ann, dressmaker, William street
-Gooch, Mrs. Amelia, Newmarket road
-Gooch, George Carver, water-closet manufacturer, and plumber, glazier,
-and painter, Castle meadow and King street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 21)
-Gooch, Henry, harness maker, St. James’ street
-Gooch, Joshua, fringe, lace, and damask warehouse, 3, Dove street
-Gooch, Henry, Brewery Cottage, King street
-Gooch, Noah, Malt and Hop tavern, Charing cross
-Gooch, Mrs. Phœbe, milliner and dressmaker, Waddington’s terrace, Thorn
-lane
-Gooch, Robert, secondhand bookseller, White Lion street
-Gooch, Samuel Irwin, currier and leather seller, 9, Davey place
-Gooch, Thomas, brush manufacturer, 7, Grout’s thoroughfare
-Gooch, Thomas Henry, Royal Hotel tap, Back of the Inns
-Gooch, William, Unthank’s road
-Good, Thomas, boot, shoe, and last maker, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Gooderham, Samuel, tunist, &c., Elm hill
-Gooderson, Mr. John, West Pottergate street
-Gooderson and Moll, linen and woollen drapers, Upper Market
-Gooding, Mrs. Harriet, straw bonnet maker, Red Lion street
-Goodson, Mr. Robert, Alms’ lane, St. George’s
-Goodson, William, butcher, Dereham rd.
-Goodwin, Charles, surgeon, Willow lane
-Goodwin, John, solicitor, Willow lane; h Thorpe hamlet
-Goodwin, Mrs., Willow lane
-Goodwin, Rev. William, M.A., incumbent of St. Benedict’s, 14, Chapel
-field
-Gooke, David, shoemaker, Rose lane
-Goose, Agas, solicitor’s clerk, Theatre street
-Goose, Mrs. Emma, milliner, 15, Briggs’ street
-Goose, Jacob, green grocer, Golden Ball street
-Goose, Mrs. Mary, Trowse Newton
-Goose, William Henry, artist, No. 15, Briggs’ street
-Goose, Mr. Robert, Union place
-Goose, Robert, bricklayer and builder, Julian street
-Goreham, John, copper and iron-plate worker, William street
-Goreham, Henry, County Court bailiff, St. Lawrence lane
-Goreham, Sarah, dressmaker, Lothian street
-Goreham, William, shopkeeper, Rosemary lane
-Gorell, Robert Atkinson, yarn agent, and cotton and silk merchant,
-Muspole street; h Unthank’s road
-Gosnold, Ellen Sarah, dressmaker, Surrey road
-Gosnold, Henry George, solicitor’s clerk, Bethel street
-Gostling, Francis, shoe manufacturer, (of the firm of Barker Benjamin and
-Co.); h 9, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Gostling, Richard, Robin Hood, Dereham load
-Gotts, John, solicitor’s clerk, Norfolk street, Union place
-Gotts, Miss Sarah, St. Stephen’s gates
-Goulty, Charles, lodging-house keeper, 3, Vauxhall terrace, Julian place
-Gould, Rev. George, Baptist minister, Unthank’s road
-Gowen, William, beer retailer, Lower Goat lane
-Gower, James, carpenter, St. Julian street
-Gower, Thomas, lemonade manufacturer, Gun lane
-Gowing, Charles, harness maker, Castle hill
-Gowing, George, farmer, Trowse Newton
-Gowing, Rev. John, Baptist minister, Parry’s buildings, Philadelphia
-Gowing, Samuel, butcher and green grocer, St. Benedict’s gates
-Grand, Edward, tailor, 13, Upper King street
-Grand, George, tailor and hatter, 2, Castle meadow
-Grand, Mr. John, St. Giles’ street
-Grand, Mr. John, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Grand, John Fuller, solicitor’s clerk, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Grand, John, fish salesman and auctioneer, Lady’s lane
-Grand, Richard, Graham’s court, Upper market
-Grand, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Duke street
-Grand, Robert, merchant’s clerk, Catton road
-Grant, Mr. Henry, Heigham road
-Grant, Mrs. Sarah, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Graver, Abraham, fruiterer, Magdalen street
-Graver, John, butcher, Lower King street
-Graver, Richard, shoemaker, Ber street
-Graver, Thomas, baker, St. Paul’s plain
-Graves, Mrs., Mount Pleasant
-Gravener, Benjamin, shopkeeper, Lower Westwick street
-Graves, John, market gardener, Dereham road
-Gray, James, hair dresser, Bethel street
-Gray, John, hair dresser, Rose lane
-Gray, Mr. Joseph, Heigham grove, St. Giles’ road
-Gray, Mrs. Rebecca, New road, Town close
-Gray, Richard, tailor, Grapes’ hill
-Gray, Mary Ann, pork butcher, Upper Westwick street, St. Swithin’s
-Gray, Mary Ann, tailoress, Pottergate street
-Green, Miss Ann, dressmaker, milliner, and straw bonnet maker, and
-register office for servants, Post Office street
-Green, Edward, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Green, Edward, whitesmith and bell-hanger, Duke street; h Gildengate
-street
-Green, Elizabeth, day school, Palace street
-Green, George, cattle inspector, Brazen Doors road
-Green, Hannah, dressmaker, St. Catherine’s terrace
-Green, Isaac, commercial traveller, Sussex street, St. Clement’s
-Green, James, green grocer, Philadelphia
-Green, Mr. James, Richmond place, Lakenham
-Green, James, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Green, John, market gardener, Asylum lane, Heigham
-Green, John, plumber and glazier, Pottergate street
-Green, John, City of Norwich inn, Westlegate street
-Green, Mary Ann, milliner and dressmaker, Colegate street
-Green, Miss, Thorpe hamlet
-Green, Mrs. Rachel, St. Giles’ terrace, Bethel street
-Green, Robert, basket and sieve maker, Upper Westwick street
-Green, Robert, jun., timber merchant, Waddington terrace, Church street,
-St. Julian’s
-Green, Robert, and Son, timber merchants, Garden street, Thorn lane
-Green, Miss Rosa, National schoolmistress, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Green, Susan, shopkeeper, St. James street
-Green, William Dann, Bee Hive, St. Paul’s plain
-Green, William, solicitor’s clerk, Thorpe hamlet
-Green, William Page, pawnbroker, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Greene, Charles Jeremiah, tobacconist, Rose lane
-Greenhough, Joseph, worstead spinner, St. Saviour’s lane
-Greengrass, John, butcher, West End street
-Greengrass, Thomas, bricklayer and plasterer, Elm hill, (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 22)
-Greenwood, Mr. William, City road, Heigham fields
-Greeves, Benjamin Titter, butcher, Market place; h 20, Victoria street
-Greeves, Henry, butcher, Market place; h 2, Surrey terrace, Lakenham
-Grice, Mrs. Mary Ann, milliner and dressmaker, Gildengate street
-Gridley, Mrs., St. Stephen’s gates
-Grief, James, White Horse, Trowse
-Grief, Jonathan, sub-postmaster and shopkeeper, Trowse Newton
-Griffenberg, Joseph, cigar dealer, Coburg street
-Griffin, Mrs. Eliza, carver and builder, Cow hill
-Griffiths, Hannah, plane, saw, and brace manufacturer, Goat lane and
-Pottergate street
-Griffiths, John, boot and shoe maker, Globe street, Union place
-Griggs, Frederick William, pawnbroker, Upper King street
-Griggs, William, agent, St. Benedict’s street
-Grigor, Mrs. Matilda, Lakenham place, St. Catherine’s plain
-Grimmer, Mrs. Ann, Newmarket road
-Grimmer, Mr. Frederick, importer of wines and spirits, (see Seaman,
-Grimmer, and Co.) The Crescent
-Grimmer, Honor, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Grimmer, Mr. Samuel, importer of wines and spirits, (see Seaman, Grimmer,
-and Co.); h 3, Albion place, Mount Pleasant
-Grimes, Ruth, grocer, &c., Botolph street
-Grimwood, Thomas H., tailor and outfitter, 4, Lower Goat lane (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 27)
-Grinter, Charles Edward, bookbinder, Gildengate street
-Grindling, George, accountant, Unthank’s road
-Groom, George, dyer, Brazen Doors road
-Groom, George, wholesale shoe manufacturer, St. Stephen’s street
-Groom, John, shoemaker, St. Lawrence lane
-Grout and Co., mourning crape manufacturers; silk works—Lower Westwick
-street
-Grout, George, Esq., Magdalen street
-Grove, Richard, boot and shoe maker, Ber street
-Gunn, Robert, ornamental painter and coach maker, Brazen Doors road
-Gunn, Robert, commission agent, 11, Julian street
-Gunton, Alfred, surgeon dentist, Priest’s court, 79, St. Giles’ street
-Gunton, Elizabeth, dressmaker, Julian street
-Gunton, Henry, watch and clock maker, and jeweller, Briggs’ street
-Gunton, John Hamnell, draper, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Gunton, Robert, coach trimmer, Hall road, Lakenham
-Gunton, Thomas, horse-hair manufacturer, White Lion yard, Oak street
-Gurney, Charlotte, fishmonger, Cowgate street
-Gurney, Christopher, green grocer, Cherry street, New Lakenham
-Gurney, James, shopkeeper, Julian street
-Gurney, Rev. Thomas, 10, Newmarket terrace
-Gurneys and Birkbecks, bankers, Bank plain
-Guyton, John Thomas, butcher, Upper Westwick street
-Habberton, Mrs. Elizabeth, Tamworth terrace, Unthank’s road
-Hadley William, Lower King street
-Haddon, Mrs. Mary Ann, grocer, baker, and confectioner, Rose lane
-Hagg, Noah, shoemaker, Sussex street
-Haggett, Mr. J., 6, Victoria terrace, Synagogue street
-Hagon, George, tailor, Southwell street
-Hagon, William, furniture broker, Oak street
-Haines Brothers, grocers and tea dealers, 58, St. Stephen’s street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 18)
-Haldinstein, Philip, fancy cap and boot and shoe manufacturer, Bridewell
-alley
-Hales, James, cabinet maker, St. John’s street
-Hales, Walter, cabinet maker, Wellington terrace, Union place
-Hall, Charles, butcher, Upper King street
-Hall, Charles Henry, 18, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Hall, Frederick George, butcher, Chapel Field road
-Hall, Miss Harriet, baker and confectioner, Gildengate street
-Hall, Henry, baker, Thorn lane
-Hall, H., milliner and dressmaker, Cowgate street
-Hall and Ilott, linen and woollen drapers, silk mercers, &c., Waterloo
-house, St. Stephen’s
-Hall, James, painter, writer, and grainer, All Saints’ green
-Hall, James, grocer and draper, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Hall, James, plumber, painter, and glazier, and gas fitter, 10, Magdalen
-street
-Hall, John Foster, writing master, Charles street, Heigham
-Hall, Jonathan, market gardener and shopkeeper, Somerleyton street
-Hall, Joseph, hawker, Thorn lane
-Hall, Robert, shoemaker, Pottergate street
-Hall, Samuel, joiner and builder, Pottergate street
-Hall, Samuel, furniture broker, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Hall, Samuel, stone and marble mason, Chapel Field road; h Norfolk
-street, Union place
-Hall, Mrs. Sarah, King street
-Hall, Timothy Bennett, boot maker, Pottergate street
-Hall, Mr. William, Ipswich road
-Hall, William, engraver, lithographer, and copperplate printer, White
-Lion street; h Kimberley street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 10)
-Hall, William, White Lion inn, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Hall, William Henry, picture-frame maker, Pottergate street
-Hallett, Rev. John, Independent minister, Grove terrace, Unthank’s road
-Hallows, George, harness maker, Rampant Horse street
-Hallows, Joseph, hairdresser, Royal Hotel street
-Halls, Robert, commercial traveller, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Ham, Mrs. Christine, Red Lion street
-Hamley, Osbertus John, commercial traveller, Distillery street
-Hammond, John, corn miller, Catton mill
-Hammond, John, Victoria tavern and eating house, Market place
-Hammond, Jonathan, shoemaker, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Hammond, William, shoemaker, Cross lane, St. George’s
-Hampson, Mr. Daniel, Bracondale
-Hannah, Peter, travelling tea dealer, 33, Pottergate street
-Hannant, Nathaniel, baker and confectioner, Magdalen street
-Hannant, Richard, grocer and tea dealer, King street
-Hansell, Henry, solicitor, notary public, deputy registrar of the
-Archdeaconry of Norfolk, Upper close
-Hansell, Peter Edward, solicitor, clerk to Governors of the Free Grammar
-School, Upper close; h Bracondale
-Hansell, Mr. Robert, St. Clement’s Hill cottage, New Catton
-Hansell, Sarah, earthenware dealer, St. Augustine’s street
-Hansell, William, green grocer, Chapel street, Union place
-Hanson, Joseph, commercial traveller, Distillery street
-Hanworth, George, commercial traveller, Rose Valley terrace, Unthank’s
-road
-Harbord, Henry, green grocer, St. Stephen’s Back street
-Harbord, Joseph Massingham, saddler and harness maker, Upper St. Giles’
-street; h Bedford street, Unthank’s rd.
-Harcourt, Anthony, carriage manufacturer, Chapel Field road
-Harcourt, James, professor of music, Colegate street
-Harcourt, Walter, surgeon dentist, 1, St. Giles’ street
-Harden, Charles, baker and grocer, Heigham street
-Hardesty, Alexander, bookseller and stationer, 4, Davey place; h St.
-Giles’ road
-Hardesty, John, Palace street
-Hardesty, Mrs. Phœbe, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Harding, Levi, The Crocodile, Heigham street
-Hardingham, William, general shopkeeper, Barrack street
-Hardy, Mrs. Ann, lodging-house keeper, 8, St. Stephen’s square
-Hardy, Charles, whip maker, Timberhill street
-Hardy, Francis, schoolmaster, Upper Surrey street
-Hardy, James, grocer and tea dealer, Rampant Horse street
-Hardy, John, shoemaker, Golden Ball square
-Hardy, Jonathan, boot and shoe maker, Upper Westwick street
-Hardy, Michael, baker, St. Catherine’s plain
-Hardy, Susan, 12, St. Giles’ street
-Hardy, William, timber dealer, Pitt street
-Hardy, William Edward, plumber, glazier, and painter, 5, Little London
-street
-Hardyman, Miss Sarah, boarding school, Bracondale
-Hardyment, Jabez, earthenware dealer and general shopkeeper, St.
-Benedict’s street
-Hare, Mrs. Barbara, Upper close
-Hare, Charles, cabinet and chair maker, West Pottergate street
-Hare, Edward, lay clerk at cathedral, Haymarket
-Hare, Mrs. Elizabeth, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Hare, William, fishmonger, Fishmarket, Market place
-Harley, John Payne, provision merchant, St. Benedict’s street
-Harman, Mrs. John, Holl’s lane
-Harman, Leonard and Sons, wine and spirit merchants, St. Andrew’s hill
-Harmer, Miss Ann, day school, Distillery street, Heigham
-Harmer, Elizabeth, hairdresser, Ber street
-Harmer, James, green grocer and fruiterer, Red Lion street
-Harmer, Robert, upholsterer, Carrow hill
-Harmer, Thomas, warehouseman, &c., Old Post Office court; h West
-Pottergate street
-Harmer, Mrs. William, 4, London terrace, St. Stephen’s road
-Harold, Philip, boot and shoe maker, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Harper, Andrews Pask, carpenter and builder, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Harper, George, dyer and dresser, Calvert street
-Harper, Henry, market gardener, Fisher’s lane
-Harper, Isaac, brewers’ agent, Lower King street
-Harper, James Kersey, brush and patten manufacturer, St. Benedict’s
-street
-Harper, Joseph, silk, cotton, and woollen dyer, St. George’s Bridge
-street
-Harper and Sutton, chemists and druggists, Bank plain
-Harpley, Thomas, hairdresser, Cowgate street
-Harris, James, green grocer, Ber street
-Harris, James Thomas, wholesale shoe manufacturer, Ber street
-Harris, Mrs. Mary, 14, Distillery street
-Harris, Thomas, gardener and green grocer, King street
-Harris, William, The Angel, Trowse
-Harris, Zebediah, dyer and scourer, 38, Pottergate street
-Harrison, Alfred, shoe manufacturer; h Distillery street, Heigham;
-warehouse, Bridewell alley
-Harrison, Edward, confectioner, &c., Church street
-Harrison, Harrod and Co., directory publishers, Somerleyton street
-Harrison, Isaac, joiner, John street, Heigham
-Harrison, John, grocer and tea dealer, Globe street, Union place
-Harrison, John, (see Harrison, Harrod, and Co.) Somerleyton street
-Harrison, Mrs. Mary Ann, green grocer, &c., Queen street
-Harrison, Mrs., baker, Elm hill
-Harrison, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Elm hill
-Harrison, Thomas Thurlow, Essex street, Union place
-Harrison, William, boot and shoe maker, Bridewell alley
-Harrison, William, muffin baker, St. Andrew’s hill
-Harrison, William, tailor, Botolph street
-Harrison, William Thomas, baker, Golden Ball street
-Harrod, John George, (see Harrison, Harrod, and Co.) Somerleyton street
-Hart, Miss Catherine, boarding and day school, 14, Victoria street
-Hart, John, corn and timber merchant; h St. Giles’ street
-Hart, Philip Woodrow, coach builder, Chapel Field road, and Red Lion st.
-Hart, Robert, havel and slaie manufacturer, Golden Dog lane
-Hart, William, grocer and draper, St. Benedict’s street
-Hart, William George, watch and clock maker, silversmith and jeweller,
-46, London street
-Hart, Mrs. Sophia, 3, Portland place, Holl’s lane
-Hartley, William, hairdresser, Little Orford street
-Hartmann, Francis A., physician, Surrey street
-Harvard and Co., wholesale and retail confectioners, The Walk
-Harvard, Mr. Samuel, Bracondale grove
-Harvey, Mr. Charles, 6, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Harvey, Rev. Edward Kerrison, Fernado cottage, Thorpe hamlet
-Harvey and Hudson, bankers, Crown bank, King street
-Harvey, Isaac, pawnbroker, William street
-Harvey, James, baker, Fishgate street
-Harvey, Mr. James, 9, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Harvey, John, boot and shoe maker, 11, London street
-Harvey, Sir Robert John, knt., Mousehold house, Thorpe hamlet
-Harvey, Robert J. H., Esq., Bracondale house
-Harvey, Samuel, baker and grocer, Staff of Life, Fishgate street
-Harvey, William S., plumber, painter, glazier, and whiting manufacturer,
-William street; h Wellington place, Wellington street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 32)
-Harwin, James, tea dealer, 3, Charles street, Heigham
-Hase, Thomas, shopkeeper, Cowgate street
-Haslip, James, coal dealer, Abbs’ yard, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Hastings, George, tunist, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Hatcarton, Joseph, confectioner, Bedford street
-Hatch, Frederick, baker, William street
-Hatch, William, The Express Train, Rose lane
-Havers, Charles, wholesale and retail ironmonger, oil and colorman,
-Charing cross; h West Pottergate street
-Havers, Amelia, milliner and dressmaker, Fishgate street
-Havers, John Bailey, accountant, Coldstream terrace, Bedford street,
-Unthank’s road
-Havers, George, (see Rogers and Havers); h 6, Chatham place, Chapel Field
-road
-Havers, Mrs. Maria, 6, Chatham place, Chapel Field road
-Havers, Robert N., designer, Infirmary road
-Havers, Samuel, sugar boiler, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Havers, William Henry, pawnbroker, St. Paul’s plain
-Haward, The Misses, milliners and dressmakers, Theatre street
-Hawes, George, plumber, glazier and painter, Mariners’ lane
-Hawes, James, dyer, dresser, and shawl cleaner, Nelson street, Heigham
-fields
-Hawes, Samuel, shoemaker, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Hawkes, Mrs. Amy, Julian street
-Hawkes, Robert William, wool merchant, Willow lane, St. Giles
-Hawkes, William, bankers’ clerk, 14, Chapel Field
-Hawkins, Mrs. Martha, Unthank’s road
-Hay, William, surgeon dentist, Post Office street
-Hayes, John, wood turner, Magdalen street
-Hayhoo, Thomas, green grocer, St., Augustine’s street
-Haylett, David, shoemaker, Playford’s court, Pottergate street
-Hayne, William, Rainbow tavern, Holl’s lane
-Hayward, Carif, tinman and brazier, Ber street
-Hayward, James John, working jeweller, Little London street
-Hayward, John, gardener, Trowse
-Hazlewood, Christmas Adam, beer retailer, and plumber and glazier,
-Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Hazlewood, Christopher John, corn merchant, Weavers’ lane
-Heasell, the Misses Elizabeth and Susan (boarding school) Surrey road
-Heaviside, John, drawing master, Church street, St. Saviour’s
-Heazle and Co., coal merchants, Lower Westwick street
-Hedgeman, Richard George, inspector of taxes, Cook’s lane, King street
-Heffill, Alder, commercial traveller, Lakenham place, St. Catherine’s
-plain
-Hemnell, Johnson, eating and coffee-house, Rose lane
-Henderson, John, travelling draper, Caledonia terrace, Dereham road
-Henderson, William, butcher, Church street, Lakenham
-Hendry, James, beer retailer, Lower Westwick street
-Henley, Mrs. Ann, Newmarket road
-Henley, Mr. William, 9, Newmarket road
-Henney, Charity, haberdasher, Eagle terrace, Newmarket road
-Hennery, William, Cat and Fiddle, Magdalen street
-Herbert, Mrs. Ann, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Herring, Mrs. Ann, West Pottergate street
-Herring, Edward, grocer, Lower King street
-Herring, Mrs. Maria, St. Faith’s lane
-Heseltine, James, Royal Hotel and posting house, Market place
-Hewett, Alfred, grocer and tea dealer, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Hewett, Charlotte, dressmaker, West Pottergate street
-Hewett, Edward Colby, clerk, 2, Adelaide buildings, Dereham road
-Hewett, L., dressmaker, Lothian street, St. Benedict’s
-Hewing, Joseph, Plumbers’ Arms, Prince’s street
-Hewison, Mr. Joseph, Keyzor’s terrace, Unthank’s road
-Hewitt, George, brass and iron founder, and Red Lion inn, Orford hill
-Hewitt, George, shoemaker, West End street, Heigham
-Hewitt, James, builder and carpenter, St. Augustine’s gates
-Hewitt, John, land agent and surveyor, corner of Chantry, Theatre street
-Hewitt, Thomas, baker, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Hewitt, Tutell, Cherry Tree, Hall road, Lakenham
-Hewitt, William, surgical instrument maker, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s
-road
-Hewitt, William, beer retailer, St. Mary’s Church alley
-Hibberd, Amies, stone mason, Chapel Field road; h Julian place
-Hibgame, Rev. Edward, Lower close
-Hick, Wm., confectioner, St. Andrew’s Hall plain
-Hicks, Ann, lodging-house keeper, Pitt street
-Hickling, Robert, beer retailer, Duke’s street
-Hickman, Mrs. E., 4, Heigham terrace, Dereham road
-Higgin, Henry, Bakers’ Arms, and baker, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-High, George, grocer, New Catton
-High, George, Eagle tavern, West Pottergate street
-High, Jacob, shoemaker, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-High, John, beer retailer, and French polisher, St. Benedict’s street
-Hill, Mrs. Catherine, sub-postmistress, Thorpe hamlet
-Hill, Miss Clara, milliner, Red Lion st.
-Hill, Edward Robert, corn merchant, 2, Exchange street
-Hill, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Upper King street
-Hill, Mrs. Hannah, St. Stephen’s road
-Hill, Hezekiah, shopkeeper, St. Augustine’s
-Hill, Horace, professor of music, 46, Pottergate street
-Hill, James Frederick, professor of music, St. Giles’ terrace
-Hill, John, grocer, Vauxhall street
-Hill, John, grocer and tea dealer, Cowgate street
-Hill, John, florist, Newmarket road
-Hill, John, wholesale grocer and tea dealer, St. Augustine’s
-Hill, John, plumber, painter and glazier, Orford hill; h St. Giles’
-street
-Hill, Lot, news agent, Bridewell alley
-Hill, Michael, tailor and draper, Colegate street
-Hill, Reuben, baker, King street
-Hill, Richard, lemonade manufacturer, Cow hill
-Hill, Robert, hairdresser, Red Lion street
-Hill, Samuel Secker, bankers’ clerk, 12, Castle meadow
-Hill, Mr. Samuel, 4, Waddington street, Heigham
-Hills and Underwood, wine and spirit merchants, and vinegar makers and
-distillers, Saint Faith’s lane
-Hilling, Mrs. Elizabeth, Julian street, Julian place
-Hilling, Frederick, merchant’s clerk, 26, Victoria street
-Hilling, Mary, The Steam Packet, King street
-Hinchley, Samuel, The Duke’s tavern, Tombland
-Hinde, Ephraim and Francis, manufacturers, Botolph street
-Hinde, Mr. Francis, All Saints’ green
-Hindes, Henry and Son, rope, twine and sack manufacturers, Red Lion
-street and Magdalen street
-Hindes, Mr. Henry, Philadelphia (see Hindes, Henry and Son)
-Hinds, Robert, hairdresser, St. Benedict’s street
-Hindes, William, rope and sack manufacturer, Upper Westwick street
-Hindle, Maria, butcher, Pump street
-Hines, Charles, engineer, lathe and tool maker, ivory, hardwood, and
-metal turner, machinist and agent to the Briton Life Association, Muspole
-street, St. George’s
-Hinsbey, Thomas William, architect and surveyor, 18, Castle meadow
-Hipper, James, tailor, Rampant Horse street
-Hipper, Mary Ann, draper, St. Benedict’s street
-Hipper, William, boot and shoe manufacturer, Upper Westwick street
-Hipperson and Jennings, Berlin wool and fancy repository and
-confectioners, Davey place
-Hitchman, Robert, city chief constable, Guildhall, Market place
-Hupton, Mrs. Francis (day school) Hall road, Lakenham
-Hoar, William, inland revenue officer, St. Julian’s street
-Hobrough, Henry, river contractor, Mousehold
-Hobrough, William, boat builder and general agent, Bishop’s bridge,
-Thorpe hamlet
-Hodds, Catherine, grocer, Ber street
-Hodds, Richard Robert, tailor and hatter, Elm hill
-Hodds, Richard, tailor, Elm hill
-Hodgson, David, artist, Grey Friars’ Priory lane, King street
-Hodgson, James Lincolne, solicitor’s clerk, St. Clement’s grove, New
-Catton
-Hogg, Henry, Rose inn, Magdalen st.
-Hogg, Mr. James, Distillery street
-Hogg, Noah, shoe manufacturer, Sussex street
-Holden, James, plasterer, Fox and Hounds’ court, Ber street
-Holder, Reuben, fancy repository, St. Stephen’s street
-Holl, Alfred Samuel, commercial traveller, Chapel Field road
-Holl, Charlotte, general shopkeeper, Peacock street
-Holl, George, shoemaker, All Saints’ green
-Holl, Mr. Robert Durrant, Mount Pleasant
-Holl, William, boot and shoe maker, Castle street
-Holl, William Gurney, boot maker, Suffolk street, Union place, Heigham
-Holland, Mrs. Catherine, ham and bacon curer, Lower Goat lane
-Holland, Edward Christopher, surgeon, St. Stephen’s Villa, St. Stephen’s
-road
-Holland, Mrs. Emily, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Holland, Francis, butcher, St. Benedict’s road
-Hollaway, Rev. Charles, The Close
-Hollis, Robert, Shakespeare tavern, Theatre street
-Holman, George, green grocer, King street
-Holmes and Sons, engineers, millwrights, and agricultural implement
-manufacturers, works, Prospect place and Castle hill (_see
-Advertisement_, _pp._ 2, 3)
-Holmes, Edmund, beer retailer and carter, Lower Westwick street
-Holmes, Edmund, beer retailer, Royal Oak, Upper King street
-Holmes, Mrs. Esther (establishment for young ladies) St. Stephen’s road
-Holmes, Frederick, engineer, Globe lane
-Holmes, George Thomas (see Holmes and Son) All Saints’ green
-Holmes, George, green grocer, St. Augustine’s
-Holmes, George, clerk at Union Fire and Life Office; h New Lakenham
-Holmes, Mr. Henry, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Holmes, James (see Holmes and Son,) Globe lane
-Holmes, James, grocer, draper, and beer retailer, King street
-Holmes, Mary Ann, dressmaker, Museum court, St. Andrew’s
-Holmes, Richard, town traveller, Bracondale
-Holmes, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Rigby’s court, St. Giles’
-Holmes, Robert, hairdresser, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Holmes, William, blacking manufacturer, Coburgh street
-Homan and Co., shoe manufacturers, Bethel street
-Homes and Son, blacking manufacturers, Anchor court, Surrey street
-Homes, John, boot maker, Surrey street
-Homewood, Miss Anna, milliner, Brazen Doors road
-Hood, John Henry, bricklayer and plasterer, Rupert street, Union place
-Hood, Robert, builder, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Hood, William, builder and contractor, Sussex street
-Hook, Joseph, butcher, St. Stephen’s street
-Hook, Joseph John, grocer, draper, and bricklayer, Brazen Doors road
-Hook, Samuel Beckett, tailor, St. George’s plain
-Hooper, John, druggist, Hall road, Lakenham
-Hopkins, John, Bethel street
-Hopkins, Stephen (lodging-house) Lower close
-Hopper, Henry William, British schoolmaster, Trafalgar st., New Lakenham
-Hopson, Mrs. Charlotte, lodging-house keeper, 14, Castle Meadow
-Horne, John, estate agent, Castle Meadow
-Horne, Robert, boot and shoe manufacturer, Little London street; h
-Heigham road
-Horner, Charles, land agent and surveyor, Saint Martin’s at Palace
-Horner, Mrs., lodging-house keeper, St. Mary’s alley, Pitt street
-Hornor, Robert T., ironmonger, &c., Post Office street
-Horsley, William, cabinet maker, St. Augustine’s
-Horth, William, shoemaker, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Hoste, Rev. George Charles, Grove terrace, Unthank’s road
-Hotblack, John and Co., shoe manufacturers and leather merchants, Orford
-hill; h Bracondale
-Hotblack, Mr. John, Bracondale
-Hotblack, Mrs. Virtue, Heigham road
-Hotson, Wales Christopher, barrister, Grey Friars’, King street
-Hough and Son, J., cheese factors, oil refiners, and grease
-manufacturers, and dealers in rosin, Castle Meadow
-Houghton, David, dyer, 4, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Houghton, Eliza, dyer, Prince’s street
-Houghton, Henry, Wounded Hart, Upper Market
-Houghton, Mr. Henry John, All Saints’ green
-Houghton, John, dyer, Ten Bell lane
-Houghton, Miss Louisa, dressmaker, Upper Market
-Houghton, Robert, boat builder, St. Faith’s lane
-Houghton, Robert, boat builder, Grout’s Thoroughfare, Orford hill
-Houghton, Robert, joiner, builder, and grocer, Ber street
-Houghton, Robert E., house steward at Norfolk and Norwich Hospital
-Houghton, Thomas, green grocer, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Houghton, William, merchant’s clerk, Charles street, Heigham
-Housego, Jemima, lodging-house keeper, Rose lane
-Housego, William, artist, 21, Upper King street
-Housedane, Joseph, second-hand clothes dealer, Lower Westwick street
-Hovell, Elizabeth, day school, Rupert street, Union place
-Hovell, Mrs. R., Distillery street
-Hovell, William, basket maker, Charing cross
-Howard, Miss Ann, dressmaker, Theatre street
-Howard, Ann, beer retailer, Fishgate st.
-Howard, Mrs. Ann, private lodging-house keeper, Grove place, Lakenham
-Howard, Anna, linen warehouse, St. Stephen’s street
-Howard, Miss Anne, ladies’ boarding school, Unthank’s road
-Howard, Benjamin, John street, Rose lane
-Howard, Charles, The Duke of York, Thorpe hamlet
-Howard, Charles H., builder, bricklayer, &c., Bishopgate street
-Howard and Co., wholesale and retail millinery establishment, Victoria
-house, London street
-Howard, Daniel, baker and shopkeeper, Barrack street
-Howard, Emanuel Simon, Venetian blind manufacturer, Rose lane
-Howard, Mrs. Emily, milliner, St. Faith’s lane
-Howard, Everett and Thomas, bricklayers and plasterers, Peacock street
-Howard, George, upholsterer, John street, Rose lane
-Howard, George, coachsmith and green grocer, Little Orford street
-Howard, James, tripe dresser, Thorn lane
-Howard, James, shoemaker, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Howard, James, bricklayer and builder, King street
-Howard, James, plumber, glazier, and painter, Sardinian tavern, St.
-Stephen’s street
-Howard, John, bricklayer and plasterer, Fishgate street
-Howard, John, carver, Bethel street
-Howard, Mrs. Mary Ann, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Howard, Riches and Watts, engineers and millwrights, iron and brass
-founders, &c., Duke’s Palace iron works (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 6)
-Howard, Robert, grocer, New Catton
-Howard, Robert, shoemaker, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Howard, Samuel, shoemaker, Peacock street
-Howard, Mr. Samuel, St. Saviour’s lane
-Howard, Thomas, bricklayer, The Red Lion, Bishopgate street
-Howard, William, pork butcher, Catton road
-Howard, William, carpenter and builder, Bishopgate street
-Howard, Z., baker, &c., near the church, New Catton
-Howell, Henry, shopkeeper, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Howell, Henry, well sinker, Baker’s road, St. Augustine’s
-Howell, James, carpenter, St. Augustine’s
-Howell, Miss Mary, 25, Paragon street, Heigham
-Howell, William, leather seller, Lower Goat lane
-Howe, John, carter, Red Lion, Magdalen street
-Howes, Abraham, boot and shoe maker, Rampant Horse street
-Howes, Mrs. Ann, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Howes, Ann and Son, grocers and tea dealers, and tallow chandlers, St.
-Giles’ hill; manufactory, Ber street, (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 22)
-Howes, Charles, boot and shoe maker, and general shopkeeper, Magdalen
-street
-Howes, Deborah, cloak, mantle, and dress maker, Magdalen street
-Howes, Mrs. Eliza, Valentine street, Heigham
-Howes, George Smith, City Arms, St. Andrew’s Hall plain
-Howes, Henry, beer retailer, Lower King street
-Howes, James A., printer, (see Howes and Soman) 4, St. Andrew’s hill
-Howes, James, market gardener, Magdalen street
-Howes, James, White Lion, Magdalen street
-Howes, Jeremiah, hotpresser, Howes’ yard, St. Miles’
-Howes, John, Esq., 4, The Crescent
-Howes, John, Rupert street, Union place
-Howes, John, (see Howes, Ann and Son) tallow chandler and grocer, St.
-Giles’ hill
-Howes, John, shopkeeper and lodging house, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Howes, Joseph and James, coach and harness makers, Red Lion street
-Howes, Richard, boot and shoe maker, Magdalen street
-Howes, Richard, hawker, Tinkler’s lane
-Howes, Robert Heron, Adam and Eve Gardens, Tabernacle street
-Howes, Mrs. Sarah, Upper close
-Howes, Thomas, hotpresser, Church street, St. Miles’
-Howes, Thomas, shoemaker, Russell st.
-Howes, Thomas Self, coach builder, Rose lane and Castle meadow
-Howes, William, green grocer, Cowgate street
-Howes, William, shoemaker, Heigham causeway
-Howes, William Cooper, writer and grainer, and gas fitter, Boarded court,
-Ber street; h Newmarket road (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 23)
-Howlett and Co., furnishing and general ironmongers, oil and colormen,
-and ironfounders, 6, Old Haymarket
-Howlett, Henry, tunist; h St. Benedict’s road
-Howlett, Eliza, grocer, Lower Westwick street
-Howlett, John W., currier, (see Tillyard and Howlett)
-Howlett, Richard, tailor, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Howlett, Robert, carpenter, St. Augustine’s
-Howlett, Thomas, grocer, Lower Westwick street
-Howlett, Walter, tunist, Valentine street, Heigham
-Howlett, William, pianoforte and music warehouse, 2, The Walk
-Howlett, William, pianoforte tuner, Valentine street
-Howman, Samuel, provision dealer, Upper market
-Howman, William, White Lion, and horse and gig letter, Oak street, St.
-Martin’s
-Hubbard, Mrs. Hannah, staymaker, Westlegate street
-Hubbard, Henry, plumber, glazier, and painter, Westlegate street
-Hubbard, Henry, Coopers’ Arms, Prince’s street
-Hubbard, James, brewer, and wine, spirit, and porter merchant, Magdalen
-street
-Hubbard, James, cowkeeper, Northumberland street, Heigham
-Hubbard, Miss Jane, All Saints’ green
-Hubbard, Sarah, dyer, Golden Dog lane
-Hubbard, Thomas, Wellington place, Grove road
-Huby, Mrs. Elizabeth, 20, Distillery st.
-Huby, Richard, cabinet maker, Lower Westwick street
-Hudbud and Son, auctioneers and appraisers, Upper Westwick street
-Hudson, E., straw bonnet maker, West Pottergate street
-Hudson, George Edmund, shoemaker, West Pottergate street
-Hudson, John, boot and shoe maker, West Pottergate street
-Hudson, Mrs. Mary Ann, 6, Grapes’ hill
-Huggins, Charles, beer retailer, King street
-Huggins, Edward, cowkeeper, Hall road, Lakenham
-Huggins, James, working cutler, Rising Sun lane
-Huggins, John, wheelwright and blacksmith, Chapel Field road
-Huggins, John, photographic artist, 17, Davey place
-Huggins, Miss Maria, upholsterer, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Hughes, Ann, milliner and dress maker, Upper Westwick street
-Hughes, William, Bath House, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Hull, Mrs. Hannah, Redwell street
-Hull, William Henry, baker and confectioner, Coslany street
-Hulme, John Hughes, chemist and druggist, St. Andrew’s Hall plain (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 11)
-Humphrey, John, clerk, Essex street, Union place
-Humphery, Susan, beer retailer, Sussex street
-Humphery, William, shopkeeper and bricklayer, Pump street
-Hunn, Philip, carpenter and shopkeeper, Rising Sun lane
-Hunt, Alfred, bookseller and stationer, and circulating library, and
-agent to the Briton Life Assurance Compy., Orford hill
-Hunt, George, branch post-office, Dereham road
-Hunt, James, pastrycook and confectioner, 62, St. Stephen’s street
-Hunt, John, working cutler and confectioner, Upper Westwick street
-Hunt, John, grocer and tea dealer, Quay side
-Hunt, Joseph William, shoemaker, Trafalgar street
-Hunt, Mrs. H., Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Hunter, William, upholsterer, (see Clarke and Hunter)
-Hurn, Daniel, rope manufacturer, Dove street; h Unthank’s road
-Hurn, George, hemp and sack merchant and waterproof cover maker, Dove
-street; h Mount Pleasant
-Hurn, Mary and Elizabeth, milliners, Bunk street
-Hurrell, William, fishmonger, Magdalen gates
-Hurry, John, shoemaker, Cross lane
-Hurry, Thomas, church bell hanger, 2, Bethel street
-Huson and Co., lace, velvet, satin, veils, scarfs, shawl, and French and
-English millinery establishment, London street
-Huson, Mrs. Mary, Crescent place, Chapel Field road
-Huson, Robert, linen draper, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Hussey, William, nurseryman, seedsman, and florist, Horticultural
-gardens, St. Catherine’s plain
-Hutchison, Charles, M.D., Surrey street
-Hutchison, G. S., surgeon, Surrey street
-Hutson, George, St. Catherine’s plain
-Hutton, John, tea dealer, Old Haymarket
-Hutton, Mr. John William, Mount Pleasant
-Hyams, Emanuel, London and Birmingham warehouse, 5 and 6, St. Andrew’s
-Hall plain
-Ibrook, Mr. Richmond, 8, Newmarket terrace
-Ilott, William, (see Hall and Ilott) St. Stephen’s
-Ineson, Joseph, rag merchant, Elm hill; h Distillery street
-Isaac, Edward, baker, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Isaacs, John, slipper manufacturer, Magdalen street
-Isbell, Miss Maria, milliner and dressmaker, Charles street, Heigham
-Isbill, Charles, butcher, Charing cross
-Iungius, Mrs. Jemima, printer and stationer, Pottergate street
-Iungius, Miss Kate, milliner, Theatre street
-Ives, Miss Ann Sarah, boarding school, 13, The Crescent, Chapel Field
-road
-Ives, Charles, butcher, Magdalen street
-Ives, Capt. Ferdinand, St. Catherine’s hill
-Ives, George, auctioneer, valuer, and estate agent, Crown Bank plain
-Ives, John, Bakers’ Arms, Ber street
-Ives, John C., commercial traveller, Brazen Doors road
-Ives, Richard N., local manager Unity Life and Fire Association, 72, St.
-Giles’ street; h Lower King street
-Iveson, Mrs. Rebecca, butcher, Union street, Crook’s place
-Jacobs, John, butcher, St. Catherine’s plain
-Jackson, Mrs. Charlotte, Lame Dog road
-Jackson, Edward, butcher, Pottergate street
-Jackson, Hannah, green grocer, Pump street
-Jackson, Henry Charles, musician, Fishgate street
-Jackson, James, musician, Cowgate street
-Jackson, Joseph, linen draper, All Saints’ green
-Jackson, Mrs. Mary, Bracondale
-Jackson, Rev. Oliver, Primitive Methodist preacher, Mill hill, New Catton
-Jackson, William, musician, Prince’s street
-Jackson, William, sen., musician and green grocer, Fishgate street
-Jackson, William, general shopkeeper, Coburg street
-James, Grace, lodging-house keeper, Rose lane
-James, Henry, King’s Arms, Bishop Bridge, Thorpe hamlet
-James, Henry, chemist and druggist, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-James, John, general shopkeeper, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-James, Wallace, beer retailer, St. John’s street
-James, William, Imperial Arms, Upper King street
-Jarman, Thomas, Royal Oak, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Jarrett, Thomas, dyer and furniture broker, Magdalen street
-Jarrold and Sons, booksellers, binders, printers, publishers, and
-wholesale stationers, London street, and 3, Exchange street
-Jarrold, Mr. Samuel; h Bracondale (see Jarrold and Sons)
-Jarrold, Mr. Thomas; h The Mount, Thorpe hamlet (see Jarrold and Sons)
-Jarrold, Mr. William P., Newmarket road
-Jarvis, Mr. Henry, Thorpe terrace, Thorpe hamlet
-Jarvis, Henry, railway and general carrier and carman, Lucas’ wharf,
-Thorpe hamlet (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 35)
-Jarvis, John, county court bailiff, Pump street
-Jarvis, Joseph, grocer, Fishgate street
-Jarvis, Mrs. R., Codogan place, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Jarvis, William, Pine Apple, market gardener and farmer, Trowse
-Jarvis, Mr. William, Trafalgar place, Hall road
-Jarvis, William, merchant’s clerk, 6, Langham place, Dereham road
-Jay, Benjamin, florist, St. Faith’s lane
-Jay, Charles, fishmonger, Market place; h Unthank’s road
-Jay, George, mohair manufacturer, King street
-Jay, George, fish merchant, The Fishmarket; h Fisher’s lane, St. Giles’
-street
-Jay, Mr. George, Bracondale (see Jay and Pilgrim)
-Jay, James, gardener, Upper King street
-Jay, Joshua, dyer, &c., Bethel street
-Jay, John, window glass, sheet lead, pipe and color merchant, St.
-Andrew’s hill
-Jay, John, baker, 12, West Pottergate street
-Jay, Joseph Burcham, shopkeeper, Lower King street
-Jay, Mrs. Mary, 3, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Jay and Pilgrim, solicitors, Toll’s court, Briggs’ street
-Jay, Mr. Thomas B., Heigham grove, St. Giles’ road
-Jeans, Edwin, bookseller, binder, and stationer, White Lion street
-Jeary, Robert, bookseller, binder, stationer, &c., 4 and 5, Bridewell
-alley; h Mount Pleasant
-Jeckell, Rev. George, Unthank’s road
-Jeckell, George, grocer, Ber Street gates
-Jeckell, Thomas, architect, Bank court, Queen street
-Jecks, Mrs. Sarah, 2, York place, Chapel Field road
-Jecks, William and Charles, timber merchants, St. Faith’s lane
-Jefferies, William, beer retailer, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Jeffries, Mrs. Emily, milliner, 56, St. Giles’ street
-Jeffries, George, gun and pistol maker, Golden Ball street
-Jeffries, Leamon, The Griffin, King street
-Jeffries, Robert, grocer and draper, King street
-Jeffries, Mr. Samuel, Brazen Doors road
-Jeffries, Walter Loud, (see Burrage and Jeffries); h Caledonia terrace,
-Dereham road
-Jennings, Samuel, wholesale shoe manufacturer, Theatre street
-Jennings, Samuel, sawyer, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Jennings, Thomas, hatter, Magdalen street
-Jennis, John, gardener, Lower Westwick street
-Jermy, Jeremiah, green grocer, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Johnson, Ambrose, pawnbroker, &c., Lower Westwick street
-Johnson, Charles, timber dealer, Trowse
-Johnson, Mr. Charles, Woodlands, Dereham road
-Johnson, Daniel, timber dealer, Trowse
-Johnson, Edward, Esq., Pitt street
-Johnson, Edwin, brush maker, Devonshire place, Holl’s lane
-Johnson, Gilman, and Co., shoe manufacturers, Pottergate street
-Johnson, Harriet, dressmaker, Lower Westwick street
-Johnson, Jacob, linen draper, (see Lovick and Johnson)
-Johnson, James, M.D., The Chantry, Theatre street
-Johnson, John, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Johnson, John Godwin, surgeon, 64, St. Giles’ street
-Johnson, John Sewell, baker and confectioner, Cowgate street
-Johnson, Robert, register office for servants, 26, Castle meadow
-Johnson, Samuel, medical botanist, Vauxhall street
-Johnson, Sarah and Anna, day school, Rose lane
-Johnson, Sewell John, baker, &c., Upper Westlegate street
-Johnson, Susanna, confectioner, Rampant Horse street
-Johnson, Thomas, solicitor’s clerk, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Johnson, Mr. William, Lothian street
-Johnston, Fergus, agent for Virtue and Co., publishers, 5, Jay’s terrace,
-Rose lane
-Jolly, Charles William, carriage and harness manufacturer, St. Stephen’s
-gates; h Newmarket road
-Jolly, John, King’s Arms, Hall road
-Jolly, Robert, stationer, Vauxhall street
-Jones, Mrs. Elizabeth, linen draper, &c., Briggs’ street
-Jones, James, butcher, Grove place, Lakenham
-Jones, Peter, plumber, painter, and glazier, St. Margaret’s Church alley
-Jones, Miss Sarah, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Jones, William, plumber, 1, St. Gregory’s Church passage
-Jordan, Mrs. Rachel Elizabeth, boot and shoe maker, Bridge street, St.
-Miles’
-Joseph and Samuel, pawnbrokers, silversmiths, shoe manufacturers, &c.,
-Timberhill street
-Joseph, Maurice, (see Joseph and Samuel) Timberhill street
-Joy, Mrs. Charlotte, 25, Newmarket road
-Joy, Matthew, Calvert street
-Joyce, Mrs. Charlotte, St. Giles’ road
-Joyce, James, last and boot-tree maker, Ber street
-Juba, Edmund, ticket writer and tobacconist, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Kahler, John Henry, baker, &c., Rose lane
-Kedenton, Samuel, boot and shoe maker, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Kedge, Robert, beer retailer, Duke street
-Kedge, Thomas, grocer, Ber street
-Keeble, Mrs. Harriet, dressmaker, Rose lane
-Keeble, James, cabinet maker, John street
-Kehle, Joseph, watch and clock maker, Stump cross, Magdalen street
-Keith, Mr. Frederick, Bracondale
-Keith, Mr. Thomas, Bracondale
-Kemp, George Pank, hair cutter and perfumer, 17, Exchange street
-Kemp, Henry, proprietor of reading and billiard rooms, Market place
-Kemp, Mr. Henry, 8, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Kemp, Isaac, Chapel Field road
-Kemp, James, green grocer, St. Lawrence lane
-Kemp, James, horse-hair seating and crinoline manufacturer, and furniture
-broker, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Kemp, Mrs. Mary, tea dealer, Golden Dog lane
-Kemp, Thomas, saddler and harness maker, Great Orford street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 26)
-Kemp, William and Son, shoe manufacturers, 18, Pitt street
-Kemp, William, The Tuns Inn, St. Giles’ gates
-Kempster, John, auctioneer, valuer, accountant, and estate agent; agent
-to the English Widows’ Fund and General Life, the State Fire, Plate
-Glass, and Accidental Death, and Agricultural Cattle and Hail Storm
-Insurance Compys., Davey place
-Kempster, Rev. John Joseph James, minister at Countess of Huntingdon’s
-chapel, The Tabernacle; h Westbeech house, St. Benedict’s road
-Kempster, Mrs., boarding and day school, Westbeech house, St. Benedict’s
-road
-Kenney, Edmund Thomas, Cabinet-makers’ Arms, Redwell street
-Kent, Alfred, rag merchant, Upper Goat lane
-Kent, Charles, Bull Inn, St. Paul’s st.
-Kent, Henry, hosier and shirt maker, 3, London street
-Kent, Mrs. Mary, butcher, St. Benedict’s street
-Kent, Robert, boot and shoe maker, 10 and 11, London street
-Kent, Thomas, The Light Horseman, Barrack street
-Kenyon, John, saw and file manufacturer, Lower Goat lane
-Keown, Mr., draper, &c., Valentine street, St. Benedict’s road
-Kerr, John, plumber, painter, and glazier, Lower Goat lane
-Kerr, Stephen John, printer and bookbinder, All Saints’ green
-Kerrison, George, traveller, Chapel Field road
-Kerrison, James, grocer and tea dealer, 6, Timberhill street
-Kerrison, James, watchmaker and provision dealer, Magdalen street
-Kerrison and Preston, solicitors; office, Bank plain
-Kerrison, Roger, solicitor, clerk to Norfolk Justices at the Shirehall,
-and to Norwich Gas Light Compy., (limited) commissioner for taking
-acknowledgments of deeds by married women, commissioner to administer
-oaths in Chancery in England, and agent to the Alliance Fire and Life
-Assurance Compy., Tombland
-Kerrison, Mr. Simon, St. Saviour’s Church alley
-Kerridge, Elizabeth, general shopkeeper, St. Benedict’s street
-Kerridge, John, Reindeer, St. Benedict’s road
-Kerry, George, furniture broker, and rent and debt collector, St. Mary’s
-Kerry, George Caythorpe, accountant and debt collector, Elm hill
-Kerry, John, cabinet maker, St. Benedict’s street
-Kett, Elizabeth, Surrey inn, Grove place, Lakenham
-Kett, George, Willow place, Hall road, Lakenham
-Kett, Henry Watson, coal merchant, Hall road, Lakenham
-Kett, James, coach maker and postmaster, 73, St. Giles’ street
-Kett, James Frederick, dealer, The Swan, Magdalen street
-Kett, Petter Mullish, butcher, Magpie road
-Kett, William Woodhouse, linen draper, silk mercer, &c., London street,
-and 2, Exchange street
-Ketton, John, oilcake manufacturer, Rose lane; h The Close, and Sprowston
-Grange
-Ketton, Mr. John, Upper close
-Kew, Louisa, milliner, &c., 45, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Key, George, shopkeeper, Oak street
-Key, Joseph, whitesmith, Calvert street
-Key, Robert, cabinet maker, Holl’s lane, Heigham
-Key, Samuel, jun., shopkeeper, Upper Heigham
-Key, Samuel, Holl’s lane
-Key, Septimus, ginger beer manufacturer, Mansfield’s yard, St. Stephen’s
-street
-Keymer, Thomas, brewer’s clerk, King street
-Keyzor, Michael, optician, St. Giles’ street
-Kidd, Mrs. Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Cowgate street
-Kidd, Walter, jobbing gardener, West Pottergate street
-Kiddell, Joshua, ironmonger and earthenware dealer, Timberhill street
-Kiddle, Joshua, Calvert street
-Kilburn, William, William Tell, Castle hill
-Kilburn, William, clothier, St. Benedict’s street
-King, Edward, butcher, Southwell street, New Lakenham
-King, George, White Lion, Prince’s st.
-King, James, Bolingbroke’s stores, Bank plain, London street
-King, James, plumber and glazier, Prince’s street; h Grapes’ hill
-King, John and James, plumbers, glaziers, and painters, Prince’s street
-King, Mrs., curiosity shop, Back of the Inns
-King, Leonard, French polisher, Lower King street
-King, Mrs., Union place
-King, Mrs., Home Cottage, Unthank’s road
-King, Matilda and Rachel, dressmakers and milliners, Calvert street
-King, Robert, Artichoke inn, Magdalen gates
-King, Russell, grocer, Ber street
-King, Samuel, 3, Chapel Field road
-King, Samuel, Theatre tavern, Bethel st.
-King, Samuel Benjamin, Pine Apple, St. Martin’s lane
-King, Thomas, clerk and collector for Water Works Company, Alma terrace,
-Infirmary road
-King, Thomas Charles Rackham, plumber, painter, and glazier, Tombland and
-Elm hill (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 22)
-King, Tyrrell, umbrella maker, St. Saviour’s lane
-King, William Howes, tailor, Trafalgar street
-Kingdom, The Misses, dressmakers, 3, Sussex street
-Kinnebrook, Mr. William, Earlham road
-Kirkham, Dennis, cabinet maker and upholsterer, Redwell street
-Kirby, Joseph, hawker, Mill street, New Lakenham
-Kitson, John, solicitor, Thorpe hamlet, clerk to Dean and Chapter, Lower
-close; h Thorpe hamlet
-Kittmer, Miss Charlotte Rice, Queen street
-Kitton, Frederic, tobacco and snuff manufacturer, 10, Old Haymarket; h
-Dereham road
-Kitton, George, merchant, St. Faith’s lane
-Kitton, Mrs. Lucy, Magdalen street
-Kitton, Robert, architect and surveyor, Tuck’s court, St. Giles’ street
-Klein, Mrs. A., fancy repository, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Klein, Herr Hermann, professor of the German language, Bridge street, St.
-Andrew’s
-Knevett and Hall, dressmakers, Magdalen street
-Knevett, Harriet, milliner and dress maker, Upper Westwick street
-Knevett, Henry, shopkeeper, 38, Magdalen street
-Knevett, Henry, beer retailer, Unthank’s road
-Knevett, Jonathan, whitesmith, Upper Westwick street
-Knights and Ballord, pawnbrokers, All Saints’ green
-Knights, Charlotte, pawnbroker, Ber street
-Knights, George, fishmonger, Heigham street
-Knights, James, pawnbroker, Upper Westwick street
-Knights, Robert, merchant’s clerk, Dereham road
-Knights, Robert, shoemaker, Eldon row, Chapel Field road
-Knights, Susannah, Boarded House, Castle hill
-Knight, Thomas, bird preserver, Upper King street
-Knowles, Mrs. Hannah, milliner and dressmaker, Rising Sun lane
-Lacey, Esau, baker and shopkeeper, Bishopgate street
-Lacey, George Plummer, builder and contractor, Surrey road
-Lacey, Horace, builder, Surrey street; h St. Faith’s terrace
-Lacey, James William, builder, &c., Surrey street
-Lacey, John, plumber, painter, and glazier, St. Margaret’s lane
-Lacey, John Greenwood, bricklayer and plasterer, Ber street
-Lacey, Robert, commercial traveller, Thorpe hamlet
-Lacey, William, White Horse, and bricklayer, Castle hill
-Lacey, William Randall, carpenter and builder, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Ladbrooke, John Barney, drawing master, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Ladell, Sarah, lodging-house keeper, Magdalen street
-Ladell, Mr. William, Newmarket road
-Ladyman, Joseph Harrison, tea dealer, 6, Gentlemen’s Walk; h New road,
-Town close
-Laflin, Mr. Joseph, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Lain, Edward, bookseller and circulating library, Elm hill
-Lake, James, baker, Colegate street
-Lake, James, shoemaker and clothier, Red Lion street
-Lake, Mr. John, Wellington place, Grove road
-Lake, John, shopkeeper, Greyhound lane, St. Benedict’s road
-Lake, Samuel, baker and confectioner, Colegate street
-Lake, William, grocer, tea dealer, oil and Italian warehouseman, &c.,
-Surrey corner, St. Stephen’s
-Lake, William, classical and commercial academy, St. Benedict’s road
-Lamb, Andrew, green grocer, Heigham street, St. Benedict’s
-Lamb, Benjamin Charles, coal merchant, Magdalen street
-Lamb, Mrs. Elizabeth, Castle meadow
-Lamb, Frederick, cordwainer, Adelaide street, Heigham fields
-Lamb, James, butcher, Market place
-Lamb, Leonard, butcher, Ber street
-Lamb, Leonard, butcher, Rupert street, Union place
-Lamb, Mrs. Sarah, wire worker, wire weaver, and corn dressing, and
-blowing machine maker, Golden Ball street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 10)
-Lamb, Thomas, pork butcher, St. James’ street
-Lamb, William, pork butcher, Grapes’ hill
-Lambert, Charles, shoemaker, Fishgate street
-Lambert, Eliza Mrs., dressmaker, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Lambert, Mr. Francis, Mount Pleasant
-Lambert, Francis, tea and coffee merchant, 6 and 7, Lower Goat lane
-Lambert, Mr. James, 8, Grove place, St. Giles’ road
-Lambert, Martin, Windsor Castle, Pockthorpe
-Lambert, Mrs., Queen street
-Lamercon, Francis, Dove, St. James’ street
-Lammas, Brothers, tea dealers, 1, The Walk
-Land, Henry, baker, Rupert street
-Land, William, gas fitter, St. Peter’s Mancroft
-Landy, Mrs. Charlotte, 6, The Crescent
-Lane, James, Three Pigeons, Charing cross
-Lane, Joseph, hosier, All Saints’ green
-Langley, John, market gardener, Holl’s lane
-Langton, Edward, librarian, Little Bethel street
-Lanham, Gilbert, boot and shoe maker, Lower King street
-Lanham, Gilbert, waterman, Lower King street
-Lanham and Sword, hairdressers, perfumers, &c., 4, St. Giles’ street
-Lantenant, Camille Louis, teacher of languages, Prince’s street
-Large, John, tallow chandler, White Friars’ street
-Large, John, tallow chandler and shopkeeper, Julian street, Julian place
-Larke, Edward Norman, boot and shoe maker, Ber street
-Larkman, Henry, furniture broker, St. Benedict’s street
-Larkman, James, shoemaker, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Larkman, James, shopkeeper, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Larkman, Robert, beer retailer, Lower Westwick street
-Larkman, William, green grocer, St. Augustine’s gates
-Larkman, William, tailor, professor of singing, and inventor of an
-improved sol-fa system, Gildengate street
-Larkman, William, baker and shopkeeper, Lower King street
-Larkman, William Augustus, corn merchant, Lower King street
-Larn, Samuel, boot maker, Magdalen street
-Larn, William, shoemaker, St. Margaret’s Church alley
-Laskey, Mary Ann, Gold Beaters’ Arms, Bethel street
-Laurence, Michael Calver, St. Julian’s tavern, St. Julian’s street
-Lawrence, Mrs. Rebecca, Botolph street
-Lawrence, William, upholsterer and paper hanger, 49, Pottergate street
-Law, Mrs. Alfred, Unthank’s road
-Lawes, Robert Curll, seedsman, Julian street
-Lawn, Lubbuck, beer retailer, Upper Westwick street
-Lawn, William, The White Lion, St. Benedict’s street
-Laws, George, beer retailer, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Laws, James, Wine tavern, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Laws, John, Victoria tavern, Magdalen street
-Laws, Robert, blacksmith, Lothian street
-Laws, Robert, straw hat manufacturer, Westlegate street
-Laws, Robert, The Swiss Cottage, and blacksmith, Dereham road
-Laws, William, manager at Mr. Read’s mill, Bracondale
-Lawson, William, commercial traveller, Dereham road
-Lawter, Ellen, dressmaker, St. Julian’s street, Thorn lane
-Laxen, Miss, St. Giles’ terrace, Bethel street
-Lay, George, cabinet maker, Bethel street
-Lay, William Robert, chemist and druggist, Rupert street, Union place
-Layton, Mr. Buxton, Mount Pleasant
-Leach, George, gas fitter and bell hanger, Lower Goat lane (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 23)
-Leach, James, baker, Union street, Crook’s place
-Leach, Philip, carpenter and builder, St. Martin’s lane
-Leach, Mr. William, Golding street, Dereham road
-Leamon, George, green grocer, Bull close
-Leamon, Robert, tanner, currier and leather merchant, Upper Market, and
-Whitwell, Norfolk
-Leamon, Thomas, baker, All Saints’ green
-Leath, Thomas Thorne, house and estate agent, Charles street, Heigham
-Leavins, Bailey, printer, (see Cundall, Miller, and Leavins); h Cross
-street, Unthank’s road
-Lebbell, Thomas, blacksmith, Heigham street
-Lee, George, commercial coffee and eating house, Market place
-Lee, William, shoemaker, All Saints’ green
-Leech, Jane, stay maker, St. George’s plain
-Leeds, Mrs. Julia, 58, St. Giles’ street
-Leeds, Mrs., 6, Somerleyton street
-Leeds, Miss Sarah, Thorpe hamlet
-Leeds, Sarah and Elizabeth, shopkeepers, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Le Fevre, Thomas, engineer and boiler maker, St. Stephen’s street
-Legood, Elizabeth, Butchers’ Arms, Ber street
-Legood, Samuel, hay dealer, Prospect square
-Leggett, Daniel, baker, Silver road
-Leggatt, John, blacksmith, Scoles’ green; h Ber street
-Leggatt, Samuel, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Leggett, John, blacksmith, Thorn Tavern court, Ber street
-Leggett, Miss Sarah, straw bonnet maker, 5, Crescent place, Chapel Field
-road
-Le Grys, William, wheelwright and carpenter, Trowse
-Leist, James, house carpenter and joiner, and plane maker, Wensum street
-Leman, Mrs. Emily, lodging-house keeper, Bethel street
-Leman, Robert, manager at Union Office
-Lemille, Mrs. Ann, West End place, Grove place, Lakenham
-Lemmon, Robert, printer, Willow lane, St. Giles’
-Lemon, Thomas, baker and confectioner, All Saint’s street
-Lemon, William, horse breaker, 12, St. Stephen’s square
-Le Neve, Charles, baker, Fishgate street
-Leney, Samuel, merchant, Thorpe hamlet
-Le Strange, Thomas, grocer, Pump street
-Leveaux and Compy., wine and spirit merchants, Liverpool; principal agent
-for Norwich and Norfolk. William E. Filbey; office, Stamp Office yard,
-St. Andrew’s, Broad street
-Leverett, George, eating house, St. Benedict’s gates
-Levern, James, boot and shoe maker, Calvert street
-Levere, Miss, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Levine, Joseph, tobacconist, Upper Westwick street
-Levine, Moses, cigar merchant, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Lewis, Mrs., 2, Albert place, St. Stephen’s place
-Llewfinly, Thomas, general shopkeeper, Cherry street, New Lakenham
-Liddelow, Robert, London Tavern, St. Andrew’s hill
-Liffen, John, bookbinder, Gildengate street
-Lilly, Mrs. Maria, milliner and dressmaker, Bishopgate street
-Lincoln, James, baker, Lower King street
-Lincoln, James, shoe manufacturer, 14, Pottergate street
-Lincoln, James, baker, Thorpe hamlet
-Lincoln, John, tobacco pipe and lucifer manufacturer, Pump street
-Lincoln, Mrs. Mary Ann, infant schoolmistress, Hall road, Lakenham
-Lincoln, Morris, Old Church path, Lakenham
-Lincoln, Morris, hairdresser and glover, Chapel street, Union place
-Lincoln, Robert, beer retailer, Mill street, Lakenham
-Lincolne, Miss Elizabeth (school) Surrey street
-Lines, Philip, Somerleyton tavern, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Linford, Robert, watchmaker, Red Lion street
-Ling, Abraham, Shirehall tavern, Castle meadow
-Ling, Edmund, banker’s clerk, Botolph street
-Ling, George, builder and contractor to the Local Board of Health, All
-Saints’ green
-Ling, Harriet, (day school) Bethel street
-Ling, Henry (classical and commercial boarding school) Unthank’s road
-Ling, William Samuel, tailor and robe maker, 19, Castle meadow
-Ling, Henry, solicitor, Willow lane
-Ling, James, lay clerk of the Cathedral, Heigham road
-Ling, Mrs. Julia Ann, (day school) 23, Sussex street
-Ling, William, Infirmary road
-Lingwood, Jeremiah, schoolmaster, St. Faith’s lane
-Linstead, Charles, green grocer, Lower King street
-Linstead, George, coal dealer, Southwell street, New Lakenham
-Linstead, Robert, grocer, Duke street
-Lister, John, manufacturing cutler and surgical instrument maker, 10½,
-Old Haymarket
-Littell, Charles, hosier and shoemaker, White Lion street
-Littell, Henry, accountant, St. Stephen’s road
-Littleproud, James, shopkeeper, Pottergate street
-Littleproud, Mrs. Susan, White Rose, Back of the Inns
-Littlewood, Ephraim, The Ship, Lower King street
-Littlewood, Frederick Burton, professor of music, Colegate street, St.
-Clement’s
-Littleboy, George, solicitor’s clerk, Lower close
-Littleboy, John, banker’s clerk, 10, Heigham terrace
-Littlewood, Sampson, accountant, St. Stephen’s road
-Livingstone, Thomas, shopkeeper, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Livock, Miss Hannah, St. Faith’s terrace, St. Faith’s lane
-Livock, James, brush maker, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Livock, Henry Briggs, beer retailer, Lower King street
-Livock, Mr. Jonathan, Synagogue street, St. Faith’s lane
-Livock, Samuel, bricklayer and shopkeeper, West Wymer street, Heigham
-Livock, William Thomas, tailor, woollen draper and hatter, 4, London
-street
-Lloyd, John Adolphus and Co., boot and shoe manufacturers, 20, and 21,
-Davey place; h Surrey terrace (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 4)
-Lloyd, Richard, merchant’s clerk, Heigham road
-Lloyd, Thomas, ecclesiastical and general mason, Rose lane
-Lloyde, Mrs. Frances, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Loades, Benjamin, land surveyor and lithographer, 55, Pottergate street
-Loads, Henry, shopkeeper, Lower King street
-Lock, Charles, confectioner, Exchange street
-Lock, Henry, St. Catherine’s plain
-Lock, Henry, boot and shoe maker, St. Stephen’s street
-Lock, Henry, grocer and tea dealer, St. Augustine’s (_see Advertisement_,
-_p._ 18)
-Lock, William, John Bull, Union street, Crook’s place
-Lockwood, Lewis, green grocer, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Lockwood, Maria, shopkeeper, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Lofty James, hairdresser, Colegate street
-Lohr, Eliza, Colegate street
-Lohr, Mrs. Lydia, ready-made linen warehouse, milliner, &c., 6, Briggs’
-street
-Lomas, William, saw maker, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Lombe, William, boot and shoe maker, St. James’ street
-London, William, Free Trade tavern, Rose lane
-Lonergan, Francis, The Dove, St. James’ street
-Long, John, farmer, Silver road
-Long, Joseph Page, baker, St. James’ street
-Long, Mrs. Mary, Crescent place, Chapel Field road
-Long, Walter, tailor and shopkeeper, Coslany street
-Loombe, Thomas, boot and shoe maker, Timberhill street
-Loose, James, broker, Botolph street
-Lord, Mr. Aaron, Unthank’s road
-Lord, George, brush maker, Lower Westwick street, St. Swithin’s
-Lord, John, wool buyer and yarn agent, Duke street
-Lorkin, Mrs. Virtue, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Lound, Thomas, agent for the County Fire and Provident Life Offices,
-Lower King street
-Louth, Robert, Rampant Horse inn, Rampant Horse street
-Love, Miss Amelia, dressmaker, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Love, Charles, plumber, painter, and glazier, Palace street
-Love, Mrs. Mary Ann, ticket writer, 2, Alma square, Julian place
-Love, William, Queen’s Head, Cowgate street, St. Paul’s
-Loveday, George, The Bee Hive, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Lovett, James, grocer, King street, Crook’s place
-Lovett and Kidd, fancy repository, Bank street
-Lovett, George, carpenter, West End street, Heigham
-Lovett, Henry, stationer, toy dealer and general fancy repository, St.
-Stephen’s street
-Lovick and Co., china, glass, and earthenware merchants, St. Andrew’s
-Broad street and Bridewell alley
-Lovick and Johnson, woollen drapers and haberdashers, London street
-Lovick, Mary Ann, green grocer, Ber street
-Lowe, Alfred, baker, Devonshire place, Holl’s lane
-Lowe, Frederick, baker, Ber street gates
-Lowe, George, baker, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Lowe, Joseph, baker and grocer, Gildengate street
-Lowne, James, shopkeeper, Cowgate street
-Lowne and Shaw, accountants, insurance agents, and agents to the
-Provident Clerks’ Life Association, Rampant Horse street
-Lowne, Mr. William Charles, (see Lowne and Shaw) Rampant Horse street
-Lucas, Brothers, builders and contractors, Norwich, Lowestoft, and
-Belvidere road, London
-Luckett, Henry, shopkeeper, Pottergate street, St. Giles’
-Ludlow, Henry, banker’s clerk, Town close, Newmarket road
-Lulham, Edwin Walter, shoe manufacturer, Bethel street
-Lusher, Mrs. Deborah, lodging-house keeper, 36, Victoria street, St.
-Stephen’s
-Lutchford, Henry, manager for Davies and Son, shoe manufacturers, Calvert
-street
-Mace, Elizabeth, draper, Grapes’ hill
-Mace, Gilbert, lucifer match manufacturer, Barrack street, Cowgate street
-Mace, James, Swan inn, Swan lane
-Mace, Mrs., dressmaker, Lothian street
-Mace, Mary Ann, The Grapes tavern, Church street, St. Miles’ Coslany
-Mace, Robert, farmer, Distillery street
-Mace, Robert, farmer, Upper Heigham street
-Mackie, Mrs. Mary Elizabeth, Heigham road
-Mackley, George William, gold and silversmith and working jeweller,
-Westlegate street
-Mackley, John, The Marquis of Granby, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Mackley, John Edward, tailor and draper, Westlegate street
-Mackley, Maria, grocer and tea dealer, Pottergate street
-Mackley, Richard, dealer in birds, The Original Dun Cow, St. Martin’s
-gates
-Mackley, Thomas, The Vine Tavern, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Madders, Anthony, accountant, Thorpe hamlet
-Madge, Giles, tuner of musical instruments, Botolph street
-Madge, Robert Alexander, teacher of music, Pitt street
-Main, Mrs. Susan, stay and corset maker, 4, Briggs’ street
-Malbon, Benjamin, glass cutter, St. Faith’s lane
-Mallett, Charles, machine maker, Fishgate street
-Mallett, Charles, tailor (see Mallet Francis and Charles); h Holly
-terrace, Unthank’s road
-Mallett, Christopher, silk manufacturer, Fishgate street
-Mallett, Francis and Charles, tailors and woollen drapers, 2, London
-street
-Mallett, Frederick, general shopkeeper, St. James’ street
-Mallett, Henry, brush manufacturer, Cross lane, St. George’s
-Mallett, Joseph Henry, mohair spinner, Lower King street
-Malster, Mr. Stephen, Botolph street
-Maltman, Janet, dressmaker, St. Benedict’s road
-Manby, Mrs. Elmira, Grapes’ hill
-Mandell, Robert, Model School yard, Prince’s street
-Mann, Cain, Lord Raglan, Pockthorpe
-Mann, Charles, tailor, Mount Pleasant
-Mann, Rev. John, Wesleyan preacher, Somerleyton street
-Mann, Joseph, turner and shopkeeper, St. Benedict’s road
-Mann, Joseph, shopkeeper, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Mann, Joseph Matthew, Mischief tavern, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Mann, Henry, pork butcher, Elm hill
-Mann, Henry, musician, John street, Rose lane
-Mann, Samuel, clerk, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Mann, Samuel, boot and shoe maker, Magdalen street
-Manning, George, tool manufacturer, Westlegate street
-Manning, Miss M. and C., dressmakers, Wellington street, Union place
-Manning, Prentice Squirrell, 2, Robinson’s terrace, Rose lane
-Manning, Mr. William, William street
-Manser, William, grocer and timber merchant, Thorn lane
-Mansfield, James, plumber, glazier, and painter, St. Stephen’s street; h
-Brunswick road
-Manthorpe, James, butcher, cabinet maker, branch post-office, Lower King
-street
-Margarson, Mrs. Ann, dressmaker, Alma square, Julian place
-Margerson, Mrs. Hannah, stay maker, St. Andrew’s Hall plain
-Markham, John, hatter and hosier, West Pottergate street
-Marner, Mr. William, Distillery street
-Marris, John, baker, Golding street, St. Benedict’s road
-Harrison, John, beer retailer, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Marrison, Robert, gun maker and ornamental engraver, Great Orford street
-Marrison, Samuel Ray, gun maker, Great Orford street
-Marsh, Edward, hairdresser, Lower King street
-Marshall, Edward, artist, Timberhill st.
-Marshall and Goffin, boot and shoe maker, Palace street
-Marshall, Joseph, Queen Adelaide, Pitt street
-Marshall, Joseph, tailor and woollen draper, Rampant Horse street
-Marshall, Peter, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Marshall, Robert, baker, Regent street, Crook’s place
-Marshall, Robert, baker, Magdalen street
-Marshall, Robert, green grocer, Lower Westwick street
-Marsham, Edward, carver and gilder, Church alley, St. Stephen’s
-Marsham, John, market gardener, Upper Heigham
-Marston, Alfred Abraham, currier and leather seller, Timberhill street; h
-All Saints’ green
-Marston, Richard, confectioner and pastry-cook, 13, Gentlemen’s walk
-Martin, Benjamin Abednego, wholesale and export shoe manufactory, and
-leather warehouse, St. Gregory’s Church alley; h 4, Earlham road terrace
-Martin, George and Richard, boot and shoe manufacturers, St. Gregory’s
-Church alley
-Martin, Mrs. Rebecca, West Pottergate street
-Martin, Robert, furniture broker, Quay side
-Martin, Robert Rowland, clerk, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Martin, Robert, sheriff’s officer, St. Peter’s at Mancroft, Market place
-Martin, Thomas, decorative artist and heraldic painter, Museum court, St.
-Andrew’s
-Martin, Thomas L., umbrella and parasol manufacturer, 39, London street
-Martin, William, Mariners’ lane
-Martineau, Miss Fanny Ann, Bracondale Hall
-Martins Josiah, carpenter, &c., Trowse
-Martins, Sarah, midwife, St. Martin’s lane
-Mase, Henry, grainer (see Pullen, Mase and Furse)
-Mason, George, commercial traveller, 20, Distillery street
-Mason, Henry, hairdresser, Ber street
-Mason, Henry John, auctioneer, appraiser and estate agent, Pottergate
-street; h Bethel street
-Mason, Henry, Sir John Barleycorn, Orford hill
-Mason, John, butcher, Golden Ball street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 23)
-Mason, John, plumber, glazier, and painter, Elm terrace, New Catton
-Mason, Peter, green grocer, Infirmary road
-Mason, Robert, cabinet maker, Alma terrace, Infirmary road
-Mason, Robert Staff, Dereham road
-Mason, Samuel, basket and sieve maker, Ber street
-Mason, Samuel Cutriss, butcher, Norfolk street, Union place
-Mason, Miss Sophia, 3, London terrace, St. Stephen’s road
-Mason, Thomas, shoemaker, Long row, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Mason, William, White Horse, Magdalen street
-Massingham, Arthur, clerk at Gurney’s bank; h Windsor terrace, Grove
-road, Lakenham
-Massingham, Henry A., clerk at Gurney’s bank; h Sprowston
-Massingham, Robert, baker, Bethel street; h Holl’s lane
-Master, Alfred, surgeon, Bethel street
-Matchett, Rev. Jonathan Chase, minor canon of Norwich cathedral, Lower
-close
-Matchett and Stevenson, publishers of the _Norfolk Chronicle_, and
-printers, bookbinders and stationers, Market place
-Matchett, William, Surrey road (see Matchett and Stevenson)
-Matthews, George, William the Fourth, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Matthews, John, Tabernacle street, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Matthews and Son, botanists, Dereham road
-Matthews, Samuel, accoucheur, Dereham road
-Matthews, William, Cupid and Bow, and dealer in hay and corn, St.
-Martin’s Palace plain
-Maxwell, Thomas, The Dolphin, Upper Heigham
-May, Eleanor, infant school, St. Mary’s plain
-May, James, boot and shoe maker, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Maydwell, James, boot maker, Bethel street
-Mayfield, James, boot and shoe manufacturer, Oxford street, Unthank’s
-road
-Mayhew, George, grocer, and furniture broker, Dereham road
-Mayhew, James, livery-stable keeper, Hale’s court, Chapel field
-Mays, Mrs. Charlotte, day school, Magdalen road
-Mays, George, solicitor’s clerk, 3, Grove Place terrace, Grove road
-Mayston, Edward, tea dealer, Distillery street
-Mc’Ilmorrow, John, draper, Coslany street
-Mc’Keown, Henry, travelling draper, St. Lawrence lane
-Meadows, Cornelius, earthenware dealer, Magdalen street
-Meachen, George, carpenter and builder, Barn road, Heigham
-Meachen, John, builder, West Pottergate street
-Meachen, Stephen Howlett, builder, &c., William street
-Meadows, George, china, glass, and earthenware dealer, Westlegate street
-Meadows, Jonathan, coach builder, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s; h St.
-Miles’
-Meadows, Jonathan, grocer, Coslany street
-Mealing and Mills, maltsters and coal merchants, Lower King street
-Mealing, Samuel Woodcock, merchant, Ipswich road (see Mealing and Mills)
-Mear, The Misses, Chapel loke
-Mear, Mr. William, architect, Surrey house, Surrey road
-Meek, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Meek, Joseph, chair maker, Charing cross
-Meen, Henry Percy, butcher, St. Stephen’s street
-Meens, William, tailor, Bartholomew st.
-Meers, William, lay clerk, Calvert street
-Melton, Frederick, chemist, druggist, &c., St. Benedict’s street
-Mendham, Wace Lockett, solicitor, town clerk, 8, St. Andrew’s Broad
-street; h Unthank’s road
-Menton, Mrs. Mary Ann, King’s Head, Gildengate street
-Merris, William, shopkeeper, New Catton
-Merry, John, cooper, Pottergate street
-Merry, Robert, merchant, Eastern Union wharf; h Earlham road
-Merry, Robert John, boot and shoe maker and shopkeeper, King Street gates
-Metcalf, Edward J., merchant’s clerk, Somerleyton street
-Metcalf, Francis, hot-presser and dyer, Colegate street
-Metcalf, John, tobacco-pipe maker, Coslany street
-Metcalf, Simon, clothier, St. Benedict’s street
-Metcalf, William, estate agent, Cadogan place, Bedford street, Unthank’s
-road
-Metcalfe, Joseph, chintz glazer, Peacock street
-Metteringham, Mr., Hall road, Lakenham
-Mickleburgh, John Henry, general clothier, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Mickleburgh, Robert, coal dealer, Nelson street, Upper Heigham
-Mickleburgh, Mrs. Phœbe, King street
-Mc’Michael, Mr., tea dealer, Valentine street
-Middleton, Alfred, carpenter, Trowse
-Middleton and Answorth, manufacturers, St. George’s mill, Calvert street
-Middleton, George, manufacturer, Calvert street; h The Grove, Ipswich
-road
-Middleton, George, Wellington place, Grove road
-Middleton, James, Hope Tavern, Calvert street
-Middleton, James, banker’s clerk, New road, Town close
-Middleton, Jeremiah, The Crown, St. George’s Bridge street
-Middleton, John, boot and shoe manufacturer, St. Augustine’s street
-Middleton, John, King’s Head, Magdalen street
-Middleton, John, tobacco manufacturer, Nelson street, Dereham road
-Middleton, Mrs. John, Surrey street
-Middleton, Mrs. Maria, dressmaker, Bishopgate street
-Middleton, Matthew, tea dealer, Oak street
-Middleton, Robert, fruiterer, and pork butcher, Cherry street, Lakenham
-Middleton, Thomas, beer retailer, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Middleton, Thomas, beer retailer, Albion tavern, Heigham street
-Middleton, Thomas, lodging-house keeper, St. Stephen’s gates
-Middleton, William, beer retailer, Coslany street
-Miles, Charles, chemist and druggist, St. Stephen’s street
-Miles, Mrs. Elizabeth, milliner and dressmaker, 5, Theatre street
-Miles, Francis, straw bonnet maker, Magdalen street
-Miles, Henry, commercial traveller, 15, Theatre street
-Miles, John, shopkeeper, Heigham Causeway
-Miles, Stephen, manufacturer, St. Augustine’s street
-Miles, Susan, grocer, Oak street
-Miles, Mr. William, Dereham road
-Millard, Charles William (see Millard and Son); h Prince’s street and
-Bradestone
-Millard, Mrs. Jane, Lower close
-Millard, William S. and Son, land agents and surveyors, Prince’s street
-Millard, William S., (see Millard and Son); h Old Catton
-Miller, Alfred, baker, St. Stephen’s gates
-Miller, Mrs. Amelia, tobacconist, and importer of cigars, 5, London
-street
-Miller, Arthur Russell, merchant’s clerk, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Miller, Miss Elizabeth, milliner, Westlegate street
-Miller, George Mingay, butcher, St. Catherine’s plain, Lakenham
-Miller, George Robert, carver, gilder, and cabinet maker, St. Andrew’s
-hill; h Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Miller, Henry, registrar of the Guildhall court, Bank chambers, Bank
-plain; h Newmarket road
-Miller, Henry Blake, clerk to the Board of Health, Bank chambers, Bank
-plain; h Ipswich road
-Miller, John, solicitor’s clerk, Freeman’s villas, Unthank’s road
-Miller, Samuel, bookseller, (see Cundall and Miller)
-Miller, Son, and Bugg, solicitors, Bank chambers, Bank plain
-Miller, Walter, baker, Upper King street
-Miller, Wallace S., Golden Dog lane
-Miller, William, green grocer, Heigham street
-Miller, William, tailor, Grapes’ hill
-Mills, Miss Ann, preparatory school for young gentlemen, Unthank’s road
-Mills, Charlotte, glove maker, Golden Ball street
-Mills, George Thomas, plasterer, St. Benedict’s street
-Mills, Mary Ann, beer retailer, Lower Goat lane
-Mills, Mr. Edward, Lakenham terrace, St. Catherine’s plain
-Mills, Mr. Jacob, Mount Pleasant
-Mills, James, yeast manufacturer, Oak street
-Mills, James, coal merchant, brick, tile, pipe, and pottery works, Castle
-meadow, and Chalk hill, Thorpe
-Mills, James, dyer, Coslany street
-Mills, Jeremiah, The Fighting Cocks, Coslany street
-Mills, Mr. Robert, Bracondale
-Milnes, Charles, manager for Mr. Lloyd, mason, Rose lane; h Castle meadow
-Mingay, Frederick, French polisher and furniture broker, Chapel street,
-Crook’s place
-Mingay, George Nelson, ladies’ London shoe warehouse and fancy
-repository, 7, Old Haymarket
-Minns, David, butcher, St. Benedict’s street
-Minns, Edward, assistant collector to Board of Health, Trory street,
-Unthank’s road
-Minns and Foyson, builders, Castle meadow
-Minns, Isaac, grocer, King street
-Minns, Mr. George William, Tombland (see Minns and Foyson)
-Minns, Jesse, dresser, St. Clement’s Church alley; h Sussex street, St.
-Augustine’s
-Minns, John, The Queen’s Arms, Magdalen street
-Minns, Robert, master of Doughty’s Hospital, Calvert street
-Minns, Robert, beer retailer, Cowgate street
-Minns, Robert, brass turner, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Minns, Samuel William, tailor, St. Benedict’s street
-Minns, Susanna, The Eagle, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Minns, William, shoemaker, Rising Sun lane
-Mitchell and Clarke, solicitors, Toll’s court, Briggs’ street
-Mitchell, Frederick, baker, &c., Palace st.
-Mitchell, John, (see Mitchell and Clarke); h Wymondham
-Mitchell, Robert, basket maker, Pitt street
-Mitchell, Mr. Samuel, Unthank’s road
-Mitchell, William, travelling draper, 4, Dereham Road terrace
-Mitson, James, bricklayer, Pump street
-Moll, Christopher, collector of market dues, Castle hill
-Moll, George, cab proprietor, St. Giles’ street; h Oxford street,
-Unthank’s road
-Moll, Richard, furniture broker, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Moll, Robert, Black Horse, St. Giles’
-Moll, William, draper, (see Gooderson and Moll); h Heigham grove, St.
-Giles’ road
-Moll, William, jun., at Gooderson and Moll’s, Upper Market
-Mollett, Alexander, beer retailer, Colegate street
-Mollett, Rizen, coal merchant, Magdalen street
-Money, Charlotte Ann, 5, St. Catherine’s terrace
-Money, James, grocer, Bethel street
-Mousey, James, cooper, Thorn lane
-Monument, Miss, St. Stephen’s road
-Moon, Robert, green grocer, Waterloo, New Catton
-Moore, Abraham, green grocer, Barrack street
-Moore and Co., haberdashers and button factors, 81, St. Giles’ street
-Moore, Charles, watch and clock maker, Coslany street, St. Mary’s
-Moore, Daniel William, The Cock inn, Upper King street
-Moore, Elizabeth, beer retailer, Lower Westwick street
-Moore, Foster Grand, soda water manufacturer, Colegate street, St.
-George’s; h Mount Pleasant
-Moore, George, Brazen Doors tavern, Lame Dog road
-Moore, Isaac, hairdresser, West Pottergate street
-Moore, James, hairdresser, Ber street
-Moore, James, green grocer, City road, Heigham fields
-Moore, James Brett, chemist, 4, Robinson terrace, Rose lane
-Moore, John, Globe tavern, Globe lane
-Moore, John George, haberdasher, &c., Pier cottage, Coach and Horses’
-road, Union place
-Moore, Luke, shoemaker, Upper Heigham
-Moore, Mrs. Maria Emily, dressmaker, Coburgh street
-Moore, Mary, New City, Crook’s place
-Moore, Mrs. Mary Ann, Bento Cottage, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Moore, Robert, market gardener, Bishopgate street
-Moore, Mrs. Sarah, milliner, Grapes’ hill
-Moore, William, builder, King street
-Moore, William, beer retailer, and hairdresser, Ber street
-Morgan, Arthur Foster, surgeon, &c., Tuck’s court, St. Giles’ street
-Morgan, Edward Charles, stock and share broker, 82, St. Giles’ street
-Morgan, Mr. Richard, Newmarket road
-Morgan, John B. and Henry, brewers, spirit merchants, and maltsters, King
-street
-Morgan, Robert Pratt, land agent, (see Pratt, Hornor and Morgan;) h 4,
-Newmarket terrace
-Morgan, William Robert, pawnbroker, St. Saviour’s lane
-Morgan, William Robert, pawnbroker, St. Paul’s
-Morris, George, coach and gig manufacturer, Magdalen street; h Catton
-road
-Morris, John, slate merchant, Lower King street
-Morris, Mr. Robert, Point House, Thorpe hamlet
-Morris, William, grocer and tea dealer, Bishopgate street
-Morrish, Miss Emily, lodging-house keeper, 3, Windsor terrace, Grove road
-Morrison and Co., wine, spirit, and ale and porter merchants, opposite
-Guildhall
-Morse, Rev. Anthony South, curate of St. Mark’s, Lakenham; h Bracondale
-Morse, Rev. Charles, M.A., rector of St. Michael’s, and incumbent of St.
-Mary’s, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Morse, Joshua, green grocer, Prince’s street
-Morse, Miss Mary Ann, Lower close
-Morter, Meshach, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Morter, Robert, the Norfolk Tavern, grocer and tea dealer, Rupert street,
-Union place
-Morter, William, boot and shoe maker, Ber street
-Mortimer, John Thursby, Lilly tavern, Ber street
-Mortimer, John Thursby, Railway and Commercial hotel, 72, St. Giles’
-street
-Mortimer, Miss, dressmaker, Willow lane
-Mortimer, William, shopkeeper, Gildengate street
-Moss, Robert, fire-wood dealer, Oak street
-Motts, John, butcher, West End street, Heigham
-Moughton, John, Waterman’s Arms, St. Ann’s lane, King street
-Mounser, William, travelling cutler, Rising Sun lane
-Mounsear, William, paper hanger, Pottergate street
-Mower, Henry, tailor, West Pottergate street
-Moxon, Timothy, book-keeper, Vauxhall street
-Moy, Francis, St. Giles’ road
-Moy, George, fishmonger, St. Margaret’s Church alley
-Moy, James, Tiger inn, Fishgate street
-Moy, John, shoe mender, Fishgate street
-Moy, William, fishmonger, Cowgate st.
-Moy, William, King of Prussia, Ipswich road
-Muirhead, Hannah, shopkeeper, Colegate street
-Munday, Thomas, shopkeeper, Mill lane, New Catton
-Mundy, William, milkman, St. Faith’s lane
-Munford, George, Nelson tavern, shopkeeper, Nelson street, Heigham fields
-Munford, Samuel, shoemaker, Mount St. Helen, Thorpe hamlet
-Multitude, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Cherry street, Lakenham
-Muriel, Charles Evans, surgeon, 64, St. Giles’ street
-Murnane, John, Bell Commercial and Family Hotel, and wine and spirit
-merchant, Orford hill, and Castle hill
-Murray, James, tailor, Russell street
-Murray, Joseph, carpenter and builder, Prospect place, Lakenham
-Murrell, George, Crown Point tavern, Trowse
-Murrell, Gibbs H., brick, tile and drainpipe maker, Duke’s Palace; h
-Saxlingham
-Murrell, Henry Timothy, solicitor’s clerk, Kimberley street, Unthank’s
-road
-Murrell, James, china, glass, and earthenware dealer, Chapel Field road
-Murrell, James, Rose lane
-Murrell, Miss Mary Ann, dressmaker, Trowse
-Murrell, Owen, iron founder, Brunswick road
-Murrell, Owen, tailor, St. Augustine’s
-Murrell, Mrs. Sarah, Trowse
-Murrell, Mr. William, London terrace, Newmarket road
-Murrell, William, iron founder, patent plough and share manufacturer,
-Crook’s place; entrance, St. Stephen’s gates
-Murrell, William, The Lord Nelson, Trafalgar street, New Lakenham
-Musk, William Faviour, baker, Oak street
-Muskett, Mrs. Emily, Thorpe hamlet
-Muskett, James, tea dealer, 2, Charles street, Heigham
-Muskett, Mrs. Mary, New Catton
-Myers, Rev. John, United Methodist Free Church minister, St. Clement’s
-hill, New Catton
-Myhill, Ann, baker, &c. The Bakers’ Arms, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Myston, Samuel, Lower close
-Nash, Joseph, cheese and bacon factor, Post Office street
-Nash, Robert, general agent, West End street, Holl’s lane, Heigham
-Nash, Robert Smith, Norfolk Railway House, Foundry bridge
-Nash, William Spooner, paper manufacturer, Lower Westwick street
-Neale, James Frederick, grocer and tea dealer, 1, and 2, Hall plain, St.
-Andrew’s
-Neave, Miss Matilda, 12, Newmarket terrace
-Neep, Edward, surgical and mechanical dentist, Post Office street; h
-Mount Pleasant
-Neeve, Frederick, tallow chandler, grocer and tea dealer, St. Stephen’s
-street
-Nelson, — coffin maker, Barracks, Pockthorpe
-Nelson, William (day school) William street
-Nettleton, Mrs. Ann, New road, Town close
-Neve, Charles and Jonathan, cabinet makers, Ber Street gates
-Neve, Mary Ann, grocer, St. Martin’s gates
-Neve, Mrs. Martha, Chapel Field road
-Nevill, George, Esq., Heigham grove, St. Giles’ road
-Newbegin, James, and Edward Joseph, manufacturers of tobacco, snuff and
-cigars, Bridewell alley and Market place
-Newby, John, Valentine street, William street
-Newby, James, Horse and Groom, Back of the Inns
-Newby, William, William the Fourth, Coburgh street
-Newham, John, carpenter and builder, Hall lane, New Lakenham
-Newham, Miss Maria, dressmaker, William street
-Newhouse, Elizabeth, Maid’s Head Tap, Pig lane, Palace plain
-Newhouse, Miss Sarah, milliner, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Newland, William, The Factory tavern, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Newman, George Frederick, rag merchant, King street
-Newman, John, Cherry Tree, birch broom maker, Gildengate street, and Pitt
-street
-Newman, Henry, grocer and market gardener, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Newman, Henry Richard, baker, Ber st.
-Newman, Mrs. Mary, 7, Heigham terrace, Dereham road
-Newman, Richard, Saracen’s Head, West Pottergate street
-Newman, Robert, painter, Ber street gates
-Newman, Samuel, bookseller, stationer, and fancy repository, 7, St.
-Giles’ st.
-Newman, Mrs. Sarah, The Pigeons, Fishgate street
-Newman, William, bricklayer and plasterer, Raglan street, Heigham
-Newman, William H., beer retailer, Heigham street
-Newson, Mrs. Ellen, Seymour place, St. Stephen’s square
-Newson and Co., grocers and tea dealers, Stump cross, Magdalen street
-Newson, Samuel, baker, Trowse
-Newstead, William, linen draper, &c., 5, Lower Goat lane
-Newton, Alfred, fruiterer, Lower Goat lane
-Newton, Clement, harness maker, Suffolk street, Union place
-Newton, Edward John, land agent and surveyor, Bethel street
-Newton, James and Clement, harness makers, Lame Dog road
-Newton, William, land agent, and agent for the Royal Exchange Fire and
-Life Office, Tombland
-Newton, William, fruiterer, Swan lane
-Nicholds, Charles, dyer, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Nichols, Edward, attorney’s clerk, Nelson street, Dereham road
-Nichols, Edward, brazier, Flower Pot, Oak street
-Nichols, Henry, cap manufacturer, Pottergate street
-Nichols, William, Curriers’ Arms, Pottergate street
-Nichols, William Peter, surgeon, Surrey street
-Nicholls, Edward, Distillery inn, Dereham road
-Nicholls, Miss Hannah, 3, Chatham place, Chapel Field road
-Nicholls, George Valentine, Rose tavern, St. Stephen’s street
-Nicholls, John, the Rose, and shop keeper, City road
-Nicholls, John, The Old Friends, and bird dealer, Ber street
-Nicholls, John, (dining rooms) Market place
-Nicholls, Richard, rope and twine maker, 11, City road, New Lakenham
-Nickols, Elizabeth, clothes’ dealer, Upper Goat lane
-Nickalls, William, tailor, St. Augustine’s
-Nickalls, Mr. William, St. John’s terrace
-Nicholson, Miss Catherine (boarding and day school) The Chantry
-Nightingale, Robert Wilson, grocer and tea dealer, St. Stephen’s street
-Nightingale, William Royal, tea and coffee dealer, Pitt street
-Ninham, Henry, artist, 12, Chapel Field
-Ninham, John, agent, The Cottage, Mousehold
-Ninham, William Henry, Prospect House, Philadelphia
-Nixon, John Hindson, solicitor, Bracondale
-Nobbs, Edward, Perseverance tavern, Oak street
-Nobbs, Edward Frederick, coach plater, King street
-Nobbs, James, hairdresser, Oak street
-Nobbs, James, boot and shoe maker, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Nobbs, John, beer retailer, Chapel Field road
-Nobbs, Henry, beer retailer, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Nobbs, Robert, green grocer, Heigham street
-Nobbs, Samuel, coal dealer, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Noble, Mark, organ builder, Pottergate street
-Nockalds, Frederick William, warehouseman, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Nockall, Mrs. Emma, stationer and news agent, 2, Lower Goat lane
-Nockall, John, tailor, Elm hill
-Nockall, Robert, merchants’ clerk, Golden Dog lane
-Nockolds, Hannah, general shopkeeper, Barrack street
-Nockolds, Henry, commission agent and rent collector, Fox and Hounds’
-court, Ber street
-Nockolds, Thomas, beer retailer, Lower King street
-Norgate and Co., importers of wines and spirits, and ale and porter
-agents; sole agents, for Norwich and Norfolk, for Thorley’s food for
-cattle, St. Stephen’s street; h Surrey street (_see Advertisement_, _p._
-1)
-Norman, Benjamin, printer and bookbinder, Old Haymarket
-Norman, Elizabeth Maria, blacksmith, King street
-Norman, Emerson, commercial traveller, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Norman, Robert, plumber, painter and glazier, and house agent, 6, York
-place, Chapel Field road
-Norris, Mrs. James, cabinet manufacturer, Charing cross; h Newmarket road
-Norris, Mrs. Lucy, Thorpe hamlet
-Norris, Samuel, cabinet maker, Elm hill
-North, Samuel, British schoolmaster, Palace street
-North, Thomas, shoe maker, Ber street
-Norton, Francis James, tailor and hatter, Back of the Inns
-Norton, George, boot and shoe maker, St. Stephen’s street
-Norton, Henry, joiner and builder, Chapel Field road; h Somerleyton
-street
-Norton, Henry, carpenter, John street, Union place
-Norton, Henry, Rampant Horse, Fishgate street
-Norton, Mr. Henry, Unthank’s road
-Norton, James, boot and shoe maker, Brazen Doors road
-Norton, Mrs. Jane, Bracondale
-Norton, John C., Westbourne terrace, Unthank’s road
-Norton, Mrs. Maria, The Curriers’ Arms, Union street, Crook’s place
-Norton, Mrs. Phœbe, dressmaker, Lower Goat lane
-Norton, Robert, grocer and tea dealer, tobacconist and provision
-merchant, Fye bridge
-Norton, William, carpenter, Upper Heigham
-Noverre, Frank, professor of dancing, Theatre square; Dene side, Great
-Yarmouth; and the Athenæum, Lynn (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 36)
-Noverre, Miss Josephine, professor of singing and the concertina, Theatre
-square
-Noverre, Miss Sophia, professor of the pianoforte and harp, Theatre
-square
-Nowack, Edward, tobacconist, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Nudds, William, carpenter and builder, Chatham place, Chapel Field road
-Nunn, John, hairdresser and seedsman, St. Augustine’s
-Nunn, Jonathan, grocer, &c., Heigham street
-Nunn, Mary, beer retailer, Greyhound opening, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Nunn, William, schoolmaster, St. James’ school, Pockthorpe
-Nurse, Robert, carver, gilder, and cabinet maker, Castle street
-Nursey, Claude L., head master of Government School of Art, St. Andrew’s
-Broad street
-Oakes, James, dealer in firewood, Botolph street
-Oakes, Mrs. E., Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Oakley, Robert, farrier Palace street
-Oakley, Simon, clerk, Thorpe hamlet
-Orford, James S., surgical and mechanical dentist, Theatre street
-Oliver, Elizabeth, Old Music House, Lower King street
-Oliver, John, 7, Grove road, Lakenham
-Ollett, Matthew, carpenter, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Olley, George, smith, Charles street, Heigham
-Olley, William and Co., engineers, Dereham road
-Olley, Stephen Benjamin, iron and tin-plate worker, St. Benedict’s street
-Onley, William Daniel, The Golden Lion, earthenware merchant, Brazen
-Doors road
-Ord, William, photographic artist, Westlegate street and Rose lane
-Orfeur, John, timber merchant, Fishgate street
-Orfeur, Mr. John, Lower close
-Orris, George, chemist and druggist, St. James’ street
-Orris, Frederick, surgeon, Magdalen street
-Orsborn, Robert, Carrow inn, Carrow road
-Orsborne, Edward, coal dealer, Quay side
-Osborn, Charles, corn merchant, Ber street
-Osborn, John, tailor, Little London street; h Wellington place, Grove
-road
-Osborn, Richard Norman, chair maker, Muspole street
-Osborn, William, green grocer and gardener, New Catton
-Osborne, Charles, The Anchor, Ten Bell lane
-Osborne, Rev. John Francis, New road, Town close
-Osborne, Kerrison Samuel, carpenter and joiner, Southwell street,
-Lakenham
-Osborne, Samuel, clerk of the Savings’ Bank; h Caledonia terrace, Dereham
-road
-Ostler, Charles Henry, beer retailer, Pump street
-Ostler, John, paper hanger, 20, Suffolk street, Heigham
-Otty, Philip, printer and bookbinder, Orford hill
-Oughton, William, draper, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Overy, Mrs., Seymour place, St. Stephen’s square
-Owen, Thomas, pawnbroker, Colegate street
-Owles, Mr. William, Surrey grove, Surrey road
-Oxborough, Barrington, shoe manufacturer, Richmond hill
-Oxley, Richard, hosier, glover, and shirt maker, 6, London street
-Padget, John, coach and cab proprietor, Rampant Horse street
-Page, Mr. Edmund, 15, Newmarket road
-Page, George and Son, curriers and leather sellers, Magdalen street
-Page, George, currier, Magdalen street; h Westbourne terrace, Unthank’s
-road
-Page, James, upholsterer, Pottergate street
-Page, Jeremiah, bricklayer and builder, Rising Sun road
-Page, James Calton, wheelwright, Bartholomew street
-Page, Joseph, tailor, shirt maker, hosier, and glover, 13, Briggs’ street
-Page, Mrs. J. H., dress and mantle maker, 4, Jay’s terrace
-Page, Mary, baker, St. John’s Timberhill street
-Page, Samuel Deyns and Son, wholesale stationers, printers, paper-bag,
-and brush and patten manufacturers, 23, Old Haymarket
-Page, Samuel, joiner, West Pottergate street
-Paine, Mrs. Mary, lodging house, Elm hill
-Pallant, Robert, The Ship, Thorn lane, Ber street
-Palmer, Miss Catherine, 8, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Palmer, Edmund, fishmonger, King street
-Palmer, Mrs. Elizabeth, Mount Pleasant
-Palmer, George, manager of brick and tile works, Duke’s palace
-Palmer, John and William, blacksmiths, and mill-bill makers, St.
-Augustine’s
-Palmer, Jonathan, box manufacturer, Lower Westwick street
-Palmer, Philip, hawker, Hall road, Lakenham
-Palmer, Richard and James Hardman, wholesale shoe manufacturers,
-Manchester buildings, Union place
-Palmer, Robert, whitesmith and bell-hanger, St. Saviour’s lane
-Palmer, Robert, shoemaker, Rose Valley terrace, Unthank’s road
-Palmer, Sophia, milliner, Ber street
-Palmer, Thomas, shopkeeper, Union place
-Palmer, Thomas Hitchen, clerk to County Court, Princes street; h Thorpe
-Palmer, William, wood carver, St. Lawrence lane
-Palmer, William, banker’s clerk, Surrey terrace
-Palmer, William, last and boot-tree maker, Timberhill street
-Pank, Abraham, gas fitter and bell hanger, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-(_see Advertisement_, _p._ 19)
-Pank, James, blacksmith, King street
-Parish, James, provision dealer, Mill lane, New Catton
-Parfitt, Cornelius, landscape gardener, Sussex street
-Parfitt, Mrs. Martha, milliner and dressmaker, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Parke, George, Dereham terrace, Dereham road
-Parke, Joseph, Esq., The Villa, Mount Pleasant
-Parker, Benjamin, dyer, Twiddy’s court, Ber street
-Parker, Clare, sen., bricklayer, Oak street
-Parker, Clare, baker, Oak street
-Parker, Francis, tailor, Southwell street, Lakenham
-Parker, Frederick, grocer and tea dealer, Ber street
-Parker, James, draper, &c., St. Catherine’s plain
-Parker, Miss Mary, milliner, Bethel street
-Parker, Mrs. Mary, Bethel street
-Parker, Oliver, tailor, Thorpe hamlet
-Parker, Mr. Robert, Brunswick road
-Parker, Thomas, fish and manure merchant, St. Stephen’s
-Parker, William, tea and coffee merchant, corner of Valentine street,
-Dereham road
-Parker, William, pill-box manufacturer, Sussex street
-Parker, William, inspector, Thorpe station, Thorpe hamlet
-Parkerson, Jude, Elephant and Castle, King street
-Parkerson, Robert, Bull inn, Bull close
-Parkinson, John W., engraver and printer, Globe street, Union place
-Parlour, Henry Edward, ironmonger and bell hanger, 15, London street
-Parnell, Richard, plasterer, Coachmakers’ Arms, Bethel street
-Parnell, William, hairdresser, Oak street
-Parr, Caroline, milliner and dressmaker, Ber street
-Parr, James, green grocer, King street
-Parr, John, baker and confectioner, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Parr, Thomas, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Parr, William Burrell, 50, Upper St. Giles’
-Parr, William Miles, Adelaide street
-Parsley, Maria, dressmaker, Grapes’ hill
-Parsons, Miss Juliet, straw hat maker, Brazen Doors road
-Partridge, John Jonathan Beesouth, furniture broker, Ber street
-Pashley, Miss Henrietta, 29, Victoria street
-Paston, Benjamin, musician, Till’s court, Ber street
-Paston, Caroline, milliner and dressmaker, Grapes’ hill
-Paston, Charles, lodging-house keeper, Ber street
-Paston, Thomas, plumber, glazier, &c., Magdalen street
-Paston, William, Paul Pry tavern, Grapes’ hill
-Patman, George, chemist and druggist, Ber street
-Patrick, Charles, butcher, St. Margaret’s plain
-Patrick, James Fitz, St. Miles’ saw mills, Coslany street
-Patteson, Rev. Frederick William, M.A., chaplain of St. Helen’s, St.
-Helen’s square
-Paul, Richard, ham and beef shop, 12, Bridewell alley
-Paul, William Francis, boarding school, Bracondale
-Pay, William, commercial traveller, 16, Distillery street
-Payne, Miss Elizabeth, milliner and dressmaker, 64, Bethel street
-Payne, John, All Saints’ tavern, All Saints’ green
-Payne, Sarah, The Bee Hive, Cowgate street
-Payne, Mr. Sturley, surgeon, Duke street
-Peacock, James, grocer, Pottergate street
-Pearce, Philip, lime burner and whiting manufacturer, The Compasses,
-Upper King street
-Pearce, Thorne, lucifer match manufacturer, St. Clement’s hill, New
-Catton
-Pearce, William, beer retailer and marine store dealer, Grapes’ hill
-Pearce, William, chair manufacturer, World’s End lane
-Pearson, Edward, builder and plasterer, Bank street
-Pearson, Miss Harriet, milliner and dressmaker, St. Andrew’s hill
-Pearson, James, cutler, and truss maker, St. Andrew’s hill (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 18)
-Pearson, John, brazier and tin-plate worker, St. Augustine’s
-Pearson, Robert, shopkeeper, Cowgate street
-Peck, Edward, inspector of police, Dereham road
-Peed, Frederick, Golden Can, Gildengate street
-Pegg, George, Norwich Arms, Ber street
-Pegg, Martha, shopkeeper, Fisher’s lane
-Peggs, James Orissa, dispensing chemist, oil and color merchant, Golden
-Ball street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 12)
-Pellew, Hon. and Rev. George, D.D., (Dean,) The Close
-Pellew, Rev. George Israel, M.A., The Parsonage, Lakenham
-Penrice, David, surgeon, Tombland
-Pentin, James, furniture broker, Chapel Field road
-Pentney, Mrs. Mary, Prince’s street
-Penton, James, furniture broker, Magdalen street
-Pepworth, James, manager at Victoria coal depôt, Brazen Doors road; h
-Southwell road, Lakenham
-Perfect, Joseph, green grocer and beer retailer, Lower Westwick street
-Perowne, James Joseph, manufacturer, 1, William street
-Perowne, Rev. John, M.A., Chapel Field grove
-Perowne, Joseph John, tailor, Heigham place
-Perowne, Robert, clerk, Botolph street
-Perowne, Sarah, shopkeeper, Nelson street, Heigham fields
-Perry, Mrs. Mary, dressmaker, Bethel street
-Perryman, William, boot closer, 4, Charles street, Heigham
-Pert, James, shopkeeper, Magdalen street
-Petch, Hannah, The Horse Barracks, Barrack street
-Petch, William, boat builder, Barrack street
-Pettingill, Mr. Richard Fabb, Somerleyton street
-Pettingill, Mrs. Sarah, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Phill, Ambrose, shoemaker, Willow lane
-Phillippo, Mr. Matthias, Newmarket road
-Phillips, Miss Elizabeth (boarding and day school) Chatham place, Chapel
-Field road
-Phillips, Francis, fishmonger, Finket street
-Phillips, Mr. Frederick, Garden terrace, Freeman’s villas
-Phillips, John, brewer and porter merchant, Eagle and Child brewery,
-Golden Ball street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 14)
-Phillips, Robert, merchant, White Lion street; h 6, London terrace
-Phillips, Mr. Samuel, watch and clock maker, Chatham place, Chapel Field
-road
-Phillips, William, currier and leather seller, All Saints’ street
-Phillips, William, Lord Nelson, Timberhill street
-Philo, Joseph, saddler, harness, and whip maker, 44, London street
-Pickford and Co., carriers by rail to all parts of the kingdom (Spencer
-D. Rudrum, agent) Duke’s Palace wharf
-Philpott, Rev. Henry, The Close
-Pickers, Alfred Howard, tailor, 34, Bartholomew street
-Pigg, Arthur, (see S. Pigg and Sons) Haymarket
-Pigg, Edmund, furnishing and general ironmonger, St. Stephen’s street
-Pigg, Edward, ironmonger (see Piper and Pigg); h 1, Heigham terrace
-Pigg, Mrs. Eliza, milliner and dressmaker, William street, Heigham
-Pigg, Frederick, mahogany and deal merchant, St. George’s bridge wharf
-Pigg and Greenwood, general furnishing and shop fitting warehouse, 14,
-London street
-Pigg, Henry, bookseller, stationer, and printer, and sole agent for the
-government survey ordnance maps, 7, London street; h 8, Lakenham terrace,
-City road
-Pigg, Horace, Bracondale
-Pigg, James, Cellar House, Pockthorpe
-Pigg, John, commercial traveller, Surrey terrace
-Pigg, Mr. Joseph, York place, Chapel Field road
-Pigg, Robert, (see Pigg and Greenwood) London street
-Pigg, Samuel, (see S. Pigg and Sons); h Old Lakenham
-Pigg, Samuel and Sons, woollen and Manchester warehousemen, Old Haymarket
-Piggin and Dyball, watch and clock makers, opticians, and spectacle
-manufacturers, jewellers, and silversmiths, Post Office street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 29)
-Piggin, Miss Mary Ann, milliner and dressmaker, Surrey street
-Piggott, John Henry, linen draper, hosier, and laceman, St. Stephen’s
-street
-Pilgrim, Frances, laundress, St. Augustine’s
-Pilgrim, John, solicitor, Chapel Field
-Pilgrim, Mrs. Mary Ann, dressmaker, Pottergate street
-Pinching, William, baker and confectioner, Bethel street
-Pinnick, Robert, brick maker and lime burner, Silver road
-Pinson, George, governor of castle, Castle hill
-Pinson, Henry, ironmonger, Bank plain, (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 39)
-Piper, Austin, commercial traveller, All Saints’ green
-Piper, John Daniel, ironmonger (see Piper and Pigg); h West parade,
-Earlham road
-Piper and Pigg, furnishing and general ironmongers, oil and colourmen, 5,
-London street
-Piper, William, draper and family linen warehouse, London street
-Pitcher, Henry, pawnbroker, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Pitcher, Thomas, green grocer, and register office for servants, Rose
-lane
-Pitman, Mrs., Newmarket road
-Pitt, John Ballard, surgeon, St. Stephen’s street
-Pitts, Robert Christopher, pharmaceutical and family chemist, St. Giles’
-street; h Thorpe villa
-Plane, Richard, Excise Coffee-house, Lower Goat lane
-Plant, James, farmer, Trowse Newton
-Platford, William, baker, Heigham street
-Platten, Mrs. Mary, Eva Cottages, Magdalen road
-Platten, Mrs. Mary, livery stables, Upper Surrey street
-Playford, Arminger, bricklayer, and beer retailer, St. George’s Bridge
-street
-Playford, William, Rising Sun, Buff Coat lane
-Pleasents, Benjamin, Calvert street
-Plummer and Bloom, builders, &c., Bethel street (_see Advertisement_,
-_p._ 21)
-Plummer, Mr. Charles Taylor, 12, Nelson terrace, Grove road, Lakenham
-Plummer, Miss Elizabeth, teacher of music, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Plummer, Neville, turner, Lower Westwick street
-Plummer, Susan (preparatory school) Plummer’s yard, St. Martin’s
-Plumsted, Frederick, hairdresser, Magdalen street
-Plumsted, Robert, hairdresser and perfumer, Wensum street
-Plumstead, Samuel James, cooper, and furniture broker, Coslany street
-Plumstead, Samuel, Three Tuns, Coslany street
-Plumptre, Mrs. Elizabeth, Lower close
-Plunkett, David, marine store dealer, St. Martin’s walls
-Plunkett, John, beer retailer, St. Augustine’s
-Pointer, Thomas, shopkeeper, Magpie road
-Pointer, William, artificial manure manufacturer, Mousehold, Thorpe
-hamlet
-Poll, David, beer retailer, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Poll, John, carpenter, &c., Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Poll, Robert, lime burner, Dereham road
-Poll, Samuel, house agent, Magdalen street
-Pollard, William, tobacconist, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Pond, James, shoe manufacturer, Barrack yard, St. Miles’
-Pond, James, shoemaker, Adelaide street
-Pond, Margaret, green grocer, Ber street
-Pontifex, Sidney, surveyor, &c., 5, Dereham Road terrace
-Poole, Mrs. M., Theatre street
-Poole, Mr. Thomas, 5, The Crescent
-Pooley, Samuel, cabinet maker, St. John’s street
-Pooley, William, cabinetmaker, Charing cross
-Pope, Rev. George, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Pope, John, beer retailer, Barrack street
-Pope, Robert Waller, merchant, &c., St. Benedict’s street
-Pope, Mrs. William, milliner and dressmaker, 23, Bethel street
-Pope, William, draper, 23, Bethel street
-Porritt, Mr. David, 12, Newmarket road
-Porter, James, Bowling Green hotel, Chapel field
-Porter, The Misses, Thorpe hamlet
-Porter, Robert, pork butcher, Lower King street
-Porter, Robert, coal merchant, 2, West End terrace, Grapes’ hill
-Porter, Samuel, commercial traveller, 7, Dereham road terrace
-Porter, Thomas, Key and Castle, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Postle, William, Esq., Chapel field
-Potter, Mrs. Ann, Newmarket road
-Potter, George, White Horse, Old Haymarket
-Potter, Mrs. Harriet, dressmaker, 4, Little London street
-Potter, James, manufacturer, 2, Grove Place terrace, Grove road, Lakenham
-Potter, Robert, shopkeeper, St. Peter’s Southgate
-Potter, Thomas and Co., hatters and furriers, 5, The Walk
-Poulter, Mrs. Maria, clothier, Lower Westwick street
-Powell, Edward, greengrocer, Chapel Field road
-Powell, Mrs. Edward, Bricklayers’ Arms, Union place
-Powell, Mrs. Hannah, Theatre street
-Powell, John, hairdresser, St. Benedict’s street
-Powell, Robert, family linen warehouse, 36, London street
-Powell, Sarah, Bricklayers’ Arms, Union place
-Powell, Mr., 5, Portland place, Holl’s lane
-Powell, William, superphosphate works, Oak street
-Powley, Mrs. Catherine, 12, Richmond place, Lakenham
-Powley, Mrs. Mary, down boa maker, Golden Dog lane
-Powley, Robert, Jolly Farmers, Castle hill
-Powley, William, lodging-house keeper, Theatre street
-Pratt, Hornor, and Morgan, land agents and surveyors, and agents to the
-Norwich Union Fire Office, Queen street
-Pratt, James, Cross Keys, Magdalen street
-Pratt, John, shoemaker, Coslany street
-Pratt, John, Jolly Skinners, Oak street
-Pratt, Richard Jeremiah, farrier and horse breaker, Northumberland
-street, Heigham
-Pratt, Robert, land agent and surveyor, Queen street; h 23, Newmarket
-road
-Pratt, Thomas, shoemaker, Union place
-Pratt, William, farmer, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Pratt, William, watch and clock maker, St. Benedict’s street
-Pratt, William, fishmonger, Market place
-Pratt, William, wholesale grocer, cheese factor, and tallow chandler,
-Wensum street; h Sprowston lodge
-Prentice, John Smith, turner, St. Augustine’s street
-Prentice, Samuel, saddler and harness maker, Magdalen street
-Presents, Philip, bricklayer, Magpie road
-Press, Edward, solicitor, commissioner for taking oaths in chancery in
-England, commissioner for taking acknowledgments of deeds by married
-women, coroner for the county, (Norwich district) clerk to the Trustees
-of the Norwich and Watton turnpike roads, and agent to the Norwich Union
-Fire office, Tombland
-Press, Frederick George, shopkeeper, Philadelphia
-Press, Miss Sarah, dressmaker, Rupert street, Union place
-Preston, Mr. Arthur, solicitor, Bank plain
-Price, John, Palace tavern, Palace street
-Price, Joseph, shopkeeper, Coslany street
-Price, Samuel Walter, shawl and dress printer, Chatham place, Sussex
-street
-Priest, George, upholsterer, Coach and Horses road, Union place
-Priest, Mr. George, Priest’s buildings, St. Stephen’s road
-Priest, George, watch and clock maker, silversmith and jeweller, 3,
-Briggs’ street
-Priest, Henry Raven, wine merchant, Pottergate street
-Priest, Henry, wine and spirit merchant, (see Priest, Pilgrim, and Co.)
-1, St. Giles’ street
-Priest, Mrs. Henry, boarding school for young gentlemen, Pottergate
-street
-Priest, Mr. Richard, 78, St. Giles’ street
-Priest, Pilgrim, and Co., wine, spirit, and porter merchants, 1, St.
-Giles’ street
-Priest, Mrs. S., York place, Chapel Field road
-Priest, Mr. Thomas, Rampant Horse st.
-Priestly, James, manager at Mr. Sparks’ foundry, Scoles’ green
-Prior, Robert, shopkeeper, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Pritty, William, Half Moon, Dereham road
-Proudfoot, Elizabeth and Ann, bakers and grocers, Trowse
-Provart, William, agent to Steward, Patteson, Finch, and Co., brewers,
-&c., Green hills
-Provart, Edgar, sheriffs’ officer, West Pottergate street
-Prowne, Mr. James J., William street
-Pryse, Miss Sarah, Upper Surrey street
-Puxley, Mrs., All Saints’ green
-Pulgrave, Mrs. Ann, Hall road, Lakenham
-Pulham, William, grocer, tea dealer, and tallow chandler, St. Mary’s
-plain
-Pulham, William, grocer, Oak street
-Pull, Elizabeth Mary, provision dealer, Bull close
-Pullen, Mase, and Furse, writers, grainers, and decorative painters, St.
-Lawrence lane (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 26)
-Pulley, Henry, solicitor, Surrey street
-Pulley, Mrs., Surrey street
-Pummell, James, baker, Ten Bell lane
-Punched, William, bookseller, Bank street
-Puncher, William, second-hand bookseller, White Lion street
-Purdy, Mrs. Hannah, Hall road, Lakenham
-Puxley, James, Marquis of Gransby, Bishopgate street
-Pycroft, Mrs. Ann, butcher, 53, St. Stephen’s street
-Pycroft, Nathaniel, butcher, Red Lion st.
-Pye, Mrs. Ann Rebecca, day school, Alma terrace, St. Augustine’s gates
-Pye, Jabez, beer retailer, Queen’s Arms, Pump street
-Pye, Robert, Shakespeare, 63, Pottergate street
-Pye, William Martin, grocer and tea dealer, St. Augustine’s street
-Pye, William, bricklayer, St. Andrew’s hill
-Pyle, Miss Harriet, 1, Nelson street, Heigham
-Pymar, John, wool and silk merchant, and cotton and yarn agent, Castle
-meadow; h Mile End
-Quadling, Henry, plumber, glazier, and painter, Lower King street
-Quantrill, Robert, shopkeeper, Mousehold
-Quantrell, Sarah, general shopkeeper, Chapel street, Union place
-Quantrell, William, bricklayer, Leonard’s buildings, Unthank’s road
-Quin, James, supervisor of inland revenue, Hall road, New Lakenham
-Quintin, Charles St., Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Quintin, Jane St., beer retailer, Barrack street
-Quinton, Benjamin, hairdresser, Thorn lane, Ber street
-Quinton, Mrs. Elizabeth (preparatory school) Charles street, Heigham
-Quinton, Mrs. Hannah, dress maker, Grout’s Thoroughfare, St. John’s
-Timberhill
-Quinton, John, bookbinder, 36, Pottergate street
-Quinton, John, librarian to the Literary Institution, h 18, Victoria
-street, St. Stephen’s road
-Quinton, Joseph, merchant’s clerk, Newmarket road
-Quinton, William Benjamin, commercial traveller, Somerleyton street,
-Unthank’s road
-Raby, William, green grocer, Fishgate street
-Rackham, Mrs. Hannah, lodging-house keeper, Mount Pleasant
-Rackham, Mr. James, Calvert street
-Rackham, John, Bee Hive, St. Benedict’s street
-Rackham, Mr. Matthew, Thorpe hamlet
-Rackham, Matthew Robert, solicitor and agent for the Imperial Fire and
-Life Office, Surrey street
-Rackham, Rev. Matthew John, rector of St. Augustine’s, Sussex street
-Rackham and Cook, solicitors, Tuck’s court, St. Giles’ street
-Rackham, Thomas, relieving officer, Elm hill
-Rackham, William, chemist and druggist, Upper Market
-Rackham, Mr. William Simon, Unthank’s road
-Radford, Mrs. Charlotte, The Chequers, Cowgate street
-Radford, William, Black Chequers, Cowgate street
-Rainger, George Henry, solicitor’s clerk, St. Giles’ road
-Rainger, Mrs., 1, Vauxhall terrace
-Ralph, John, boot and shoemaker, King street, Crook’s place
-Rainbird, Jonathan, hairdresser, Market place
-Rainbird, Samuel, carpenter, Elm hill
-Ramm, Robert, Rose tavern, Palace street
-Ramm, William, tailor, 6, John street, Rose lane
-Ramsey, James, beer retailer and shoemaker, Ber street
-Randall, Mr. Henry, St. Benedict’s road
-Randall, James, boot and shoe maker, Magdalen street
-Randall, Thomas, hairdresser, Union place
-Randall, William, Union terrace, Union place
-Rand, William Fell, surgeon, Sampson court, Tombland
-Randle, William, corn miller, malt, flour, rice, and biscuit dealer, 10,
-Upper Market (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 23)
-Ranking, William Harcourt, physician, St. Giles’ street
-Ransom, Mrs. Susan, Bracondale
-Ransome, George, shopkeeper, Bridewell alley
-Ransome, Harriet, Berlin wool and fancy repository, 18, The Walk
-Ransome, James, watchmaker, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Ransome, Mrs., Hampden place, Dereham road
-Rant, Jonathan, Ribs of Beef, Wensum street
-Ratcliffe, William, tailor, 18, Distillery street
-Rattee, Charles, shopkeeper, Grapes’ hill
-Raven, Edward, Queen Anne, St. Miles’ Church street
-Raven, Robert, green grocer, Tinkler’s lane
-Rawling, Henry, shopkeeper, West Pottergate street
-Ray, Mr. John, West End cottages, Chapel Field road
-Ray, John Anthony, hairdresser, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Ray, Orlando Dennis, auctioneer, Upper King street (_see Advertisement_,
-_p._ 31)
-Ray, Robert, Front row, New Lakenham
-Raymes, Robert, basket maker, Rupert street, Union place
-Rayner, James, butcher, Bartholomew street
-Rayner, James, butcher, Nelson terrace, Dereham road
-Rayner, John, solicitor’s clerk, St. Catherine’s plain
-Raynes, Mr. Michael James, St. Giles’ road
-Rayson, Mrs. Ann, St. Catherine’s plain
-Read, Charles, bricklayer, Globe street, Union place; h Somerleyton
-street
-Read, Charles Thomas, bookbinder, Graham’s court, Upper market
-Read, Charles Thomas, grocer, Eaton Cottage, Unthank’s road
-Read, Mrs. Charlotte, dressmaker, 23, Alma square, Julian place
-Read, George, plumber, glazier, and painter, Bartholomew street
-Read, Gurney, coal merchant, Badding lane, Quay side
-Read, James, joiner and builder, Prince’s street
-Read, Joseph John, painter, Union cottages, Julian street
-Read, Randall, miller, Magdalen street
-Read, Robert, coal agent for E. C. Compy., Lower close
-Read, Thomas William and Co., corn millers, maltsters, and coal
-merchants, Trowse mills, and Cannon wharf, King street
-Read, Mr. Trivett, Newmarket road
-Read, William Dring, grocer and wine merchant, Orford hill
-Read, William, coal merchant, Elm hill
-Redgrave, Joseph, corn merchant and maltster, St. Miles’ Church street; h
-The Close
-Redgrave, The Misses, ladies’ school, The Priory, St. Stephen’s
-Redgment, Kirby, butcher, Rupert street, Union place
-Reeder, William, toll collector, Carrow gate
-Reeve, Alfred, merchant’s clerk, 6, John street
-Reeve, Charles, confectioner, Upper Westwick street
-Reeve, Edward, whitesmith, Gildengate street
-Reeve, Edward, whitesmith, Duke street
-Reeve, Miss Eliza Susanna, day school, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Reeve, Frederick, carpenter, &c., Lower Westwick street
-Reeve, James, dyer, Duke street
-Reeve, Horace, pianoforte tunist, Calvert street
-Reeve, Louisa, milliner, Lower Westwick street
-Reeve, Mr. Richard, Unthank’s road
-Reeve, Simms, barrister, 18, St. Giles’ street
-Reid, John Cowan, draper and tea dealer, Douro terrace, Heigham grove,
-St. Giles’ road
-Reid, Samuel, linen and woollen draper, and silk mercer, St. Andrew’s
-Hall plain
-Restieaux, Joseph, registrar of marriages, and agent for the Law Union
-Life and Fire office, Lady’s lane
-Reynolds, Mr. Edward, Tamworth terrace, Unthank’s road
-Reynolds, Edward, manure manufacturer, Pockthorpe hamlet; h Unthank’s
-road
-Reynolds, Edward and Compy., St. Ann’s oil mills, King street
-Reynolds, Mrs. Jemima, day school, Saw Mill yard, Coslany street
-Reynolds, Joseph James, general shopkeeper, Rupert street, Union place
-Reynolds, Mr. Josiah, miller and farmer, Philadelphia
-Reynolds, Laban, shoemaker, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Reynolds, Lorenzo, shoe manufacturer, Alder’s buildings, St. Catherine’s
-plain
-Reynolds, William, butcher, Ber street
-Reynolds, William, nurseryman and seedsman, Hall road, Lakenham
-Reynoldson, Mrs. Mary Lavender, lodging-house keeper, St. Lawrence lane
-Rice, James, Free Trade tavern, William street
-Rice, Joseph, telegraph clerk, John street, Rose lane
-Rice, William Herbert, teacher of music, Somerleyton street
-Richards, Rev. John, Magdalen road, New Catton
-Richardson, James, wheelwright, Timberhill street
-Richardson, Samuel, schoolmaster at City gaol; h Fox and Hounds’ court,
-Ber street
-Richardson, Thomas Joseph, banker’s clerk, 1, Oxford street, Unthank’s
-rd.
-Richardson, William, tailor, 21, Bartholomew street
-Riches, Mrs. Ann, lodging-house keeper, Brunswick road
-Riches, Edward, hairdresser, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Riches, Eliza, grocer, Church street, St. Julian’s
-Riches, Miss Frances, Infirmary road
-Riches, Mrs. Hannah, St. Saviour’s lane
-Riches, Henry, Golden Lion, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Riches, Henry, hairdresser, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Riches, Henry C., tailor, Castle meadow
-Riches, John, Three Kings tavern, St. Benedict’s street
-Riches, Lucy, milliner and dressmaker, Queen street
-Riches, Robert, hairdresser and tobacconist, Timberhill street
-Riches, Simon, Ship inn, St. Peter’s Southgate
-Riches and Skoyles, tailors and outfitters, Davey place
-Riches, Miss Susannah, straw hat maker, Queen street
-Riches, Thomas, Earl of Leicester arms, Dereham road
-Riches, Thomas, beer retailer, Pump street
-Riches, Thomas, tailor, 32, Victoria street
-Riches, Mr. Thomas, 7, Richmond place, Lakenham
-Riches, Thomas, tailor, Grapes’ hill
-Riches, William, wheelwright and blacksmith, Barn road
-Riches, William, wheelwright, Charles street, Heigham
-Rider, Samuel, tailor, &c., St. Margaret’s Church alley
-Rigg, Rev. Richard, M.A., rector of St. Clement’s and St. Michael’s
-Coslany, Bethel street
-Riley, Francis, Waggon and Horses, Tombland
-Ringer, Mrs. Elizabeth, Paragon street
-Ringer, Mrs. Susanna, St. Catherine’s plain
-Ringer, William, Berlin wool and fancy repository, 7, The Walk; h
-Tharston
-Riseborough, Elizabeth Francis, Point House cottage, Ipswich road
-Rivett, Francis, warehouseman, &c., Old Post Office court; h Richmond
-Hill house, Ber street gates
-Rivett, John, Two Quarts, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Rivett and Harmer, wholesale clothiers, and Manchester warehousemen, Old
-Post Office court
-Rix, Charles Edward, grocer, Dereham road
-Rix, George, temperance house, Golden Ball street
-Rix, Henry, wholesale brush manufacturer, 53, Duke street
-Rix, Mrs. Mary, Thorpe hamlet
-Rix, Robert, King’s Head, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Rix, William, White Horse, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Rix, William, draper, Pump street
-Rix, William, Black Horse, Finket st.
-Roach, Edward, rent collector and accountant, Southwell road
-Robberds, Charles Leicester, paper manufacturer, (see Robberds and Money)
-Lyng
-Robberds, John Mann, solicitor, Ber Street gates
-Robberds and Money, paper manufacturers and millers, Lyng mills; office,
-Chapel Field road
-Roberts, Henry, medical botanist, Rising Sun road
-Roberts, James, shoemaker, Timberhill street
-Roberts, Mr. Joseph, Holl’s lane
-Roberts, Mrs. Susan, Thorpe hamlet
-Roberts, William Peter, tailor, Chapel loke, Surrey road
-Robertson, Henry, upholsterer and cabinet maker, Grove road, Lakenham
-Robbins, Mrs. Ann, 3, York place, Chapel Field road
-Robbins, Mrs., straw bonnet maker, West Pottergate street
-Robins, George, clerk, 2, Trafalgar place, Dereham road
-Robinson, Christopher, carver and gilder, Pottergate street
-Robinson, Mr. George, Chapel field
-Robinson, James, horse dealer, 5, Victoria street
-Robinson, John, cork manufacturers, Cork Cutters’ Arms, Bridge street,
-St. George’s
-Robinson, Mrs. Mary, Chapel Field road
-Robinson, Thomas, green grocer, St. Benedict’s street
-Robinson, Mr. William Henry, St. Faith’s lane
-Robison, Mr. Charles Morley, Pitt street
-Robison, John (of the firm of Grout and Co.) Unthank’s road
-Roe, Mr. Bartholomew, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Roe, Charlotte, Queen Victoria, Pottergate street
-Roe, Isaac, chimney sweeper, Magdalen street
-Roe, John, cabinet maker, Ber street
-Roe, John C., merchant, St. George’s plain
-Roe, Samuel, tailor and shopkeeper, Distillery street
-Roe, Sarah, Bank street
-Rogers, Charles, tailor, 47, Bethel street
-Rogers, Edmund Dawson, reporter for the _Norfolk News_, West parade,
-Earlham road
-Rogers and Havers, photographic artists and dealers in photographic
-materials, Davey place
-Rogers, Mr. Henry, Thorpe hamlet
-Rogers, John, blacksmith, Muspole street
-Rogers, Joseph, clerk, 27, Victoria street
-Rogers and Page, wholesale brush and clog manufacturers, Wensum street
-Rogers, Samuel, shoe manufacturer, Gun lane
-Rolfe, Mrs. Harriet, Lower close
-Roll, Robert, Globe inn, Globe street, Union place
-Roll, Robert, Dove tavern, Muspole street
-Rolling, Edmund, carpenter, Grove hill, St. Giles’ road
-Rolls, Edward, bricklayer, Holl’s lane
-Roofe, Ann, baker, Thorpe hamlet
-Root, Christiana, Boy and Cup, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Root, Robert, carver and gilder, Golden Dog lane
-Rope, Charles, whitesmith, Surrey street
-Rope, Robert William, wharfinger, St. Benedict’s street
-Rope, William, green grocer, Rising Sun lane
-Roper, Agnes, dressmaker, Ten Bell lane
-Rose, George, cork manufacturer, 68, St. Stephen’s street
-Rose, James, beer retailer, King street
-Rose, John, general dealer, 5, Golden Ball street
-Rose, Philip, baker, Coslany street
-Rose, Mr. Philip William, St. Giles’ road
-Rose, Robert, Hotpressers’ Arms, Coslany street
-Rose, Mrs. Sarah, fancy repository, Castle street
-Rose, Thomas, baker and confectioner, St. Benedict’s street
-Rose, William, Red Lion, Magdalen street
-Rose, William, brazier and tin-plate worker, Gildengate street
-Ross, Rev. John, M.A., Thorpe hamlet
-Ross, Mrs. Priscilla Sarah, 4, Vauxhall terrace, Julian place
-Rossi, George, watch and clock maker, silversmith, and jeweller, Market
-place; h Eaton
-Roulston, Mr. Thomas, 10, Richmond Place, Lakenham
-Roundtree, Charles, fishmonger, Crow’s yard, Westwick street
-Roundtree, Charles, fishmonger, Barrack street
-Rouse, Harriet, grocer and tea dealer, St. Stephen’s street
-Rouse, James, horse clipper, &c., Currier’s Arms, St. Giles’ street
-Rouse, Richard, hawker, Globe lane
-Rout, George, grocer, Cowgate street
-Row and Bridges’ chemists, &c., St. Stephen’s street
-Row and Co., manufacturing chemists, Surrey grove
-Rowland, Daniel, The Raven, King st.
-Royall, Daniel, tailor, Upper King street
-Royall, Mr. Daniel, Palace street
-Royall, James, shopkeeper, Elm hill
-Ruburt, Justus, secondhand boot and shoe seller, Lower Westwick street
-Rudd, Edward F. G., accountant, 10, St. Stephen’s square
-Rudd, Elizabeth, The Little Buck, Oak street
-Rudd, Francis Robert, tailor, 4, St. Julian street’s
-Rudd, George John, tailor, Surrey street
-Rudd, Mrs. Hannah, box maker, St. Stephen’s Back street
-Rudd, Henry, professor of music, Duke street
-Rudd, James, grocer, St. Catherine’s plain
-Rudd, John, turner, Thorn lane, Ber street
-Rudd, John, chemist, St. George’s plain
-Rudd, Joseph, currier, &c., (see Rudd and Paston) Grapes’ hill
-Rudd, Mary Ann, dressmaker, Calvert street
-Rudd, Noah, butcher, Duke street
-Rudd and Paston, curriers, Grapes’ hill
-Rudd, Robert, grocer, Coslany street, St. Miles’
-Rudd, Thomas, furniture broker, cabinet and chair maker, Ber street
-Rudd, William, turner, Ber street
-Rudling, James, coach builder, Palace street
-Rudling, William, butcher, Ber street
-Ruddock, Thomas, post office clerk, 48, Pottergate street
-Rudrum, Christopher, butcher, Lower King street
-Rudrum, Isaac Samuel, beer retailer, Pottergate street
-Rudrum, Spencer Drake, inspector of weights, St. Faith’s terrace
-Rumball, John George, news agent, Vauxhall street, Julian place
-Rumbold, John, grocer, Grapes’ inn, Howard street, Lakenham
-Rump, Mr. James, 33, Victoria street
-Rump, John, hosier, haberdasher, and fancy repository, 8, Old Haymarket
-Rump, Robert and James, builders and contractors, Colegate street
-Rump, Thomas, grocer, Golden Ball street
-Runacres, William, solicitor’s clerk, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Rushbrook, Robert, shopkeeper, St. Julian’s street
-Russell, Benjamin, watchmaker, Magdalen street
-Russell, George Robert, bricklayer and plasterer, Southwell street
-Russell, Henry, piano-forte manufacturer, Magdalen street
-Russell, William, baker, 16, Row, Old Church street, Lakenham
-Rust, James Barrow, tailor and draper, Bethel street
-Rust, Mrs. Hannah, hosier, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Rust, Rev. Cyprian Thomas, L.L.B., 12, The Crescent, Chapel Field road
-Rust, Joseph, wood turner, Charing cross
-Rust, Robert, Elm tavern, Prince’s street
-Rust, Samuel, wood turner, Bee Hive yard, St. Benedict’s
-Rutherford, Walter, schoolmaster, Nelson street, Heigham fields
-Sacret, Thomas, boot and shoe maker, Magdalen street
-Sadd, Mr. William, Coslany street
-Sadd, David, grocer and draper, Gloucester place, St. Catherine’s plain
-Sadd, William, solicitor, Theatre street; h 1, Heigham road
-Sadler, James, sen., horse-hair manufacturer, Oak street
-Sadler, James, jun., horse hair manufacturer, Oak street
-Sadler, John, Roebuck, Church Walk, New Lakenham
-Saint, Samuel, mathematician, John street, Heigham
-Sainty, Mary, lodging-house keeper, Bethel street
-Salkind, Simon, travelling jeweller, Gildengate street
-Salmons, John, green grocer, Lower King street
-Salmon, John, Nelson tavern, and tailor, West Pottergate street
-Salmon, Thomas, tailor, Rupert street, Union place
-Salter, William, Mitre tavern, Briggs’ street and Rampant Horse street
-Sampson, H., boot and shoe maker, Charles street, Heigham
-Sampson, William, boot and shoe maker, 24, Bethel street
-Samuel, Mrs. Emma, pawnbroker (see Joseph and Samuel)
-Sandell, Edward Harrison, The Cinder Ovens, King street gates
-Sanderson, Ann, tobacconist, Magdalen street
-Sands, Anthony, artist, Grapes’ hill
-Sands, John, Free Masons’ Arms, Southwell street, Lakenham
-Sapey, John, lodging-house keeper, St. Stephen’s Church lane
-Sapey, Thomas, London Coffee House, Rampant Horse street
-Saul, Miss Elizabeth, Grapes’ hill
-Saul and Frazer, city saw mills, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Saul, John, Windmill, Ber street
-Saul, Joseph, box manufacturer, West Pottergate street
-Saul, Sarah Ann, lodging-house keeper, Surrey road, St. Michael at Thorn
-Saul, William Staff, timber merchant, 61, and 62, Pottergate street
-Saunders, Mr. James, 4, York place, Chapel Field road
-Saunders, Mrs. Julia, tailoress, Grout’s thoroughfare
-Savage, Mrs. Mary, butcher, Cowgate street
-Savage, Robert, butcher, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Savary, David, green grocer, Rupert street, Wellington street, Union
-place
-Sawford, Ann Maria, milliner and dress maker, Cow hill, St. Giles’
-Sawyer and Co., cutlers, opticians, and dealers in photographic goods,
-42, London street
-Sawyer, John (see Sawyer and Co.) Chapel field
-Say, Mrs. Sarah, plumber, painter, and glazier, 14, St. Giles’ street
-Sayer, Benjamin, Heart’s Ease, Thorpe hamlet
-Sayer, Daniel, brick and tile maker, Oak street
-Sayer, Daniel, veterinary surgeon, Pottergate street
-Sayer, John, bird and animal preserver, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Sayer, The Misses (boarding school) New road, Town close
-Sayer, The Misses Ann and Charlotte, West Pottergate street
-Sayer, Richard Henry, draper, Unthank’s road
-Sayer, William, currier and leather seller, Upper Westwick street
-Scales, Jeremiah, timber dealer, Chapel Field road, and Oxford street,
-Unthank’s road (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 30)
-Scales, Mary Ann, Trafalgar tavern, Trafalgar street
-Scarles, Charles, solicitor’s clerk, 9, Heigham terrace, Dereham road
-Scarlett, Robert, Surrey tavern, Surrey road
-Scofield, Susan, straw bonnet and dress maker, 52, Upper St. Giles’
-street
-Scott, Benjamin, cooper, Chapel Field road
-Scott, Mr., commercial traveller, Heigham road
-Scott, Charles Turner, sofa, couch, chair, and mattress manufacturer,
-Gildengate street
-Scott, Miss Eliza, dressmaker, 6, Crescent place, Chapel Field road
-Scott, Mrs. Elizabeth, St. Giles’ terrace
-Scott, Mrs. Emily, furniture broker, Charing cross
-Scott, Francis, tailor and clothes’ cleaner, Magdalen street
-Scott, George James, furniture broker, 9, Timberhill street
-Scott, James, cutler, &c., register office, St. Andrew’s hill, corner of
-London street
-Scott, John, professor of languages, Bank street
-Scott, John Turtle, boot and shoe maker, Magdalen street
-Scott, John, grocer and boot maker, Ber street gates
-Scott, Levi, wheelwright, Brunswick road
-Scott, Peter Thomas, brush and patten maker, White Lion street
-Scott, Mr. Robert, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Scott, Robert Bagg, cabinet maker and upholsterer, 18, Charing cross and
-St. John’s street; h St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Scott, Rev. Thomas, Baptist minister, Grove house, Thorpe hamlet
-Scott, William, draper, &c., St. Stephen’s street
-Scott, William, grocer, &c., Magdalen gates
-Scott, William, wholesale and retail lead and window glass dealer,
-plumber, glazier, and painter, Bedford street; h Pottergate street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 40)
-Scott, Mr. William, Hall road, Lakenham
-Scott, William John, furniture and mangle warehouse, Bridge street, St.
-George’s
-Scotter, Henry, 5, Charles street, Heigham
-Scotton, Mary, confectioner, 2, Red Lion street
-Scowen, John, Saracen’s Head, St. Giles’ street
-Scrutton, Henry, grocer, Bethel street
-Seager, Elizabeth and Son, glovers and hair dressers, St. John’s street
-Seager, Robert, hairdresser, Castle meadow
-Seaman, Coriolanus, furniture broker, St. James’ street
-Seaman, David, horse dealer, Chapel Field road
-Seaman, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, St. Martin’s at Palace street
-Seaman, Mr. George, Caledonia terrace, Dereham road
-Seaman, Grimmer and Co., importers of foreign wines and spirits, and sole
-agents for Truman, Hanbury and Co.’s London stout porter, St. John’s
-Maddermarket
-Seaman, Henry, grocer and draper, Old Church path, New Lakenham
-Seaman, Mrs. Martha, beer retailer, St. James’ street
-Seaman, Martha (day school) West End street, Holl’s lane, Heigham
-Seaman, Richard, grocer and tea dealer, Gildengate street
-Seaman, Robert, Esq., Bracondale
-Seaman, Samuel, fishmonger, Bull close
-Seaman, Walter, woodman, Waterloo place, New Catton
-Searby, Wright, and William Martin, dispensing and family chemists, White
-Lion street
-Searles, George, engraver, Trory street, Unthank’s road (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 30)
-Secker, Mr. John, Sussex street
-Sedgwick, Rev. Professor, Lower close
-Sedgwick, Rev. Richard, Lower close
-Seed, Henry, woolstapler, Muspole street; h Eaton Hill House
-Seeley, Elizabeth and Hannah (commercial boarding house) St. Stephen’s
-plain
-Seeley, William, station master at Victoria station, St. Stephen’s
-Seeley, John, beer retailer, and musician, St. Augustine’s street
-Seeley, William, pork butcher, Pottergate street
-Seeley, William, Priest’s buildings, St. Stephen’s road
-Seer, William George, shoemaker, Botolph street
-Selby, Charles James, grocer, Pitt street
-Self, James, The Duke of Wellington, St. Stephen’s street
-Self, Mrs. Mary, butcher, Tombland
-Self, Thomas, gas fitter, painter, &c., Tombland
-Self, Thomas, beer retailer, Red Lion street
-Self, Thomas, grocer, &c., Oak street
-Self, Thomas, gas fitter and bell hanger, Pottergate street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 20)
-Seppings, William, grocer, West End street, Heigham
-Severn and Blackwell, dressmakers, Botolph street
-Severn, James, shoemaker, Calvert street
-Severn, Samuel, St. Paul’s tavern, Cowgate street, St. Paul’s
-Sexton, Edward, Whalebone inn, and maltster and brewer, New Catton
-Sexton, Horace, bricklayer and plasterer, Lower Westwick street
-Sexton, John, pig dealer, St. Catherine’s plain, Lakenham
-Sexton, John, grocer, &c., Scoles’ green
-Sexton, Joseph, dyer and dresser, Calvert street
-Sexton, Robert William, plasterer, Calvert street
-Shalders, Albert, Cadogan place, Cross street, Unthank’s road
-Shalders, Mrs. Charlotte, milliner, Bethel street
-Shalders, Edward, grocer, St. Benedict’s street, St. Lawrence
-Shalders, John, hydraulic engineer, and gutta percha depôt, Bank plain
-(_see Advertisement_, _p._ 17)
-Shalders, Mr. John, Bethel street
-Shalders, Noah, pawnbroker, silversmith, and jeweller, Westlegate street
-Shalders, Thomas, blacksmith, Hay hill, Market place
-Sharman, Mr. Henry, Green hills, Aylsham road
-Sharman, Miss Rachel, dressmaker, Eldon row, Chapel Field road
-Sharon, Anthony, engineer and machinist, Pottergate street
-Sharon, Mrs. Rebecca, dressmaker, 37, Pottergate street
-Sharp, Daniel, solicitor, Surrey street; h 7, Lakenham terrace, City road
-Sharp, Frederick, solicitor’s clerk, Surrey place, Lakenham
-Sharp, Mrs. Leonora, lodging-house keeper, Chapel Field road
-Sharpe, Benjamin Thomas, solicitor, manager of the Norwich and East of
-England Permanent Mutual Benefit Building Society, and agent to the Star
-and British Empire Life, Manchester and General Fire, and County
-Hailstorm Insurance Compys., York house, Chapel Field road
-Sharpe, Henry, tailor, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Sharpe, Rev. William Robert, M.A., 8, Chapel field
-Shaw, Miss Elizabeth, dressmaker, Douro terrace, Heigham grove, St.
-Giles’ road
-Shaw, William, banker’s clerk, Grapes’ hill
-Shearing, Miss Sophia, baby linen establishment, Rampant Horse street
-Sheedy, Mrs., Rachel, Rosary, Thorpe hamlet
-Shenfield, Mrs., Upper St. Giles’
-Shephard, Isaac, cooper and measure maker, Magdalen street
-Shephard, William, shoemaker, Mill lane, New Catton
-Sheppard, Mrs. Ann, ladies’ boarding school, St. Benedict’s plain
-Sheppard, Elizabeth, baker, Upper market
-Sheppard, Robert, hop and seed merchant, Weston’s court, Upper market; h
-St. Benedict’s plain, Pottergate street
-Sheward, William, pawnbroker, Lower King street
-Shibley, William, house and land agent, York terrace, Chapel Field road
-Shickle, Mrs. Ann, 15, The Crescent
-Shickle, Robert, Greyhound Gardens, Ber street
-Shields, Daniel, hoop and rim manufacturer, Prospect square, Scoles’
-green
-Shields, Joseph William, accountant, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Shields, William, tallow chandler, St. Stephen’s Church alley
-Shildrake, Thomas, banker’s clerk, Bracondale
-Shildrake, William, watch and clock maker, silversmith and jeweller, 34,
-London street
-Shires, James, gun-flint cutter, Alma terrace, St. Augustine’s road
-Shirley, Mr. Thomas, 6, Surrey terrace, Lakenham
-Short, Edmund Barker, (at Grout and Co.’s) 3, Dereham Road terrace
-Short, Henry, wine and dry cooper, Middle street, St. George’s
-Short, John Edmund, cashier at Grout and Co.’s, 8, Dereham road terrace
-Short, Mrs., milliner and dressmaker, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Short, Mrs., 2, Dereham Road terrace
-Short, Miss Mary, milliner and dressmaker, 4, Gildengate street
-Shorten, James, fly proprietor, Bull inn, Magdalen street
-Shorting, Mrs. Mary, Chapel field
-Shreeve, George, baker and grocer, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Shreeve, John, shoeing smith, Magdalen street
-Sibel, Mrs. Averill, Pottergate street
-Sibley, Mrs. Rudd, milliner, &c., Fisher’s lane
-Sidney and Armes, curriers and leather cutters, 5, Dove street
-Sidney and Ladyman, wholesale tea dealers, 6, Gentleman’s walk, and 8,
-Ludgate hill, London
-Sidney, Thomas, (see Sidney and Ladyman); h Bow’s manor, London
-Sillett, Mr. James B., All Saints’ green
-Silvey, William, confectioner, White Lion street
-Simpson, Charles, wood turner, St. Lawrence lane; h Charing cross
-Simpson, Mr. Frederic, York villa, Chapel Field road
-Simpson, Mrs. Frederick, Mount Pleasant, Newmarket road
-Simpson, George, master of the Great Hospital, St. Helen’s square
-Simpson, George Elward, solicitor, clerk to the Visiting Justices of the
-Castle, at Norwich, and agent to the London Fire and European Life
-offices, &c., Tombland
-Simpson, Matthias, wood turner, Bear and Staff yard, Fisher’s lane
-Simpson, Robert, grocer and tea dealer, Magdalen street
-Simpson, Thomas, butcher, Charles street, Heigham
-Singleton, Mrs. J., 13, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Sinkler, John, builder, Magdalen street
-Sissen, Miss Louisa, dressmaker, Rose lane
-Sizeland, Adam, Bethel street
-Skelton, John Smith, tailor and woollen draper, 16, St. Giles’ street
-Skelton, Joseph, dyer, Gildengate street
-Skelton, John, manufacturer, Fishgate street; h Palace plain
-Skerritt, George, baker, Upper Regent street, Union place
-Skillings, William, shoemaker, St. George’s plain
-Skipper, Henry, confectioner, and register office for servants, Magdalen
-street
-Skipper, John, solicitor, and secretary to the Equitable Fire Office,
-Bank street; h Thorpe hamlet (see Skipper and Son)
-Skipper, Mrs. Rachel, dressmaker, Surrey road
-Skipper and Son, solicitors, Bank street
-Skipper, Mr. William, (see Skipper and Son); h Thorpe hamlet
-Skippon, James, jun., clerk to Commissioners of Income Tax, schedule E;
-agent for the Lancashire Insurance Compy.; secretary to Norwich and
-Norfolk Angler’s Society; 3, St. Faith’s terrace, St. Faith’s lane
-Skippon, William, the Locomotive tavern, Rupert street, Union place
-Skoyles, C. (see Riches and Skoyles); h Castle meadow
-Skoyles, William, furniture broker, St. Benedict’s street
-Skoyles, Samuel, shopkeeper, Barrack street
-Slack, Mrs. Elizabeth (day school) Grove place, New Lakenham
-Slack, Jacob Henry, engineer, &c., Grapes’ hill
-Slack, Robert Hugh, machinist, Cow hill, St. Giles’
-Slade and Rapier, homœopathic chemists, 7, London street
-Slater, John, bookseller, Castle hill
-Slater, Joseph, tailor and woollen draper, Tombland
-Slaughter, Christopher, shopkeeper, St. Augustine’s street
-Slipper, Charles, carpenter, and toy maker, Pig lane
-Slipper, Elizabeth, green grocer, Grove place, New Lakenham
-Slonitz, Leopold, professor of languages, 26, Bethel street
-Sloper, John, Lame Dog tavern, Lame Dog road
-Sloper, John, fruiterer, Queen street
-Smith, Alfred, shopkeeper, Fishgate street
-Smith, Benjamin, Cattle Market inn, and horse and gig letter, Cattle
-Market
-Smith, Benjamin, furniture broker, Upper Westwick street
-Smith, Mr. Charles, City road, Lakenham
-Smith, Mr. David, Catton road
-Smith, Edward, chemist and druggist, Calvert street
-Smith, Edward, Waterloo tavern, and wine and spirit merchant, Market
-place
-Smith, Edward, market gardener, Dereham road
-Smith, Mrs. Elizabeth, The Coach and Horses, Union place
-Smith, George, coach maker, 3, St. Stephen’s square
-Smith, George, Greyhound, Rampant Horse street
-Smith, Mrs. George William, St. Giles’ street
-Smith, George, linen draper, hosier, &c., 10, Ber street
-Smith, George, clerk, 22, Paragon street
-Smith, George Lincoln, merchant’s clerk, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Smith, Miss Helena, Nelson terrace, Grove road
-Smith, Henry, shoemaker, and shopkeeper, Ber street
-Smith, Henry George, Victoria tavern, Adelaide street, Heigham fields
-Smith, Henry, grocer, King street, Crook’s place
-Smith, James, dealer, Prospect place, Aylsham road
-Smith, Mr. James, 24, Newmarket road
-Smith, James, shopkeeper, Botolph st.
-Smith, James Wilkin, baker, Stump cross, Magdalen street
-Smith, John, yeast manufacturer, St. Augustine’s street
-Smith, Mr. John, West End terrace, Earlham road
-Smith, John, Bear and Staff, Fisher’s lane
-Smith, John, tea dealer, and Birmingham and Staffordshire warehouse,
-Timberhill street
-Smith, John, cheese factor, Stamp Office yard, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Smith, John Joseph, baker and confectioner, Ber street
-Smith, John and Samuel, cigar, snuff, and tobacco warehouse, 7,
-Gentleman’s Walk
-Smith, John Watson, Rose tavern, Upper King street, and Rose lane
-Smith, John William, baker and confectioner, Dove street
-Smith, Jonas, pork butcher, Rising Sun lane
-Smith, Mrs. Joseph, Paragon street
-Smith, Joseph, King’s Arms, and boat builder and bath house, Oak street,
-St. Martin’s gates
-Smith, Joseph De Carle, Magdalen street (see Smith and Sons)
-Smith, Miss Lydia, shopkeeper, Botolph street
-Smith, Mrs., 9, Surrey terrace, Lakenham
-Smith, Miss Mary, 4, Langham place, Dereham road
-Smith, Mary Ann, milliner and dress maker, Rigby’s court, St. Giles’
-Smith, Mrs. Neave, Priest’s buildings, St. Stephen’s road
-Smith, Richard Buck (see Smith and Sons); h Market place
-Smith and Sons, dispensing and family chemists, Market place, and
-Magdalen street
-Smith, Samuel E., carpenter, &c., City road, Lakenham
-Smith, Samuel James, draper, Magdalen street
-Smith, Samuel Howard, working jeweller, Royal Hotel street, Back of the
-Inns; h St. Benedict’s road
-Smith, Samuel, jobbing smith, St. Martin’s gates
-Smith, Samuel, fowl dealer, Scoles’ green
-Smith, Mrs. Sarah, glover, Magdalen street
-Smith, Mrs. Susan, 11, St. Stephen’s square
-Smith, Mr. Thomas, Hall road, Lakenham
-Smith, Thomas, umbrella and parasol maker, St. Benedict’s street
-Smith, William, cattle dealer, Newman’s yard, Ber street
-Smith, William, haberdasher and general warehouseman, 11, Lower Goat lane
-Smith, William, shoemaker, Chapel loke
-Smith, William, fowl dealer, Coburgh street
-Smith, William, veterinary surgeon, Pottergate street
-Smith, Mr. William L., Mount Pleasant
-Smith, William, nursery and seedsman, Nelson Cottage, Nelson st., Heigham
-Smith, William, tin plate worker, St. Benedict’s street
-Smith, William, boat builder, Oak street
-Smith, William Richard, baker, &c., St. Benedict’s street
-Smith, William Richard, confectioner, Palace street
-Smith, William Wilson, shoemaker, Trory street, Lakenham
-Smithdale, Thomas, millwright, engineer, iron, and brass founder, St.
-Ann’s foundry, King street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 9)
-Smyth, William, repairer of musical instruments, Union place
-Snape, Mrs. Jane, 68, St. Giles’ street
-Snelling, James Gage, confectioner and fruiterer, Rampant Horse street
-Snelling, John, Yarmouth Arms, Pudding lane, Market place
-Snelling, Robert, paper pill box manufacturer, Hawthorn row, Heigham
-Snelling, Thomas, grocer and tea dealer, 42, and 43, Magdalen street
-Snelling, Thomas, beer retailer, King street
-Snelling, William, boot and shoemaker, and gutta percha warehouse, Orford
-hill
-Snowdon, Henry, linen and woollen drapers, silk mercer, &c., Bridge
-street, St. George’s
-Snowdon, John Christopher and Co., linen and woollen drapers, and silk
-mercers, Market House, 9, The Walk
-Snowling, John, Duke’s Palace Inn; postmaster, Duke’s Palace street
-Soman, David, wholesale boot and shoe manufacturer, Muspole street
-Soman and Howes, printers, 4, St. Andrew’s hill
-Soman, Philip (see Soman and Howes) 4, St. Andrew’s hill
-Sommerville, Joseph, John, and Robert, drapers and hatters, Magdalen
-street
-Soons, John, seedsman and florist, St. Augustine’s
-Sothern, Mr. Samuel, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-South, Mr. George, Unthank’s road
-Southgate, Benjamin, saw sharper, St. Martin’s lane
-Southgate, John G., baker, Upper Heigham
-Southon, Edmund, cap maker, St. James’ street
-Sowells, Mrs. Charlotte, 5, Chapel Field road
-Sowels, John, Paragon street, St. Giles’ road
-Sowels, Mrs. Mary, William street, Heigham
-Sowels, William, West Pottergate street
-Sowter, Abraham, clerk, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Spalding, James, French polisher, St. Andrew’s hill
-Spanton, Francis Humphrey, dealer in hay and corn, King’s Arms, Ber
-street
-Sparham, Mrs. Julia, 5, Newmarket terrace, Newmarket road
-Sparke, Alfred, engineer, (see Sparke and Co.); h Trowse
-Sparke and Co., general engineers, iron and brass founders, and
-agricultural implement manufacturers, Thorn lane foundry and Castle hill
-(_see advertisement_, _pp._ 36, 37, 38)
-Sparke, Miss Elizabeth, milliner, Chapel Field road
-Sparkhall, Emily, lodging-house keeper, 2, Jay’s terrace, Rose lane
-Sparkhall, John, market gardener, Nelson street, Heigham
-Sparks, Edward, wine and spirit merchant, (see Clabburn and Sparks) St.
-Giles’ street; h Aylsham road
-Sparks, Francis William, wine and spirit merchant, auctioneer and valuer,
-5, St. Giles’ street
-Sparks, William, cabinet maker and upholsterer, Fye Bridge, Magdalen st.
-Sparrow, Charles, Anchor of Hope, Bracondale
-Spatchett, James, chemist, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Spaul, Fidelis Joseph, carver, Prince’s street
-Spaul, William B., builder, and wood and stone carver, Lower close
-Spelman, George, accountant, Pottergate street
-Spelman, Mr. Henry, Unthank’s road
-Spelman, Mrs. William, Unthank’s road
-Spelman, William and Sons, auctioneers, valuers, and land agents, and
-agents to the Argus Life office, St. Giles’ street, and Great Yarmouth
-Spence, George, circulating library and tobacconist, Bridge street, St.
-George’s
-Spence, George William, banker’s clerk, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s
-road
-Spencer, Daniel, solicitor’s clerk, The Chantry
-Spencer, Christopher J. M., surgeon, Lower King street
-Spencer, Miss Harriet, Duke street
-Spencer, Rev. Henry, Grove terrace, Unthank’s road
-Spencer, Isaac, grocer, St. Mary’s Church alley
-Spencer, Isaac, Duke of Wellington, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Spencer, Jonathan, carpenter and joiner, Trowse Newton
-Spencer, Mrs., Lady’s lane
-Spencer, Robert, Elm tavern, Catton road
-Spice, Thomas, flour dealer, Duke street; h Sussex street
-Spink, James, bricklayer and builder, Jubilee place, Heigham road
-Spinks, James, grocer and draper, St. Augustine’s gates
-Spinks, James, livery stables, and horses and carriages for hire, Surrey
-street
-Spinks, John, manager of the District Visiting society, Pottergate street
-Spinks, Samuel, bricklayer and plasterer, King Street gates
-Spinks, Samuel, Calvert street
-Spooner, Edward, beer retailer, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Spooner, Edward Frederick, upholsterer and paper hanger, St. Margaret’s
-plain
-Spooner, Maria, green grocer, Ber street
-Spratt, Mrs. Emma, Albert terrace, Unthank’s road
-Spratt, Miss Sarah, academy, Bethel street
-Spratt, William, hay and corn dealer, Market place
-Spratt, William, coach and harness manufacturer, Chapel field
-Springall, Benjamin, grocer, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Springall, James, wholesale and retail grocer, and agent to the British
-Equitable Life and Imperial Fire offices, Tombland
-Springfield, Mrs., St. Mary’s Church alley
-Springfield, Osborn, silk merchant, St. Martin’s lane; h Catton
-Springfield, Son and Nephew, silk merchants, St. Martin’s lane
-Springfield, Thomas, drill master, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Spurgeon, Emily, dressmaker, Suffolk street, Union place
-Spurling, William, The Trowel and Hammer, St. Stephen’s road
-Squires, James, butcher, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Stacey, Anthony, cooper, Thorpe hamlet
-Stacey, Edward, house and land agent, 1, Point house, Newmarket road
-Stacey, Mrs. William, Theatre street
-Stacy, Henry Walter, bookseller, printer, publisher, stationer, and
-bookbinder, 2, Old Haymarket
-Staff, Charles, green grocer, Ber street
-Staff, Frederick, Nelson tavern, Bedford street
-Staff, John, congreve maker, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Staff, Matthias, pig dealer, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Stafford, Robert, Mariners’ Arms, Mariners’ lane
-Stafford, Thomas, grocer and tea dealer, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Stafford, William, baker, Vauxhall street
-Stafford, William, baker, Brazen Doors road
-Stageman, Miss Susanna, day school, Brazen Doors road
-Staines, Mrs. Angelina, grocer, St. Stephen’s gates
-Stallard, Joseph William, tailor and outfitter, Orford hill
-Stalweather, Frederick, green grocer, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Stammers, Robert, whitesmith, Castle hill
-Stamp, William, coffee-house keeper, and tailor, Colegate street
-Stamp, W., rent and debt collector, Luckett’s court, St. Andrew’s
-Stangroom, Caroline, straw bonnet maker, Ber street
-Stangroom, Henry, furniture broker, Gildengate street
-Stangroom, John, Duke of Sussex, St. Augustine’s street
-Stangroom, Robert, grocer, Fishgate street
-Stanley, George, scale, beam, weight, weighing machine, and steelyard
-maker, Elm hill
-Stanley, Joseph, statuary and mason, St. Stephen’s street
-Stanley, Thomas, Essex street, Union place
-Stanley, William, stone and marble mason, St. Catherine’s plain
-Stannard, Alfred, artist, King street, Crook’s place
-Stannard, Cubitt, manufacturer, St. George’s plain
-Stannard, Miss Emily, boarding school, Rose lane
-Stannard, Mrs., Willow lane, St. Giles’
-Stannard, Harriet, milliner and straw bonnet maker, Infirmary road
-Stannard, John, shopkeeper, Magdalen street
-Stannard, Robert John, baker, Little London street
-Stannard, Mrs. Sarah, matron of Jenny Lind Infirmary for Sick Children,
-Pottergate street
-Stanshaw, Mr. George, 20, St. Giles’ street
-Stanton, Robert, beer retailer, King street
-Stapleton, Robert, boot and shoe manufacturer, corner of Pottergate
-street, and St. John’s street
-Stark, Mr. William, St. George’s plain
-Stark, William and Co., agricultural chemists and merchants, dyers,
-dressers, and hot pressers, Duke’s Palace bridge
-Stark, Mr. John Michael, 10, Chapel field
-Starkey, Mrs. Mary, mistress of St. Lawrence’s District National School,
-St. Benedict’s street
-Starland, George and Edward, plumbers, glaziers, and painters, Surrey
-street
-Starling, Charles Grey, linen draper, hosier, &c., White Lion street
-Starling, Edmund A., fancy warehouseman, West Pottergate street
-Starling, Mrs. Sophia, dressmaker, Chapel street, Union place
-Starling, Miss Rebecca, milliner and dressmaker, West Pottergate street
-Starling, Thomas, accountant, 12, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Starr, Frank, merchant’s clerk, Portland place, Holl’s lane
-Steadman, Mr. Charles, Heigham road
-Stearman, Eliza, dressmaker and milliner, Whitefriars’ street
-Stearne, Thomas, city missionary, Sussex street, St. Augustine’s
-Stebbings, Mrs. Sarah, lodging-house keeper, Rose lane
-Steel, Henry, commercial traveller, West End Cottages, Chapel Field road
-Steel and Rix, fancy repository, Queen street
-Steele, The Misses, Unthank’s road
-Stevens, Charles Frederick, brazier, and tin-plate worker, Magdalen
-street
-Stevens, Gardner Christopher, furnishing and general ironmonger, Orford
-hill
-Stevens, Mr. George, Poplar Cottage, Hellesdon road
-Stevens, John, tobacconist, Back of the Inns
-Stevens, Mrs. Mary (day school) Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Stevens, John Thomas, law stationer, &c. Castle meadow
-Stevens, William Horace, printer, &c., Upper Goat lane; h Trory street,
-Unthank’s road
-Stevens, William, solicitor, Close; h St. Faith’s lane
-Stevenson, Henry, Esq., Newmarket road (see Matchett and Stevenson)
-Steward and Fisher, solicitors, and agents for the Norwich Union Fire
-Office, King street
-Steward, Edward, solicitor (see Steward and Fisher)
-Steward, George, baker, Bull close
-Steward, Henry, shopkeeper and tailor, Bull close
-Steward, James, merchant tailor, and general outfitter, Tombland; h
-Thorpe
-Steward, Mrs. James, Bracondale
-Steward, Mrs. Lucy, Heigham Lodge, Unthank’s road
-Steward, Mary, green grocer, St. Benedict’s street
-Steward, Miss Mary Ann, dressmaker and milliner, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Steward, Miss Mary, milliner and dressmaker, Little Globe street, Union
-place
-Steward, Patteson, Finch and Co., maltsters, brewers, and spirit
-merchants, Anchor brewery, Pockthorpe
-Steward, Robert and Co., timber merchants, King street
-Steward, Samuel, bookbinder, &c., Prince’s street
-Steward, William, bricklayer and plasterer, East End, Thorpe hamlet
-Stewards, Matthew, butcher, St. James’ street
-Stewardson, Mr. Edward, 6, St. Giles’ road
-Stewardson, Nathaniel Thomas, shopkeeper, St. James’ street
-Stewardson, William Henry, printer, Little London street
-Stewart, Charles Keith, fringe manufacturer, St. Giles’ street
-Stigles, Daniel, hairdresser and herbalist, Fishgate street
-Stimpson, James, furniture broker, Orford hill
-Stirgess, George, bricklayer, Dingle’s row, New Catton
-Stockings, Jonathan, baker, Eagle terrace, Newmarket road
-Stockings, Mark, butcher, St. Stephen’s street
-Stocks, Alfred Joseph, linen draper, silk mercer, hosier, glover, and
-laceman, 12, Briggs’ street; h St. Stephen’s rd.
-Stocks, George William, commercial traveller, St. Benedict’s street
-Stocks, Mrs. Maria (boarding and day school) St. Benedict’s gates
-Stone, Edward, beer retailer, King st.
-Stone, Henry, plane maker, Magdalen street
-Stone, Mr. James, Castle street
-Stonex, James, grocer, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Stonex, William, farmer, Hall road, Lakenham
-Storey, David, Black Swan, Upper Market
-Storey, James, shopkeeper, St. Augustine’s
-Storey, William, Bricklayers’ Arms, grocer, Bull close
-Stowers, James, tobacconist, 4, Red Lion street, St. Stephen’s
-St. Quintin, Edward H., R.N., Thorpe, hamlet
-St. Quintin, Capt. James, R.N., Lower close
-Strachan, James, Guildhall tavern, Market place
-Strangways, Walter Fox, Capt. R.H.A., The Lower close
-Stratford, Edmund, scripture reader, Cowgate street
-Stringer, Charles, surveyor of taxes, Orford hill; h 2, Newmarket road
-Stroyan, Robert, cattle salesman, Bracondale
-Stubbs, Charles, poulterer, Golden Ball street
-Stubbs, Edward, White Horse tavern, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Stubbs, George, carter, &c., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Stubbs, Hugh, carter, Stamp Office yard, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Stubbs, Maria, general shopkeeper and beer retailer, Barrack street
-Studwell, Mrs. Sarah, lodging house keeper, St. Benedict’s road
-Sturley, Charles, cabinet maker, Pottergate street
-Stygals, William, green grocer, Ber street
-Suckling, Mr. Nelson Morris, Distillery street, Heigham
-Suffolk, Edward, coal dealer, King street, Crook’s place
-Suffolk, George, wholesale shoe manufacturer, Fountain square, Union
-place
-Suffolk, Mrs., Rising Sun road
-Suffolk, William, carpenter, Ber street
-Suggett and Dunsford, surgical and mechanical dentists, 17, St. Giles’
-street
-Sullivan, Stephen, baker, St. Margaret’s plain
-Sultzer, John and Co., manufacturers, St. Augustine’s street
-Sumner, David, pork butcher, Elm hill
-Surflin, William, plumber and glazier, Bank tavern, Bank street
-Sursham, Henry David, boot and shoe maker, Ten Bell lane
-Sursham, John, corn and coal merchant, Fishgate street (see Boardman and
-Sursham)
-Sussams, William Stevenson, grocer, Heigham street
-Sutton, Francis, analytical chemist, (see Harper and Sutton) Bank plain;
-h 2, Lakenham terrace (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 7)
-Sutton, James, (Bennett’s hotel and boarding house) Exchange street
-Sutton, John, market gardener, Lower King street
-Sutton, John Thompson, commercial traveller, Unthank’s road
-Sutton, Henry Marrison, draper, &c., St. Augustine’s
-Sutton, Marrison Daniel, tailor and draper, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Sutton, Robert, furniture broker, Magdalen street
-Sutton, Samuel, working cutler, Royal Hotel street
-Swann, Mrs. Ann, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Swann, James, boot and shoe manufacturer, Magdalen street
-Swann, Joshua, (of the firm of Willett and Co.) The Grove, Chapel field
-Swash, Maria, Turkey Cock, St. Simon’s Church street
-Swash, Robert, green grocer, St. Mary’s plain
-Swash, Sarah Ann, hairdresser, St. James’ street
-Sweatman, Mrs. Elizabeth, Red Rose tavern, and tobacconist, Back of the
-Inns
-Swinden, John, fancy repository, Magdalen street
-Swinton, Mr. William, West Pottergate street
-Sword, John, livery and bait stables, Rose lane
-Sword, John, hairdresser, (see Lanham and Sword) St. Giles’
-Syder, Mr. James, 2, St. Swithin’s villa, Catton road
-Symonds, Rev. Henry, M.A., Lower close
-Syrett, James, bailiff, Lower Westwick street
-Tadman, Mr. William, gas works, Thorpe hamlet
-Talbot, George, tailor and woollen draper, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Talbot, Hannah, Lower close
-Tallowin, Samuel, cow keeper, Rope Makers’ Arms lane, Hellesdon road
-Talmedge, Miss Lydia, mistress of Industrial School, King street
-Taney, William, fishmonger and photographer, Timberhill street
-Tann, Mrs. Hannah, baker, Charing cross
-Tann, Mary Ann, lodging-house keeper, Hall road, Lakenham
-Tann, Samuel Wiseman, cabinet maker, &c., Upper Westwick street
-Tarte, William, paper hanger, carver, and gilder, Botolph street
-Tate, George, confectioner, Coslany street
-Tatham, Mr. Charles, Distillery street
-Tattam, Richard, cab proprietor, Lady’s lane
-Tayler, Mrs. Eleanor, boarding and day school, 5, Grove place, Lakenham
-Tayler, Francis George, teacher of music, 5, Grove place, Lakenham
-Taylor, Adam and Clement, solicitors, and deputy under-sheriffs of
-Norfolk, and agents to the Palladium Life Insurance office, Orford place
-Taylor, George, green grocer, Rupert street, Union place
-Taylor, George, truss maker, 13, Upper St. Giles’
-Taylor, Mr. C., cemetery, Earlham road
-Taylor, Lieut. Edward, R.N., Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Taylor, Elizabeth, dressmaker, Prince’s street
-Taylor, Elizabeth, stay and elastic bandage maker, 13, Upper St. Giles’
-st.
-Taylor, George, green grocer, Rose lane
-Taylor, Henry, shoemaker, Boarded court, Ber street
-Taylor, James William, builder and contractor, measure maker, and bowl
-turner, White Friars’ street, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Taylor, Mrs. John, Surrey street
-Taylor, John Martin, baker, St. Mary’s plain
-Taylor, John Oddin, solicitor, solicitor to Eastern Counties and Norfolk
-Railways, registrar of marriages, solicitor to the Lowestoft Marine
-Parade Building Society, Lowestoft Harbour Building Society, and the
-Wellington Esplanade Building Society, and commissioner for
-acknowledgments of deeds by married women, 21 and 22, St. Giles’ street
-Taylor, John William, cooper and measure maker, Upper Westwick street
-Taylor, Mrs. Jane, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Taylor, Mrs. Mary, Castle hotel and Commercial inn, Castle hill
-Taylor, William, chemist and druggist, Magdalen street
-Taylor, Mrs. William, cement agent, King street
-Taylor, William Aaron, tailor, Jay’s square, Rose lane
-Taylor, William Brown, tobacconist, 1, St. Stephen’s street
-Taylor, William Henry, surgeon, Prince’s street
-Taylor, William Henry and Co., wholesale grocers, Old Haymarket
-Taylor, William James, grocer, plumber, and glazier, Bird in Hand, Mill
-lane, New Catton
-Taylor, Mr. William, Carrow Abbey
-Taylor, William Samuel, tailor and draper, Prince’s street
-Taylor, William, coal dealer, Coslany street
-Tebble, Mr. Thomas, Hall road, Lakenham
-Temple, Robert, grocer, Ber street
-Tench, James, shopkeeper and shoemaker, Spitalfields, Thorpe hamlet
-Terrington, William, boot maker, Bloomsbury street, Rose lane
-Testar, Charles, Cirque Unique tavern, Upper Westwick street
-Thaxter, John, blacksmith, Barrack street
-Thayne, Edward, basket manufacturer Upper Westwick street
-Theobald, Mr. John, 6, Newmarket terrace
-Theobald, Thomas and Son, hosiers and glovers, London street
-Thetford, William, pork butcher, Trowse
-Thirkettle, —, cabinet maker, Scole’s green
-Thirkettle, Mrs. Harriet, feather dresser, Dereham road
-Thirkettle, Mrs. Mary Ann, milliner and dressmaker, Timberhill street
-Thirkettle, Robert, tailor, Wheelhouse’s court, St. Giles’ road
-Thirkettle, William, whitesmith and bell hanger, Timberhill street
-Thirtle, Mrs. Elizabeth, 11, Heigham terrace
-Thirtle, James, boot and shoe maker, Lower Westwick street
-Thirtle, James, whitesmith, Thorn lane
-Thirtle, Thomas, boot and shoe maker, practical corn extractor, and
-estate and commission agent, 2, Bridewell alley
-Thomas, John, coal merchant, Quay side, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Thompson, Alfred William, commercial traveller, Chapel Field road
-Thompson, Benjamin, shopkeeper, Rose tavern, Thorn lane
-Thompson, Christopher, brazier and tin-plate worker, Rampant Horse street
-Thompson and Corrick, milliners and dressmakers, 60, St. Giles’ street
-Thompson, Daniel, shoemaker, Upper King street
-Thompson, Mrs. Eliza, dressmaker, Suffolk street, Union place
-Thompson, Mrs. Elizabeth, Blue Anchor, Silver road
-Thompson, George, Canteen, Barracks, Pockthorpe
-Thompson, Henry, chemist and druggist, St. Stephen’s plain
-Thompson, Henry, brazier, St. Julian’s street
-Thompson, Mr. Jabez, 10, Newmarket rd.
-Thompson, James, boot closer, St. Catherine’s plain
-Thompson, James, grocer, Cross lane, St. George’s
-Thompson, John, boot and shoe maker and gutta percha factor, St. Peter’s
-steps, Market place
-Thompson, John, green grocer, King street, Crook’s place
-Thompson, Joseph, grocer and tea dealer, St. Stephen’s street
-Thompson, Miss Maria, furniture broker, Oak street
-Thompson, Martin, The Griffin, Barrack street
-Thompson, Mrs., Dereham road
-Thompson, Mrs., Chapel loke
-Thompson, Philip, general shopkeeper, &c., Cherry street, New Lakenham
-Thompson, Robert, jun., Phœnix iron works, St. Clement’s
-Thompson, Robert, surgeon, Theatre street
-Thompson, Robert, The Three Tuns, King street
-Thompson and Son, iron merchants, ironmongers, oil and colourmen,
-ironfounders, boiler makers, and general smiths, Castle street and
-Colegate street
-Thompson, Mrs. Sarah, bricklayer, St. Augustine’s
-Thompson, Thomas, shoemaker, Botolph street
-Thompson, William, beer retailer, Lower King street
-Thorn, Charles, coach builder, St. Giles’ gates
-Thorn, William, green grocer, Magdalen street
-Thorndick and Co., printers and paper-bag manufacturers, Prince’s street
-Thorns, Robert and Co., wholesale ironmongers, oil and colormen, Exchange
-street
-Thornton, Mrs. H., Bracondale
-Thornton, William, working cutler, Grapes’ hill
-Thorold, Mr. William, Thorpe hamlet
-Thorpe, Thomas, hairdresser, Coslany street
-Thorpe, Thomas Edward, furniture broker, Sun and Anchor, Colegate street
-Thorpe, William, hairdresser, St. Stephen’s street
-Thouless, James, grocer, Lothian street, Heigham
-Thouless, William, Bartholomew Tavern, Thorn lane
-Thrower, Maria, Woolpack inn, Golden Ball street
-Thurgar and Co., mustard manufacturers and patentees of the condensed
-egg, Albion mills, King street
-Thurgar, Christopher Walter, surgeon, St. Catherine’s plain
-Thurgar, William T., portrait painter, Unthank’s road
-Thurling, James, Coachmakers’ Arms, St. Stephen’s gates
-Thurlow, Mrs. Elizabeth, Post Office Tavern, Post Office street
-Thurlow, Henry, Bricklayers’ Arms, Castle hill
-Thurlow, John, baker and grocer, &c., Trowse
-Thurlow, William, grocer, Prospect House, Philadelphia
-Thurst, James, Venetian blind manufacturer, Castle meadow
-Thurston, Daniel, Bull inn, St. Stephen’s street
-Thurston, Samuel W., Chatham place, Chapel field road
-Thurston, William, furniture broker, Oak street
-Thurtell, Henry, green grocer, King street
-Thurtell, James, whitesmith, Thorn lane
-Thurtell, Mr. Thomas, Hall road, Lakenham
-Thwaites, Mr. Henry, Holl’s lane
-Thwaites, Isaac Mower, plumber, painter, and glazier, Willow cottage,
-Thorn lane
-Thwaites, John, beer retailer, Rainbow, Lower King street
-Tibbenham, William, cowkeeper, Newmarket road
-Tidd, Robert, grocer and tea-dealer, Oak street
-Tidman, Robert, Bridge House, Thorpe hamlet
-Tidman, Robert, machinist and boiler maker, Thorpe hamlet
-Tillett, Mr. Jacob, Quay side
-Tillett, Jacob Henry, solicitor, and agent to the General Life and Fire
-Insurance Company, St. Andrew’s Broad street; h Town close
-Tillett, James, wheelwright, St. Augustine’s gates
-Tillett, Leonard, bricklayer and plasterer, Lower Westwick street
-Tillett, William, coachbuilder, St. Augustine’s
-Tilley, Alfred, upholsterer, Lothian street
-Tills, Benjamin, grocer and tea dealer, Magdalen street
-Tillyard and Howlett, curriers, leather merchants, and shoe
-manufacturers, St. George’s plain
-Tillyard, Isaac, shoe manufacturer, St. George’s plain; h Bracondale
-Tillyard, Mr. Robert, Grove, St. Giles’ road
-Tillyard and Son, boot and shoe makers, Elm hill
-Tillyard, Abraham, boot and shoe maker, (see Tillyard and Son)
-Tilney, Henry, beer retailer, Magdalen street
-Tink, William, jobbing gardener, Trafalgar street
-Tinkler, George, clerk to the Commissioner of Taxes, and Deputy Registrar
-of Births and Deaths for East Wymer District, Magdalen street
-Tinkler, George, green grocer, Magdalen street
-Tinkley, Mrs. Esther, boot and shoe maker, Rampant Horse street
-Tiptod, Benjamin, green grocer, Coburgh street
-Titlow, Rev. Samuel, A.M., 16, The Crescent
-Todd, Miss Catherine, 3, Heigham place
-Todd, John, and Son, tailors and woollen drapers, Queen street
-Todd, William, clerk to the Norwich Union Insurance Society, Lower King
-street
-Todd, William Austin, tailor, habit maker, woollen draper, and hatter,
-16, London street
-Toll, Elizabeth, 57, St. Giles’ street
-Toll, William, shoemaker, Ber street gates
-Tolladay, Joseph, horse-hair seating and mattress manufacturer, Lower
-Westwick street
-Tolson, Mrs. Martha, 5, London terrace, St. Stephen’s road
-Tomlinson, Miss Ann, milliner, Bishopgate street
-Tomlinson and Co., hatters, hosiers, and glovers, Castle street
-Tomlinson, Mr. George, City road, Heigham fields
-Tomlinson, Hannah, lodging-house keeper, 2, Bank plain
-Tompson, Charles, schoolmaster and shopkeeper, Pitt street
-Toogood, William, shoemaker, Aylsham road
-Tooke, Mrs. Mary, Nelson place, Mount Pleasant, Newmarket road
-Tooke, Michael, tailor, Vauxhall street
-Tooley, Peter, saddler and harness maker, Upper King street
-Towell, Mrs. Ann, White Cottage, Philadelphia
-Towell, William, seed merchant, 2, Upper King street
-Towler, Mr. Abel, Heigham grove, Unthank’s road
-Towler, Edward William Robert, grocer and tea-dealer, Magdalen street
-Towler, Miss Hannah, linen draper and haberdasher, Fye bridge, Magdalen
-street
-Towler, John Burrows, fish salesman, Lady’s lane
-Towler, Rowling and Allen, manufacturers’, Elm hill, and 46, Friday
-street, Cheapside, London
-Towler, Richard Burrows, The Ostrich tavern, Plumstead road
-Townley, Mr. Jonathan, treasurer of County Court, Surrey road
-Townshend, Charles, furniture broker, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Townshend, George, Crown inn, Elm hill
-Townshend, John, house agent, Trafalgar street, New Lakenham
-Townshend, Robert, clerk, 7, Synagogue street
-Townshend, Samuel, herring curer, 32, Pottergate street
-Townshend, Samuel Thomas, jun., carver, gilder, and looking-glass and
-picture-frame manufacturer, 13, Charing cross
-Townshend, Miss Sarah, milliner and dressmaker, Botolph street
-Townshend, William, bricklayer, King’s Arms, Bethel street
-Trackson, James, travelling draper, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Travis, Samuel, Bowling Green tap, Theatre street
-Traxton, Edward, tailor, Lower close
-Trevor, Mr. Frederick Francis, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Trevor, Henry, cabinet, upholstery, paper hanging, and carpet warehouse,
-5, Post Office street; h Earlham road
-Trimmer, Rev. Kirby, B.A., Upper close
-Tripp, John, whitesmith, Golden Ball street
-Trollop, George, gardener and green grocer, Southwell road, New Lakenham
-Trory, John, professor of music, Elm hill, St. Peter’s Hungate
-Trory, William, green grocer, Bethel street
-Trory, Mr. William, Unthank’s road
-Trowse, Christopher, tailor, Ten Bell lane
-Trowse, John, parish clerk to St. Peter’s Mancroft, Bethel street
-Trowse, William and Charles, builders, St. Julian street
-True, Samuel, stationer, St. Augustine’s street
-True, William John, Jolly Gardeners, Brunswick road
-Truman, James, shoe manufacturer, Pottergate street
-Trumbetta, William, Market House, Weaver’s lane
-Tubb, William Henry, original Berlin wool and fancy warehouse, London
-street
-Tuck, Charles Edward, solicitor, St. Giles’ street
-Tuck, James Stannard, lodging-house keeper, Surrey street
-Tuck, Robert, baker, Vauxhall street
-Tuck, Robert, confectioner, Wensum street
-Tuck, Robert Alexander, baker and confectioner, Lower Goat lane
-Tuddenham, Edward, tailor, Duke’s street
-Tuddenham, Henry, tailor, St. Augustine’s
-Tuddenham, John, The Swan, Cowgate street
-Tuffield, William, fishmonger, Badding lane, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Tuffs, William, beer retailer, Botolph street
-Tungate, William, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Turner, Charles, shoemaker, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Turner, Mr. Charles, Lower King street
-Turner, Charles, Rev., M. A., 17, The Crescent
-Turner, Edmund, commercial traveller, Grove, Surrey road
-Turner, James Mangles, iron founder, Norwich foundry, St. Martin’s at
-Palace
-Turner, James, carver and gilder, Charles street, Heigham
-Turner, John, house and furniture painter, St. Lawrence lane
-Turner, John Joseph, painter, &c., Barn road, Heigham
-Turner, Joseph, The Anchor, Surrey street
-Turner, Sarah, shopkeeper, Adelaide street, Heigham
-Turner, Sarah, grocer, John street, Heigham
-Turner, Thomas, green grocer, Ber street
-Turner, William, jun., boot and shoemaker, Palace street
-Turner, William, green grocer, St. James’ street
-Turner, William, tailor, St. Stephen’s Church lane
-Turner, William Nicholas Harwin, solicitor, Lower close; h Newmarket road
-Turrell, James, grocer, Ber street
-Turrell, Josiah, furniture broker, and general shopkeeper, Coburgh street
-Turtle, Francis Gilling, throwster and stover, Botolph street
-Tuttell, Ann Maria, baker, and shopkeeper, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Tuttell, Henry, general shopkeeper, Trafalgar street, New Lakenham
-Tuttle, John, grocer, Mill street, Lakenham
-Tuxford, William, trunk maker, Back of the Inns
-Tyce, George, cabinet maker, 16, Charing cross
-Tye, Jemima, milliner and straw bonnet maker, Ber street
-Tyler, Mrs. Adelaide (day school) Lothian street, Heigham
-Tyzack, William Valentine, haircutter, wig maker, and perfumer, 13,
-London street
-Ulph, Frederick, carpenter and builder, St. John’s terrace, Ber street
-gates
-Ulph, Henry William, billiard table keeper, Old Post Office court; h
-Dereham road
-Ulph, James, The Three Tubs, Barrack street, Pockthorpe
-Ulph, Thomas, shoe mercer, leather warehouseman, &c., 1, Dove street
-Ulph, William, dyer and dresser, Lower Westwick street
-Underwood, Charles, butcher, West Pottergate street
-Underwood and Gaze, lime burners and brick makers, Chalk hill, Thorpe
-hamlet
-Underwood, Henry, bricklayer and plasterer, St. Margaret’s plain; h
-Somerleyton street
-Underwood, John, bricklayer, King street
-Upcroft, James, Jack of Newbury tavern, Magdalen street
-Upcroft, William, printer and bookbinder, Fishgate street
-Utting, Charles, bankers’ clerk, Holl’s lane, Heigham fields
-Utting, John, boot and shoe maker, Gildengate street
-Utting, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Ber street
-Utting, Mr. Robert, Sussex street, St. Augustine’s
-Valentine, Elizabeth, green grocer, St. Swithin’s
-Varley, John, cabinet and chair maker, Ropes’ yard, Surrey street
-Varvill, James, lime burner, Trowse Newton
-Vassar, John, grocer and tea dealer, West End street, Heigham
-Venning, Mrs. Julia, Surrey House, Surrey street
-Venteman, George Deanes, inland revenue officer, Lower King street
-Vincent, Elizabeth, milliner, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Vincent, Henry, furniture broker, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Vincent, Henry, tin-plate worker, Lower Westwick street
-Vincent, Henry and Son, furniture brokers, and tin-plate workers, Upper
-Westwick street
-Vincent, James, hat manufacturer, furrier, and feather maker, Red Lion
-street
-Vincent, John, salesman, Leonard’s buildings, Unthank’s road
-Vincent, Rev. John Charles Frederick, A.M. and LL.D., Upper close
-Vlieland, Jerome N., professor of languages, Redwell street
-Vyall, Daniel, parish clerk, and coal merchant, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Vyall, Henry Manning, coal merchant, Chapel Field road
-Wade, Elizabeth, tailoress, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Wade, Mrs. Frances, woollen cloth warehouse, Redwell street
-Wade, James, furniture broker, Fishgate street
-Wade, Robert, hairdresser, &c., Bank street
-Wade, Rev. Robert, B.A., incumbent of Christ church, New Catton
-Wade, Thomas, wood turner, Pitt street
-Wade, Thomas, beer retailer, Pitt street
-Waddington, James, estate agent, St. Julian’s street, Ber street
-Waight, Thomas, White Hart, Ber street
-Waite, George, gas fitter and brazier, 4, Redwell street
-Wakerley, George, agent to Blackie and Son, publishers, Upper St. Giles’
-street
-Wallace, Thomas, Whip and Nag, Pitt street
-Wales, John, carpenter and builder, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Wales, Mr. William, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Walker, Amos, baker, Infirmary road
-Walker, Mrs. Ann, milliner, and straw bonnet maker, Peacock street
-Walker and Bird, writers and grainers, Surrey street (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 19)
-Walker, Clement Henry, grainer, (see Walker and Bird); h Victoria place
-Walker, Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Ber street
-Walker, George, Cardinal Cap, Upper Westwick street
-Walker, James, butcher, Coslany street
-Walker, John, green grocer, Ber street
-Walker, John, Castle tavern, Thorpe hamlet
-Walker, Richard, fancy repository, St. George’s Bridge street
-Walker, Robert, printer and news’ agent, Church street, St. Miles’
-Coslany
-Walker, Theresa, Calvert street
-Walker, Thomas, joiner and builder, Upper Westwick street
-Walker, William Steward, accountant, 7, Surrey terrace, Surrey road
-Wallace, James, Two Brewers, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Waller, Elizabeth, dressmaker, Calvert street
-Waller, John Gamble, haberdasher, Peacock street
-Waller, Martha, shopkeeper, St. Paul’s opening
-Waller, Robert Pitts, Christian Knowledge Society repository, 15, Castle
-meadow
-Waller, Thomas, baker, Cowgate street
-Walmsley, George William, carpenter, West Pottergate street
-Walne, Mr. William B., 53, Pottergate street
-Walters, William, grocer, Ber street
-Want, Frederick, stone and marble mason, Dereham road
-Ward, Charles Palmer, hairdresser, White Lion street
-Ward, Elizabeth, green grocer, St. Benedict’s street
-Ward, George, baker, Little Orford street
-Ward, Isaac, hairdresser, West Pottergate street
-Ward, James, carpenter, St. Andrew’s hill
-Ward, Mrs. Maria, dressmaker, Albemarle street, Crook’s place
-Ward, Thomas William, boot and shoe maker, St. Benedict’s street
-Ward, William, William the Fourth, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Ward, William, The Bird in Hand, Barrack street
-Wardle, Sarah, draper and milliner, St. Mary’s plain
-Warlett, Mrs. Phœbe, clothier, Coslany street
-Warman, Zachariah W., haberdasher, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Warner, George G., merchant’s clerk, Paragon street
-Warner, Henry, George inn, Old Haymarket
-Warner, James, blacksmith, Trafalgar street
-Warner, Walter Waite, tea dealer, All Saints’ green
-Warne, Samuel, shoemaker, Russell street
-Warner, William and Co., brass founders, coppersmiths, and agents to
-copper mines, 2, St. Giles’ street
-Warnes, Charles, Orchard Tavern gardens, Heigham street
-Warnes, Elizabeth, Eastern Counties Railway tavern, Foundry bridge
-Warnes, Henry, merchant’s clerk, 6, St. Stephen’s square
-Warnes, Robert, coal merchant, Foundry bridge; h 7, John street, Rose
-lane
-Warnes, Thomas, beer retailer, Cowgate street, St. Paul’s
-Warnes, Thomas, brush manufacturer, City road, Heigham
-Warner, William Waite, Theatre street
-Warnett, Charles, bricklayer and builder, Lower King street
-Warnett, Phœbe, shopkeeper, &c., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Warren, Reuben, carpenter, Russell st.
-Warren, Mrs. Susan, 4, Grove place, St. Giles’ road
-Warren, Mr. William, Bracondale
-Watching, Thomas, green grocer, Heigham street
-Watering, Jeremiah, boot and shoe maker, Southwell street, Lakenham
-Watering, John, shopkeeper, Mill lane, New Catton
-Watering, Mr., Douro terrace, Heigham grove, Earlham road
-Waters, John, fishmonger, Ber Street gates
-Waterson, Joseph, coal merchant, Quay side
-Waterton, Mr. Edward, The Cottage, Silver road
-Watling, Francis, wood turner, Oak street
-Watling, Robert Shingles, corn merchant, Cinder Ovens yard, King street;
-h Yarmouth
-Watling, Simon, shoe manufacturer, Cowgate street
-Watson, Ann and Son, stone merchants and masons, St. Faith’s lane and
-Castle meadow; h Thorpe hamlet
-Watson, Daniel Filby, carver and gilder, All Saints’ green
-Watson, Edward Charles, carpenter and joiner, Chapel street, Crook’s
-place
-Watson, Frederick Elwin, solicitor, clerk to the Commissioners of taxes,
-and agent to the Yorkshire Fire and Life office, Rampant Horse street; h
-5, Lakenham terrace
-Watson, George, Alma terrace, Infirmary road
-Watson, Gilbert Pickering, chemist and druggist, King street
-Watson, James, carpenter and builder, Philadelphia
-Watson, James, chemist and druggist, Lower King street
-Watson, James, tea dealer and lodging-house keeper, Calvert street
-Watson, James Crane, carpenter and builder, John street, Rose lane
-Watson, James Harvey, tailor and clothier, 2, Charing cross
-Watson, John, Star Commercial inn and posting house, Old Haymarket
-Watson, John Ferra, surgeon, Heigham hill, Heigham
-Watson, Miss Mary Ann, day school, John street, Rose lane
-Watts, Mrs. Elizabeth, 8, The Crescent
-Watts and Graham, drapers and tea-dealers, Thurso place, Dereham road
-Watts, Sarah, Lord Nelson, Dereham rd.
-Watts, Harriet, beer retailer, Lower King street
-Watts, Henry, tailor, Devonshire place, Heigham
-Watts, James, engineer, &c., Bishopgate street
-Watts, James, engineer, Bloomsbury street, Rose lane
-Watts, John, Kett’s Castle, Spitalfields, Thorpe hamlet
-Watts, Mrs. Sarah, Earlham road
-Watts, Thomas, butcher, Willow lane, St. Giles’
-Watts, Thomas, clerk, 1, St. Stephen’s square
-Weavers, Elizabeth, lodging-house keeper, 1, Pottergate street
-Weavers, Mrs. Fanny Mary, dressmaker, 5, John street, Rose lane
-Weavers, Robert, beer retailer, Heigham street
-Weavers, William, fishmonger, Austin court, Bethel street
-Webb, Goldsmith, cattle dealer, Julian street, Julian place
-Webb, John, photographic artist, Cowgate street
-Webb, William, jun., rope manufacturer, Magdalen street
-Webber, Joseph, brazier, Pitt street
-Websdale, Mrs. Frances, Lamb inn, Old Haymarket
-Websdale, Miss Harriet, milliner and dressmaker, Surrey street
-Websdale, James, grocer and beer retailer, Lower King street
-Webster, Benjamin, merchant’s clerk, Grove place, New Lakenham
-Webster Emma, dressmaker, Philadelphia
-Webster, Henry, shopkeeper, Golden Ball street
-Webster, James, carver, Ber street
-Webster, John, hairdresser, Ber street
-Webster, Robert, boot and shoe maker, Lower Westwick street
-Webster, Robert, second-hand clothes dealer and shoemaker, St. Lawrence
-steps
-Webster Stephen, boot and shoe maker, 14, Timberhill street
-Webster, Mrs. Sarah Ann, dressmaker, Botolph street
-Webster, William, Maid’s Head inn and Posting house, Wensum street
-Webster, William, brewer and beer retailer, Ber street
-Webster, William, builder, Golden Ball street
-Websdale, William, upholsterer and paper hanger, Surrey street
-Weeds, Mary Ann, grocer, Bishopgate bridge, Thorpe hamlet
-Weeks, Henry, The Jolly Gardeners’ tavern, Infirmary road
-Weeks, William, plumber, painter, and glazier, St. Augustine’s street
-Wegg, Christopher, blacksmith, Fishgate street
-Welch, James R. J., baker, Lower King street
-Wells, Jeremiah, beer retailer, Botolph street
-Wells, Peter, Oxford tavern, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Wells, Mr. Robert, Queen street
-Wells, Thomas, veterinary surgeon, Castle meadow
-Wells, William, butcher, 1, Norfolk terrace, Union place,
-Wells William, cabinet manufacturer, Castle meadow
-Wells, William Harrison, corn miller, New Mills; h Hellesdon
-Welton, Edward, wheelwright, &c., Brazen Doors road
-Wenn, William, Jolly Maltsters, and marine store dealer, Cowgate street
-West, Mr. Charles, 3, St. Stephen’s back street
-West, John, the Royal Standard, Chapel street, Union place
-Weston, Charles, maltster and brewer, St. George’s Bridge street; h
-Thorpe
-Whaites, Mrs. Hannah, lodging-house keeper, Surrey street
-Whaites, Mr. Charles, solicitor, Samson’s Court, Tombland
-Whaites, Mr. Robert, Newmarket terrace
-Whales, Mark, bricklayer, Distillery yard, Coslany street
-Whall, Ann, gun maker, Little London street
-Whall, Jeremiah, tunist, Julian street, Julian place
-Whall, John, beer retailer, Cowgate street
-Whall, Robert, grocer, King street, Crook’s place
-Whall, William, whitesmith, St. Stephen’s back street
-Whall, William, hairdresser, Mill lane, New Catton
-Wheeler, Francis, pharmaceutical chemist and druggist, 2, Swan lane,
-London street
-Wheeler, Rev. Thomas Archibald, Baptist minister, Golden Dog lane
-Wheelhouse, Mr. William, St. Giles’ road
-Whincop, George Garwood, banker’s clerk, Newmarket road
-White, Anna and Drusilla, Berlin wool and millinery warehouse, No. 8,
-London street
-White, Frederick, ironmonger, St. Faith’s lane
-White, George, shoemaker, Upper Goat lane
-White, Jeremiah, carpenter and builder, Thorn lane
-White, Mrs., 1, Grove place, St. Giles’ road
-White, Robert, ticket writer, St. Benedict’s street
-White, Richard, green grocer, Palace street
-White, Richard, surgeon dentist, Tuck’s court, St. Giles’; h Unthank’s
-road
-White, William, furniture broker and estate agent, St. Gregory’s church
-alley
-Whitehead, Mrs. Ann, servants’ registry office, 12, Grapes’ hill, St.
-Giles
-Whitehead, George, stone mason, Grapes’ hill, St. Giles’
-Whitehead, Mary, midwife, Sussex street
-Whitehead, William, Two-necked Swan, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Whitelock, Mrs. Anna, Timberhill street
-Whiting, Mrs. Elizabeth Lawrence, Grout’s thoroughfare, St. John’s
-Timberhill
-Whiting, George Jones, tailor, Heigham street
-Whitlam, Thomas, cutler, West Pottergate street
-Whitlan, Henry, shoe manufacturer, Adelaide street, Heigham
-Whitrick, James, grocer, West Pottergate street
-Whitaker, William, grocer, &c., Lower King street
-Wick, Mr. Thomas, St. Catherine’s plain
-Wicks, Benjamin, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Wicks, Robert, grocer and tailor, Ber street
-Wicks, Thomas, wire worker, Tombland
-Wicks, William, clerk to the guardians of Heigham, Oxford street,
-Unthank’s road
-Widows, Francis, manufacturer, St. Paul’s terrace, Cowgate street
-Widdows, Charles, teacher of music, 8, John street, Rose lane
-Widdows, Mark, Shoulder of Mutton, St. Andrew’s hill
-Wigg, Edward, Stag inn, St. Benedict’s street
-Wigg, John, cow-keeper, Vauxhall street
-Wigg, Sarah, lodging-house keeper, 6, Jay’s terrace, Rose lane
-Wigger, John Henry A., picture dealer, Bethel street
-Wigger, John, The Dog, St. Paul’s plain
-Wiggett, Henry, wood turner, Oak street
-Wiggett, Mrs. Mary, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Wigham, Mrs. Elizabeth, Lower close
-Wilby, Caroline, day school, Lower King street
-Wilch, Harriet, baker and shopkeeper, Lower King street
-Wilch, Mary Ann, baker and shopkeeper, Lower King street
-Wild, Edward, grocer, tea-dealer, &c., 11, Old Haymarket
-Wild, Elizabeth, milliner, Cowgate street
-Wilde, John, collector of Inland Revenue stamps and taxes, office, Orford
-hill; h 6, Newmarket road
-Wilde, Frederic, plumber, glazier, and painter, St. Stephen’s street
-Wilde, John, coal seller, Lower King street
-Wilde, Matthew, Eastern Union Railway tavern, St. Stephen’s gates
-Wilde and Son, parliamentary agents, St. Stephen’s street
-Wilde, Mr. Stephen, Unthank’s road
-Wilde, William, auctioneer, Post Office street
-Wilde, William, coroner for the city, St. Stephen’s street
-Wilding, Henry, hairdresser and perfumer, 42, London street
-Wiles, Mary Ann, linen and woollen draper, silk mercer, &c., St.
-Stephen’s street
-Wiley, Samuel Hall, general shopkeeper, The General Windham, Cowgate
-street
-Wilkin, Charles, carver and gilder, Wensum street
-Wilkins, John, bricklayer, St. Martin’s lane
-Wilkins, Mr. Robert Frederick, Bethel street
-Wilkinson, Mr. Benjamin, Newmarket road
-Wilkinson, Henry Joseph, saddler and harness maker, St. Giles’ street
-Wilkinson, Joseph, solicitor, Prince’s street
-Wilkinson, William, Suffolk Arms, Oak street
-Willement, George, green grocer, Coburg street
-Willement John, shoemaker, Dereham road
-Willement, Mrs. Maria, shopkeeper, St. Augustine’s street
-Williment Richard, manufacturer, 1, Calvert street
-Willett, Mr. Charles J., Eaton Willow, Newmarket road
-Willett, Charles, manure and agricultural implement makers’ agent, 5,
-Great Orford street
-Willett, Mr. Edward, Eaton Grove, Newmarket road (of the firm of Willett
-and Co.)
-Willett, Nephew, and Co., manufacturers, Pottergate street; London
-warehouse, 62, Friday street
-Williams, Elizabeth, baby linen warehouse, 9, London street
-Willett, Mr. Henry, Thorpe House
-Williams, Henry, beer retailer, King street gates
-Williams, Josiah, grocer and tea-dealer, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Williamson, Henry William, corn, flour, and seed merchant, 56, St.
-Stephen’s street
-Williamson, Mrs. Mary Ann, boot and shoe warehouse, St. Stephen’s street
-Williamson, William, William the Fourth, and cheesemonger, St.
-Augustine’s street
-Willgrass, John, butcher, Ber street
-Williams, Benjamin, collector of taxes, 3, Calvert street
-Williams, Case, and Potter, manufacturers, Calvert street
-Williams, Mr. Isaac, Calvert street (see Williams, Case, and Potter)
-Williams, Josiah, grocer, &c., Globe street, Union place
-Williams, John, corn traveller, City road, Heigham
-Williams, John Henry, grocer, &c., Duke street
-Williams, Mrs. Mary Ann, Moon and Stars, Duke’s Palace street
-Williams, Thomas, green grocer, Crook’s place
-Williamson, John Austin, corn and seed factor, Duke’s Palace street
-Williamson, Mrs. Temperance, dress maker, Duke’s Palace
-Willins, Mrs. E., Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Willins, the Misses, Mount Pleasant
-Willis, Reuben, shopkeeper, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Willins, William, solicitor, Castle meadow
-Wills, Anthony, parish clerk, West end street
-Wills, Anthony Frederick, Gibraltar gardens and bowling green, Upper
-Heigham
-Wills, George Edward, draper, Heigham street
-Wills, William, tanner and fellmonger, Heigham street
-Willsea, Mrs. Harriet, news agent and tobacconist, Orford hill
-Wilsea, John, Waggon and Horses, and furniture broker, Bridge street, St.
-Miles’
-Wilson, Alexander, cab proprietor, St. Stephen’s square
-Wilson, George, bookseller, Castle street
-Wilson, George, confectioner, Queen street, Tombland
-Wilson, James, Railway Inn, Trowse Millgate
-Wilson, Miss Jane, straw bonnet maker, St. Paul’s
-Wilson, James, supervisor of inland revenue, 34, Victoria street, St.
-Stephen’s
-Wilson, Mrs. Maria, grocer, &c., Bridge street, St. Miles
-Wilson, Miss Maria, Unthank’s road
-Wilson, the Misses E. & C., boarding school, Grove house, Newmarket road
-Wilson, Robert, Marquis of Lothian, Lothian street, St. Benedict’s
-Wilson, Sarah, general shopkeeper, Barrack street
-Wilson, Thomas, cork manufacturer, Golden Ball street
-Wilson, Thomas, boat letter, Crown yard, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Wilson, William S., manager of East of England Bank, Old Haymarket; h
-Newmarket road
-Wilson, William, firework maker, Church walk, New Lakenham
-Wilson, William, solicitor, 7, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Wimperis, William, earthenware dealer, Cowgate street
-Winkle, John, engineer and machinist, St. Benedict’s gates
-Winter, Ambrose, Heigham road
-Winter, Charles, wholesale shoe manufacturer and leather merchant, 7, 8,
-and 9, Upper market; h Heigham Grove House, St. Giles’ road
-Winter, George, baker and confectioner, Timberhill street
-Winter, James, solicitor, and treasurer to Carrow bridge com. and
-guardian, St. Giles’ street; h Rose Cottage, Heigham
-Winter, James John, solicitor, St. Giles’ street; h Lower Close
-Winter, John Green, clerk, Valentine street
-Winter, John, beer retailer, Barrack street
-Winter, Robert, baker, Coburg street
-Winter and Rowland, carpenters, King street
-Winter Robert, relieving officer and parish clerk, 4, Victoria terrace,
-Synagogue street
-Winter, Samuel, baker, Pitt street
-Winter, Mrs. Thomas, Greenhill gardens, St. Augustine’s
-Winter, William, plumber, painter, and glazier, Timberhill street
-Winter, William, wholesale brush manufacturer, Chapel street, Crook’s
-place
-Wiseman, Mr. Alfred, 1, Earlham Road terrace
-Wiseman, Isaac, wine and spirit merchant, Post Office street; h Newmarket
-road
-Wiseman, Robert, bricklayer and plasterer, Muspole street
-Wiseman, Mr. Samuel, Gildengate street
-Wiseman, William, West Pottergate street
-Wisker, Robert Newton, grocer and tea dealer, Tinkler’s lane
-Wittrick, Henry, lodging-house keeper, Priest’s buildings, St. Stephen’s
-road
-Wittrick, Samuel, coal dealer, Vauxhall street
-Wodderspoon, Mr. John, Lower close
-Wodehouse, Miss Elizabeth, Lower close
-Wodehouse, William, agent for the Liverpool Friendly Society, 21, Upper
-King street
-Wolsey, Henry, merchant’s clerk, 4, Surrey terrace
-Wolton, Durrant, and Co., grocers and tea dealers, 47, London street
-Wolton, Mr. John Hyam, Castle meadow
-Womack, George, wholesale clothier, outfitter, woollen draper, tailor,
-and hatter, 10, 11, 12, White Lion street, and 13, 14, Davey place; h
-Surrey street
-Womack, Mr. George, Grapes’ hill
-Wood, George, Morgan’s Cellar House, Lower King street
-Wood, George James, leather seller, Sussex street, St. Augustine’s
-Wood, John, carpenter, Union place
-Wood, Mr. John, Fisher’s lane
-Wood, John Samuel, whitesmith, brazier, and tin-plate worker, Magdalen
-street
-Wood, Mr. Robert, 25, Bethel street
-Wood, Robert, Cricketers’ Arms, Red Lion street
-Wood, William, general shopkeeper, Union street, Crook’s place
-Woodard, Henry, hairdresser, Lower King street
-Woodcock, Mr. Henry, 70, St. Giles’ street
-Woodcock, Samuel, pork butcher, Palace street
-Woodcock, Thomas, solicitor, Surrey road, All Saints
-Woodcraft, Charles, St. Faith’s lane
-Woodcraft, James, news agent, Fishgate street
-Woodgate, Philip, shoe warehouse, Castle street; h St. Giles’ road
-Woodhouse, George, accountant, 6, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s road
-Woodhouse, Mr. George, 66, Pottergate street
-Woodhouse, Joshua, Curriers’ Arms, St. Stephen’s Back street
-Woodhouse, William, surgeon at Infirmary, St. Augustine’s
-Woodron, Mr. John, 2, London terrace, St. Stephen’s road
-Woodrow, Mrs. Hannah Maria, Bracondale
-Woodrow, James Samuel, merchant’s clerk, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s
-road
-Woodrow, Mr. Joseph, Unthank’s road
-Woodrow, Robert, watch and clock maker, Gloucester place, St. Catherine’s
-plain
-Woodrow, Thomas, pawnbroker, St. Miles; h 3, Trafalgar place, Dereham
-road
-Woodrow, William, wholesale shoe manufacturer, Church walk, Lakenham
-Woods, Mr. Alexander, Holl’s lane
-Woods, George John, leather seller and currier, St. Gregory’s Church
-alley
-Woods, James, merchants’ clerk, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Woods, James Matthias, linen draper, 67, St. Stephen’s street
-Woods, John, tailor, West Pottergate street
-Woods, John Robert, cabinet maker, Red Lion street
-Woods, John, tailor, Tinkler’s lane
-Woods, Robert, tailor, John street, Rose lane
-Woods, William, green grocer and coal dealer, Union place
-Woodward, Charles, baker and confectioner, Trory street, Julian place
-Woodward, Mrs. Elizabeth, St. Stephen’s road
-Woodward, Mrs. Jane, 17, Distillery st.
-Woodyard, James, boot and shoe manufacturer, Oak street
-Woolbright, Robert, gardener, Lower close
-Woollistone, Samuel, baker, and timber dealer, Cherry street, Lakenham
-Woollinger, John, green grocer, St. Augustine’s street
-Woolmer, Clement Amies, boot and shoe maker, and parish clerk, Bridge
-street, St. George’s
-Woolnough, Martha, corn dealer, Ber street
-Woolnough, Theophilus, stationer, Prince’s street
-Woolsey, Samuel, White Hart family and commercial hotel and posting
-house, St. Peter’s
-Woolterton, Robert, surgeon, Tombland
-Wordingham, Robert, painter, plumber, and glazier, Rose tavern, Hall’s
-road, Lakenham
-Wordingham, William, joiner and builder, St. Catherine’s plain
-Worledge, John, fishmonger, Gildengate street
-Worman, James, builder, Castle meadow
-Worman, Robert, carter, Grapes’ hill
-Wortley, Mrs. John, Bracondale
-Wortley, Miss Martha, milliner and dressmaker, 5, Briggs’ street
-Wortley, Thomas, shoe manufacturer, William street
-Wright and Base, boot and shoe makers, London street
-Wright, Daniel, tin-plate worker, Pitt street
-Wright, Eliza, tailoress, Lower King st.
-Wright, George, green grocer, Upper Westwick street
-Wright, Mrs. Harriet, Upper close
-Wright, Miss Harriet, school mistress, Prospect place, Philadelphia
-Wright, Jacob, St. Mary’s foundry, Muspole street
-Wright, James, bricklayer and plasterer, Ber street
-Wright, James, linen draper and milliner, Ber street
-Wright, James, and Son, land agents, surveyors, and valuers, Bank
-chambers
-Wright, Mr. James, senr., Mount Pleasant
-Wright, Mr. James, junr., Mount Pleasant
-Wright, James, Goat Tavern, Upper Goat lane
-Wright, John, and Son, manufacturers, Elm hill; h St. Helen’s, Bishopgate
-street
-Wright, Mr. John, St. Helen’s place
-Wright, John, millwright, Alma terrace, St. Augustine’s road
-Wright, John, fishmonger, Oak street
-Wright, Robert John, land agent, Queen street; h Lower close
-Wright and Son, plumbers, painters, and glaziers Mission place, King
-street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 34)
-Wright, Thomas, butcher and beer retailer, Long row, New Catton
-Wright, Thomas, boot and shoe maker, Pump street
-Wright, Mr. Thomas Frederick, Mount pleasant
-Wright, Walter, plumber, painter, and glazier, Surrey place
-Wright, Mrs. Warner, Gildengate street
-Wright, William, joiner and builder, Richmond hill, Lakenham
-Wright and Woodrow, land agents and surveyors, Queen street
-Wurr and Page, bricklayers and plasterers, Grapes’ hill
-Wyatt, David, tailor, Paragon street, St. Giles’ road
-Wyatt, Esdaile, clerk, Grove road, New Lakenham
-Wyatt, Henry, boot and shoe manufacturer, Upper King street
-Wyatt, John, The Spear in Hand, Julian place, Heigham
-Wymer, Mrs. Elizabeth, Bartholomew street
-Yallop, William, Somerset tavern, Union street, Crook’s place
-Yarington, Mrs. Mary Ann, ladies’ seminary, Gildengate street
-Yates, William, china, glass, and earthenware warehouse, Davey place
-Yaxley, Henry, King’s Arms, St. Augustine’s street
-Yeames, Samuel, The Waterman, King street
-Yellop, Robert, Golden Can, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Yexley, William, accountant, Jubilee Place, Heigham road
-Youell, Catherine, dressmaker, Globe street, Union place
-Youels, William, hairdresser and glover, St. Catherine’s plain
-Young, Mrs. Elizabeth, Unthank’s road
-Young, James, bricklayer and builder, Dereham road
-Young, John, commercial traveller, 11, Victoria street, St. Stephen’s
-road
-Young, Thomas, baker and grocer, Magdalen street
-Youngman, John, accountant, Grove place, Lakenham
-Youngman, Harold, merchant’s clerk, and agent for the Scottish Union Fire
-and Life Assurance Society, Vauxhall street
-Youngman, Samuel Wood, commercial traveller, 10, Victoria street, St.
-Stephen’s road
-Youngs, Crawshay and Youngs, brewers, maltsters, and spirit merchants,
-King street
-Youngs, Mr. John, West End street, Holl’s lane, Heigham
-Youngs, Mr. John, (see Youngs, Crawshay, and Youngs); h 11, Richmond hill
-Youngs, Mary Ann, baker, St. Stephen’s street
-Youngs, Peter, Richmond tavern, Richmond hill
-Youngs, Robert C., (see Youngs, Crawshay, and Youngs) Lower King street
-Youngs, William, Carpenters’ Arms, Trowse
-Zipfel, Charles, watch and clock maker, Magdalen street
-Zipfel, John, watchmaker, Lower King street
-Zipfel, Matthew, watch and clock maker, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Zobel, Mrs. Margaret, dressmaker, Rupert street, Union place
-
-
-
-CLASSIFICATION
-OF
-TRADES, PROFESSIONS, &c.
-
-
-_Academies and Schools_ (_For Public Schools_, _see under Public
-Information_)
-
-
-Abel, Mrs., (day) Unthank’s road
-Appleton, Mrs. Anna, (day) St. Augustine’s
-Bardwell, Miss Adlian, (day) St. Stephen’s gates
-Barker, Mrs. Eliza, (boarding) Grove road, Lakenham
-Bateman, Mrs. Mary, (day) St. Stephen’s road
-Bell, Miss L., (day) Synagogue street
-Blakely, The Misses, (boarding and day) St. Giles’ road
-Blogg, W., (day) Upper King street
-Body, Elizabeth M., (day) Adelaide street, Heigham
-Boyden, The Misses, (boarding and day) Pottergate street
-Brook, William, (boarding) Grey Friar’s Priory, King street
-Burrage, Frederick J., (boarding and day) Golden Dog lane
-Burrage, John Charles, (boarding and day) Castle hill
-Campling, Mrs. Eliza Jane, (boarding and day) Castle hill
-Carver, Mrs. Ruth, West Pottergate street
-Chalker, Elizabeth, (day) Till’s court, Ber street
-Codling, Arthur John, (boarding and day) Magdalen street
-Coldwell, Amelia, (boarding and day) St. Clement’s Church alley
-Cooke, Miss Mary H., (day) Distillery street, Heigham
-Crowe, Miss Elizabeth, (boarding) Calvert street
-Dunnett, Mrs. Mary, (boarding and day) Surrey street
-Dye, Miss Harriet, 5, Grapes’ hill
-Farnell, James Thomas, (boarding and day) St. Giles’ street
-Farnell, William Keeling (boarding) Theatre street
-Finegan, Mrs., Cow hill
-Froggett, Ellen, (boarding) Sussex st.
-Gilbert, Mrs., (day) Gildengate street
-Golding, Mary Ann, (day) St. Paul’s Back lane
-Green, Elizabeth, (day) Palace street
-Hardyman, Miss Sarah, (boarding) Bracondale
-Harmer, Miss Ann, (day) Distillery street, Heigham
-Hart, Miss Catherine, (boarding) 14, Victoria street
-Heasell, the Misses, (boarding) Surrey road
-Holmes, Mrs. Esther, St. Stephen’s rd.
-Hovell, Elizabeth, (day) Rupert street
-Howard, Miss Anne, (boarding) Unthank’s road
-Hupton, Mrs. Frances, (day) Hall road, Lakenham
-Ives, Miss Ann Sarah, (boarding) 13, the Crescent
-Johnson, S. and A., (day) Rose lane
-Kempster, Mrs., (boarding) Westbeech house, St. Benedict’s road
-Lake, William, (classical and commercial) St. Benedict’s road
-Lincoln, Mrs. Mary Ann, (infant) Hall road, Lakenham
-Lincolne, Miss Elizabeth, (boarding) Surrey street
-Ling, Harriet, (day) Bethel street
-Ling, Henry, (classical & commercial) Unthank’s road
-Ling, Mrs. J. A., (day) 23, Sussex st.
-May, Eleanor, (infant) St. Mary’s pln.
-Mays, Mrs. C., (day) Magdalen road
-Mills, Miss Ann, (for young gentlemen) Unthank’s road
-Nelson, William, (day) William street
-Nicholson, Miss C., the Chantry
-Paul, Wm. F., (boarding) Bracondale
-Phillips, Miss E., Chatham place, Chapel Field road
-Plummer, Susan, (preparatory) Plummer’s yard, St. Martin’s
-Priest, Mrs. Henry, (boarding, young gentlemen) Pottergate street
-Pye, Mrs. Ann Rebecca, (day) Alma terrace, St. Augustine’s gates
-Quinton, Mrs. E., (preparatory) Charles street
-Redgrave, Misses, (boarding) Priory, St. Stephen’s
-Reeve, Miss E. S., (day) Kimberley st.
-Reynolds, Mrs. J., (day) Coslany st.
-Sayer, the Misses, (boarding) New road, Town close
-Seaman, Martha, (day) West End street, Holl’s lane
-Sheppard, Mrs. Ann, (boarding) St. Benedict’s plain
-Slack, Mrs. E., Grove pl., Lakenham
-Spratt, Miss Sarah, Bethel street
-Stageman, Miss S., (day) Brazen Doors road
-Staines, Mrs. A., St. Stephen’s gates
-Stannard, Miss E., (boarding) Rose lane
-Stevens, Mrs. M., (day) Kimberley st.
-Stocks, Mrs. Maria, (day and boarding) St. Benedict’s gates
-Tayler, Mrs. E., (day and boarding), Grove place, Lakenham
-Tyler, Mrs. Adelaide, (day) Lothian street, Heigham
-Watson, Miss M. A., (day) John str., Rose lane
-Wilson, Misses E. and C., (boarding) Grove house, Newmarket road
-Wright, Mrs. M. A., (day and boarding) Gildengate street
-
-
-_Accountants_—
-
-
-Bardwell, G. S., St. Stephen’s road, (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 5)
-Kempster, John, Davey place
-Kerry, George Caythorpe, Elm hill
-Roach Edward, Southwell road
-Shields, Joseph W., Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Starling, Thomas, Victoria street
-
-
-_Agents_—
-
-
-Baldry, George, (land) Newmarket rd.
-Baldry, Wm., (land) St. Stephen’s rd.
-Bardwell, George Syder, (estate and insurance) St. Stephen’s road (_see
-Advertisement_, _page_ 5)
-Bateman, J., and Son, (general commission) Gildengate street
-Beart, R. H., (commercial) Bethel st.
-Butcher, William, and Sons, (land) Theatre street
-Campling, J., (commission) Castle hill
-Churchill, Wm., (commission) Pitt st.
-Clowes and Flowerdew, (land) Bank chambers, Bank place
-Cossey, John, (estate) Gildengate str.
-Creasby, Edmund, (commission) Colegate street
-Croxford, Edward, (for the London Printing and Publishing Company) 33,
-Magdalen street
-Didwell, William, (house) Catton road
-Ellis, John, (land) Bank plain
-Esperett, William Henry, (house and estate) Distillery street
-Francis, Thos., (estate) Newmarket rd.
-Gorell, Robert A., (yarn) Muspole st.
-Griggs, William, St. Benedict’s street
-Gunn, R., (commission) 11, Julian st.
-Hewitt, John, (land) Theatre street
-Hobrough, William, (general) Thorpe hamlet
-Horne, John, (estate) Castle meadow
-Horner, C., (land) St. Martin at Palace
-Ives, Geo., (estate) Crown Bank plain
-Johnston, F., agent for Virtue & Co., publishers, Jay’s terrace, Rose
-lane
-Kempster, John (estate) Davey place
-Leath, Thomas Thorne, (house and estate) Charles street, Heigham
-Mason, H. J., (estate) Pottergate st.
-Metcalf, William, (estate) Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Millard & Son, (land) Prince’s street
-Nash, Robert, (general) West End street, Heigham
-Nelson, J. W., (for Blackie and Son, publishers) Upper St. Giles
-Newton, Edward J., (land) Bethel st.
-Newton, William, (land) Tombland
-Ninham, J., The Cottage, Mousehold
-Nockolds, Henry, (commission) Fox and Hounds’ court, Ber street
-Norman, Robert, (house) 6, York place, Chapel Field road
-Paterson, Charles, (for Fullarton and Co., publishers) 5, Davey place
-Poll, Samuel, (house) Magdalen street
-Pratt, Hornor, and Morgan, (land) Queen street
-Pymar, John, (wool, silk, cotton, and yarn), Castle meadow
-Slubley, William, (house and land) Chapel Field road
-Sparks, F. W., (estate) St. Giles’
-Spelman, William, and Sons, (land) St. Giles’ street, and Yarmouth
-Stacey, Edward, (house and land) Newmarket road
-Thirtle, Thomas, (estate and commission) 2, Bridewell alley
-Townshend, J., (house) Trafalgar str.
-Waddington, Jas., (estate) St. Julian’s street, Ber street
-White, William, (estate) St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Willett, Charles, (manure and agricultural implements) 5, Great Orford
-street
-Wright, James and Son, (land) Bank chambers
-Wright, Robt. J., (land) Queen street
-Wright and Woodrow, (land) Queen street
-
-
-_Agricultural Implement Makers_ (_see also Engineers_)—
-
-
-Barnard, Bishop, and Barnards, Market place
-Bensted, William, Castle meadow
-Blyth, R. and F., Ber street
-Buck, John, Grove place, Lakenham
-Campling, James, Golden Ball street
-Cudbard, Charles, Theatre street
-Hewitt, George, Orford hill
-Holmes and Sons, Prospect Place works, Globe lane
-Howard, Riches, and Watts, Duke’s palace (_see Advertisement_)
-Mallett, Charles, Fishgate street
-Murrell, W. and Co., Crook’s place
-Slack, Jacob H., Grapes’ hill
-Sparke and Co., Thorn lane and Castle hill (_see Advertisement_, _pp._
-36, 37, 38)
-Turner, James Mangles, St. Martin’s at Palace
-
-
-_Ale and Porter Merchants_—
-
-
-Barwell and Sons, St. Stephen’s st., London st., and St. Andrew’s hill
-Cannell, Hannah, Unthank’s road
-Caston, John, St. Benedict’s gates
-Hubbard, James, Magdalen street
-Morrison and Co., Market place
-Norgate and Co., St. Stephen’s street
-Phillips, John, Eagle and Child, Golden Ball street
-Seaman, Grimmer, and Co., St. John’s Maddermarket
-
-
-_Architects_ (_see also Surveyors_)—
-
-
-Benest, E. E., (and Surveyor to the Corporation) Board of Health offices,
-Castle meadow
-Benest and Newson, Bank Chambers
-Brown, John, King street
-Bunn, John, 20, Pottergate street
-Esperett, William H., Distillery street
-Hinsbey, T. W., 18, Castle meadow
-Jeckell, Thomas, Queen street
-Kitton, Robert, Tuck’s court, St. Giles’
-Mear, Wm., Surrey house, Surrey rd.
-
-
-_Artists_ (_see also Professors and Photographic Artists_)—
-
-
-Blazeby, William, Bethel street
-Blazeby, James, Bethel street
-Burgess, John, Willow Cottage, Lower close
-Cunningham, Edward, Ber street
-Downes, Thomas, Bethel street
-Freeman, William, Pottergate street
-Goose, Wm. H., 15, Briggs’ street
-Hodgson, David, Grey Friars, Priory lane, King street
-Housego, Wm., 21, Upper King street
-Ladbrooke, J. B., Thorpe hamlet
-Marshall, Edward, Timberhill street
-Ninham, Henry, 12, Chapel field
-Sands, Anthony, Grapes’ hill
-Stannard, A., King street, Crook’s pl.
-Thurgar, Willm. T., Unthank’s road
-
-
-_Attornies_ (_see Solicitors_)—
-_Auctioneers and Appraisers_—
-
-
-Butcher, Wm. and Sons, Theatre str.
-Clarke and Hunter, Dove street
-Clowes and Flowerdew, Bank Chambers, Bank place
-Foulsham, Thomas, Westlegate street, (_see Advertisement_, _page_ 28)
-Grand, John, Lady’s lane
-Hudbud and Son, Charing cross
-Ives, George, Crown Bank plain
-Kempster, John, Davey place
-Mason, Henry John, Pottergate street
-Ray, Orlando D., Upper King street
-Sparks, Francis W., St. Giles’ street
-Spelman, Wm. and Sons, St. Giles’ street and Yarmouth
-Wilde, William, Post Office street
-
-
-_Axletree and Spring Maker_—
-
-
-Gilbert, George, Timberhill street
-
-
-_Baby Linen Warehouses_—
-
-
-Canham, Mrs. Emma, 68½, St. Stephen’s street
-Shearing, Miss S., Rampant Horse st.
-Williams, Elizabeth, 9, London street
-
-
-_Bakers_ (_see also Confectioners_)—
-
-
-Alden, Edward, Oak st., St. Martin’s
-Alexander, Henry, Heigham street
-Anderson, Joseph, Pump street
-Artis, Francis, Castle meadow
-Ayton, John, St. Augustine’s street
-Baldwin, Henry, Oak street
-Bardwell, Ann, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Barker, Harriet, St. Benedict’s street
-Barker, Samuel, Somerleyton street
-Barnes, Edward R., Thorn lane
-Baxter, Mrs. Maria, Brazen Doors rd.
-Beckham, John Rix, Cowgate street
-Bennett, Emily, Ber street
-Bennett, Henry, Orford hill
-Bennett, Maria, Wellington street
-Bennett, Robert, West Pottergate st.
-Bennett, Robert, City road, Heigham
-Bennett, Samuel, Cowgate street
-Benslyn, Thomas, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Berry, George John, Ber street
-Betts, John Samuel, Coslany street
-Blyth, Josiah, Adelaide str., Heigham
-Bone, Francis, St. Benedict’s street
-Brock, Samuel, St. Augustine’s street
-Brock, William, Oak street
-Brown, B., City road, Lakenham
-Brown, John, Muspole street
-Brown, Maria, Lower Westwick street
-Brown, Sophia, Philadelphia
-Burrage, Edward, Julian street, Julian place
-Buxton, Stephen, Thorpe hamlet
-Cannell, Robert, King street
-Catling, Alfred, Carrow hill
-Cattermole, W., Front Row, Lakenham
-Cettermer, Isaac, Barrack street
-Chiddick, Francis J., Magdalen street
-Claxton, Walter, New Catton
-Crowfoot, George, Prince’s street
-Daniels, Robert, Rosemary lane
-Daplyn, Mrs. Mary, St. Augustine’s
-Davison, Matthew, Rising Sun lane
-Dawson, William, St. Martin’s lane
-Ding, James, 45, Pottergate street
-Dunn, John, West Pottergate street
-Empson, Ezra, St. James’ street
-Faulke, Robt., Queen st., Crook’s place
-Fitt, John Mason, Coburg street
-Folk, Charles, St. Augustine’s street
-Fox, Mary, Lower Close
-Fox, William, Cowgate street
-Freeman, James, 15, St. Giles’ street
-Freeman, W., Chapel st., Union place
-Freestone, Anthony, Fye Bridge
-Freestone, Samuel, Old Church road, Lakenham
-Gedge, Wm., Chapel st., Union place
-Gibson, Wm., St. Catherine’s plain
-Gill, James, Lower Westwick street
-Girling, Elizabeth, New Catton
-Graver, Thomas, St. Paul’s plain
-Haddon, Mary Ann, Rose lane
-Hall, Harriet, Gildengate street
-Hall, Henry, Thorn lane
-Hannant, Nathaniel, Magdalen street
-Harden, Charles, Heigham street
-Hardy, Michael, St. Catherine’s plain
-Harrison, Mrs., Elm hill
-Harrison, Wm., (muffin) St. Andrew’s hill
-Harrison, William T., Golden Ball st.
-Harvey, James, Fishgate street
-Harvey, Samuel, Fishgate street
-Hatch, Frederick, William street
-Hewitt, Thomas, Rising Sun lane
-Higgin, Henry, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Hill, Reuben, King street
-Howard, Daniel, Barrack street
-Howard, Z., New Catton
-Hull, William Henry, Coslany street
-Isaac, E., Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Jay, John, 12, West Pottergate street
-Johnson, John Sewell, Cowgate street
-Kahler, John Henry, Rose lane
-Lacey, Esau, Bishopgate street
-Lake, James, Colegate street
-Lake, Samuel, Colegate street
-Land, Henry, Rupert street
-Larkman, William, Lower King street
-Leach, Jas., Union st., Crook’s place
-Leggett, Daniel, Silver road
-Leman, Thomas, All Saints’ street
-Le Neve, Charles, Fishgate street
-Lincoln, James, Thorpe hamlet
-Lincoln, James, Lower King street
-Long, Joseph Page, St. James’ street
-Lowe, Alfred, Holl’s lane
-Lowe, Frederick, Ber street gates
-Lowe, George, Mousehold
-Lowe, Joseph, Gildengate street
-Marris, J., Golding st., Dereham road
-Marshall, R., Regent st., Crook’s place
-Marshall, Robert, Magdalen street
-Massingham, Robert, Bethel street
-Miller, Alfred, St. Stephen’s gates
-Miller, Walter, Upper King street
-Mitchell, Frederick, Palace street
-Musk, William F., Oak street
-Myhill, Ann, St. Martin’s palace
-Newson, Henry Richard, Ber street
-Newman, Samuel, Trowse
-Page, Mary, Timberhill street
-Parker, Clare, Oak street
-Parr, John, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Pinching, William, Bethel street
-Platford, William, Heigham street
-Proudfoot, Elizabeth and Ann, Trowse
-Pummell, James, Ten Bell lane
-Roofe, Ann, Thorpe hamlet
-Rose, Philip, Coslany street
-Rose, Thomas, St. Benedict’s street
-Russell, W., Old Church st., Lakenham
-Sheppard, Elizabeth, Upper Market
-Shreeve, George, Tinkler’s lane
-Skerritt, George, Upper Regent street, Union place
-Smith, James W., Stump cross
-Smith, John Joseph, Ber street
-Smith, John William, Dove street
-Smith, William R., St. Benedict’s st.
-Southgate, John G., Upper Heigham
-Stafford, William, Vauxhall street
-Stafford, William, Brazen Doors road
-Stannard, Robt. J., Little London st.
-Steward, George, Bull Close
-Stockings, Jonathan, Newmarket rd.
-Sullivan, Stephen, St. Margaret’s plain
-Tann, Mrs. Hannah, Charing cross
-Taylor, John Martin, St. Mary’s plain
-Tuck, Robert D., Vauxhall street
-Tuck, Robert, Wensum street
-Tuck, Robert A., Lower Goat lane
-Tuttell, A. M., Trafalgar st. Lakenham
-Walker, Amos, Infirmary road
-Waller, Thomas, Cowgate street
-Ward, George, Little Orford street
-Welch, James R. J., Lower King st.
-Welch, Harriet, Lower King street
-Welch, Mary Ann, Lower King street
-Winter, George, Timberhill street
-Winter, Robert, Coburg street
-Winter, Samuel, Pitt street
-Woodward, Charles, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Wollistone, S., Cherry st., Lakenham
-Young, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Youngs, Mary Ann, St. Stephen’s st.
-
-
-_Bankers_—
-
-
-Gurneys and Birkbecks, Bank plain
-Harvey and Hudson, Crown bank, King street
-East of England, Haymarket (W. S. Wilson, manager)
-Savings’ Bank, Haymarket (W. C. Hotson, superintendent)
-
-
-_Barometer and Thermometer Maker_—
-
-
-Ellison, Mrs. Frances, Dove street
-
-
-_Barristers_—
-
-
-Brown, William J. U., St. Giles’ road
-Cooper, Carlos, Orford hill
-Drewry, John Henry, Mousehold
-Evans, Charles, King street
-Hotson, W. C., Grey Friars, King st.
-Reeve, Simms, 18, St. Giles’ street
-
-
-_Basket Makers_—
-
-
-Beales, Mrs., Wensum street
-Burman, Henry, Oak street
-Cushing, John, Magdalen street
-Gay and Co., Upper market
-Green, Robert, Upper Westwick st.
-Hovell, William, Charing cross
-Mason, Samuel, Ber street
-Mitchell, Robert, Pitt street
-Raymes, Robert, Rupert street
-Thayne, Edward, Upper Westwick st.
-
-
-_Beer Retailers_ (_see also Publicans_)—
-
-
-Angell, Robert, Coburg street
-Atkins, Thomas, Heigham street
-Attle, Samuel, Ber street
-Balls, Frederick, St. Benedict’s street
-Banham, R., Northumberland street
-Barber, Joseph, Ber street
-Barker, Benjamin, Orford hill
-Barker, John, Magdalen street
-Bell, Mary, Botolph street
-Bensley, John, Oak street
-Berry, Swithin, Brazen Doors road
-Blyth, William, Ber street
-Bray, Robert, Ber street
-Briggs, William Henry, New Catton
-Bryant, Samuel, Thorn lane
-Buck, George, Mill street, Lakenham
-Burrell, E., Church street, St. Miles’
-Burrows, Mrs. Mary, Colegate street
-Bush, John, Fishgate street
-Carver, William, Trowse
-Catchpole, John, Cowgate street
-Cattermoule, Thomas, Ber street
-Chalker, Mary Ann, Coslany street
-Clark, William, Timberhill street
-Claxton, George A., Fishgate street
-Clayton, Thomas, Barrack street
-Colby, Samuel, St. Giles’ hill
-Collett, Robert G., White Friars’ st.
-Cook, William, Ber street
-Cossey, Robert, Oak street
-Crotch, William, Oak street
-Cubitt, James, Lower King street
-Cushing, William, Magdalen street
-Daynes, Robert, St. Margaret’s street
-Decaux, David, St. Augustine’s street
-Diver, Mrs. Mary Ann, Gildengate st.
-Dugdale, Robert, Cowgate street
-Durrant, Zachariah, Coslany street
-Dye, Henry, Upper King street
-Earl, John, Magdalen street
-Easton, Haylett, Magdalen street
-Ellis, Samuel, Oak street
-Ellison, William, King Street gates
-Fountain, Mary Ann, King street
-Freeman, Samuel, Quay side
-Gower, William, Lower Goat lane
-Hazlewood, Christmas A., Trafalgar st.
-Hendry, James, Lower Westwick st.
-Hewitt, W., St. Mary’s Church alley
-Hickling, Robert, Duke street
-High, John, St. Benedict’s street
-Holmes, Edmund, Lower Westwick st.
-Holmes, Edmund, Upper King street
-Howard, Ann, Fishgate street
-Howes, Henry, Lower King street
-Huggins, Charles, King street
-Humphery, Susan, Sussex street
-James, Wallace, St. John’s street
-Jefferies, W., Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Kedge, Robert, Duke street
-Knevett, Henry, Unthank’s road
-Larkman, Robert, Lower Westwick st.
-Lawn, Lubbock, Upper Westwick st.
-Lincoln, R., Mill street, Lakenham
-Livock, Henry Briggs, Lower King st.
-Marrison, J., Bridge st., St. Andrew’s
-Middleton, T., Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Middleton, William, Coslany street
-Mills, Mary Ann, Lower Goat lane
-Minus, Robert, Cowgate street
-Mollett, Alexander, Colegate street
-Moore, Elizabeth, Lower Westwick st.
-Moore, William, Ber street
-Newman, William H., Heigham street
-Nobbs, H., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Nobbs, John, Chapel Field road
-Nockolds, Thomas, Lower King st.
-Nunn, Mary, Greyhound opening, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Ostler, Charles Henry, Pump street
-Pearce, William, Grapes’ hill
-Perfect, Joseph, Lower Westwick st.
-Playford, A., St. George’s Bridge st.
-Plunkett, John, St. Augustine’s
-Poll, David, St. George’s Bridge st.
-Pope, John, Barrack street
-Quintin, Jane St., Barrack street
-Ramsey, James, Ber street
-Riches, Thomas, Pump street
-Rose, James, King street
-Rudrum, Isaac S., Pottergate street
-Seaman, Mrs. M., St. James’ street
-Seeley, John, St. Augustine’s street
-Self, Thomas, Red Lion street
-Snelling, Thomas, King street
-Spooner, Edward, Barrack street
-Stanton, Robert, King street
-Stone, Edward, King street
-Stubbs, Maria, Barrack street
-Thompson, William, Lower King str.
-Tilney, Henry, Magdalen street
-Tuffs, William, Botolph street
-Wade, Thomas, Pitt street
-Warnes, Thomas, Cowgate street
-Watts, Harriet, Lower King street
-Weavers, Robert, Heigham street
-Websdale, James, Lower King street
-Webster, William, Ber street
-Wells, Jeremiah, Botolph street
-Whall, John, Cowgate street
-Williams, Henry, King Street gates
-Winter, John, Barrack street
-Wright, Thos., Long row, New Catton
-
-
-_Bell-hangers_ (_see Whitesmiths_, _&c._)—
-_Berlin Wool and Fancy Repositories_—
-
-
-Duffield, Miss A., Gildengate street
-Ellison, Mrs. Frances, Dove street
-Ganley, James, London street
-Hipperson and Jennings, Davey place
-Holder, Stephen, St. Stephen’s street
-Klein, Mrs. A., Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Lovett and Kidd, Bank street
-Ransome, Harriet, 18, The Walk
-Ringer, William, 7, The Walk
-Rump, John, 8, Old Haymarket
-Tubb, William Henry, London street
-White, A. and D., 8, London street
-Spauls, M. A., 7, Briggs’ street
-Warman, Z., Bedford street
-
-
-_Billiard Rooms_—
-
-
-Kemp, Henry, Market place
-Ulph, Henry, W., Old Post-office yard
-
-
-_Bird and Animal Preservers_—
-
-
-Bullock, John, Lower Westwick street
-Knight, Thomas, Upper King street
-Sayer, John, Upper St. Giles’
-
-
-_Birmingham and Sheffield Warehouses_—
-
-
-Boswell, Thomas, (and perambulator maker), St. John’s Maddermarket
-Caprani, L., and Co., White Lion st.
-Hyams, E., St. Andrew’s Hall plain
-
-
-_Blacking Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Clarke, Richard, Muspole street
-Holmes, William, Coburg street
-Homes and Son, Anchor court, Surrey street
-
-
-_Blacksmiths_—
-
-
-Baldson, William, Chalk hill, Thorpe hamlet
-Banham, Henry, Holl’s lane
-Beaton, John, King street
-Bollison, William, Thorpe hamlet
-Brooks, John, All Saints’ street
-Brown, William, Lower King street
-Child, Stephen, Chapel Field road
-Cock, William, Ber Street gates
-Cook, James, Pitt street
-Cook, John, Dial yard, Coslany street
-Cox, Alfred, St. Stephen’s
-Daniels, Robert, Trowse
-Daynes, George, Oak street
-Finch, William, Wagon and Horses lane, Tombland
-Forder, James, Chapel Field road
-Franklin, C., Cardigan st., Heigham
-Freeman, Jeremiah, Barn road
-Laws, Robert, Lothian street
-Laws, Robert, Dereham road
-Lebbell, Thomas, Heigham street
-Leggatt, John, Scoles’ green
-Norman, Elizabeth Maria, King st.
-Pank, James, King street
-Palmer, John and W., St. Augustine’s
-Riches, William, Barn road
-Rogers, John, Muspole street
-Shalders, T., Hay hill, Market place
-Shreeve, J., (shoeing) Magdalen st.
-Thaxter, John, Barrack street
-Warner, James, Trafalgar street
-Wegg, Christopher, Fishgate street
-
-
-_Blind Makers_ (_see Venetian Blind Makers_)—
-_Boat Builders_—
-
-
-Britcher, John, Carrow abbey
-Fisher, James, Oak street
-Hobrough, William, Bishop’s bridge
-Houghton, Robert, St. Faith’s lane
-Houghton, Robert, Orford hill
-Petch, William, Barrack street
-Smith, Joseph, Oak street
-Smith, William, Oak street
-
-
-_Boiler Makers_—
-
-
-Campling, James, Golden Ball street
-Le Fevre, Thomas, St. Stephen’s str.
-Sharon, Anthony, Pottergate street
-Thompson, Robert, Castle street, and Colegate street
-Thompson, Robt., jun., St. Clement’s
-Tidman, Robert, Thorpe hamlet
-
-
-_Bone Crushers_ (_see also Manure Manufacturers_)—
-
-
-Bagshaw, George, Coslany street
-Brown, Robert, St. Benedict’s lane
-Parker, Thomas, St. Stephen’s street
-
-
-_Bookbinders_—
-
-
-Bardwell, Marcus Gill, Prince’s street (_see Advertisement_)
-Barnes, C., Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Campling, James, Westlegate street
-Cattermoul, Wm., 22, White Lion str.
-Colby, Richard, Golden Dog lane
-Cundall and Miller, (late Priest) Rampant Horse street
-Fletcher, Josiah, 8, The Walk
-Grinter, Charles E., Gildengate street
-Jarrold and Sons, London and Exchange streets
-Kerr, Stephen John, All Saints’ green
-Liffen, John P., Gildengate street
-Norman, Benjamin, Old Haymarket
-Otty, Philip, Orford hill
-Pigg, Henry, London street
-Quinton, John, 36, Pottergate street
-Read, Charles Thomas, Graham’s court, Upper market
-Stacy, Henry W., Haymarket
-Steward, Samuel, Prince’s street
-Upcroft, William, Fishgate street
-
-
-_Booksellers and Stationers_—
-
-
-Bacon, Richard N., 12, London street
-Bramwell, Daniel Kellard, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Croxford, Henry, Tombland
-Cundall and Miller, (late Priest) Rampant Horse street
-Fletcher, Josiah, 8, The Walk
-Fuller, Thos. B., St. Stephen’s street
-Gooch, Robert, (second-hand) White Lion street
-Hardesty, Alexander, 4, Davey place
-Hunt, Alfred, Orford hill
-Jarrold and Sons, London and Exchange streets
-Jeans, Edwin, White Lion street
-Jeary, Robert, Bridewell alley
-Jolly, Robert, (stationer) Vauxhall st.
-Lain, Edward, Elm hill
-Matchett and Stevenson, Chronicle office, Market place
-Newman, Samuel, St. Giles’ street
-Pigg, Henry, 7, London street
-Puncher, William, Bank street, and White Lion street
-Slater, John, Castle hill
-Stacy, Henry W., Haymarket
-True, S., (stationer) St. Augustine’s
-Wilson, George, Castle street
-
-
-_Boot Lace Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Crisp, John, Heigham Causeway
-Cullington, Mary Ann, Queen street
-
-
-_Boot and Shoe Makers_ (_see also Boot and Shoe Manufacturers_)—
-
-
-Abbott, William, 22, Magdalen street
-Alden, J., St. John’s Maddermarket
-Alexander, Benjamin, Southgate st.
-Allen, Mrs. Marianne and Co., (ready-made) 14, Briggs’ street
-Allman, William, Coburg street
-Andrews, Robert, Chapel st., Crook’s place
-Auker, John, 71, St. Stephen’s
-Baker, William Osborn, St. Augustine’s Church alley
-Bales, William, Hall road
-Basey, Robert, Calvert street
-Bassingthwaighte, W., Upper market
-Batterbee, John, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Bell, Charles, Botolph street
-Bell, James, Muspole street
-Bell, Michael, Botolph street
-Bennett, Austin, Cowgate street
-Bennett, John, St. Miles’ Church st.
-Blyth, John, Earlham road
-Blyth, William Bates, Bethel street
-Bone, Thomas, St. Benedict’s street
-Borking, James, Upper Westwick st.
-Bowhill, Henry, St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Buck, Charles Harrison, Back of the Inns (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 19)
-Burgess, William, Coslany street
-Burrows, Edward, Oak street
-Burrows, William, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Calver, John, Church st., St. Simon’s
-Calver, Thomas, St. Giles’ street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 16)
-Canham, W., Lower Westwick street
-Cannell, George Symonds, Ber street
-Carter, John, Peacock street
-Carver, Charles, Wellington street
-Carver, William, Trowse
-Challis, Thomas, London street
-Clark, Thomas, Coburg street
-Clarke, David, Golden Ball street
-Clarke, Robert N., White Friars’ st.
-Cletheroe, William, Botolph street
-Coe, Robert, Philadelphia
-Cogman, B., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Collins, James, 4, Davey place
-Cook, Edward T., 21, White Lion st.
-Cook, Henry, Magdalen road
-Cook, Philip, Fishgate street
-Copeman, E., Union st., Crook’s place
-Copeman, William, Lower King street
-Copley George, Pottergate street
-Cork, Andrew Thompson, Waddington street, Heigham
-Cott, Robert, Julian st., Union place
-Cousins, John, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Cox, John, Magdalen street
-Cox, Samuel, Wellington street
-Crawford, William, Bank plain
-Carle, Robert, King street
-Daines, James, Holl’s lane
-Davis, Edward, Youell’s buildings, New Lakenham
-Dawson, Robert, Lame Dog road
-Daynes, J., Lord Nelson, Trafalgar st.
-Dearly, William, Thorpe hamlet
-Decaux, Shakespeare, St. Augustine’s
-Denmark, William, Barrack street
-Dobson, Robert, Rose valley terrace, Unthank’s road
-Drake, Francis, Coslany street
-Drake, Robert, King street
-Dunn, James, Pitt street
-Elwes, Jonathan, St. Stephen’s road
-Fenn, Thomas, 35, Pottergate street
-Fish, John, Grout’s thoroughfare, Timberhill street
-Fish, Thomas, 51, Pottergate street
-Fisher, F., Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Fisher, Joseph, Lower King street
-Fox, William, Russell street
-Freeman, R., Upper Westwick street
-Fuller, John, Quay side
-Gardner, Thompson, Mount Pleasant
-Gay, James, City road, Heigham fields
-Gaze, James, Pottergate street
-Gedge, Robert, Ber street
-Gent, George, Coslany street
-Gibson, John, Pitt street
-Goffin, Mrs. M. E., Palace street
-Goldsmith, James, Back of the Inns
-Good, Thomas, Bridge street, St. George’s (_see advertisement_, _page_
-13)
-Gooke, David, Rose lane
-Grand, Robert, Duke street
-Graver, Richard, Ber street
-Griffiths, John, Globe st., Union place
-Groom, John, St. Lawrence lane
-Grove, Richard, Ber street
-Hagg, Noah, Sussex street
-Haldinstein, Philip, Bridewell alley
-Hall, Robert, Pottergate street
-Hall, Timothy Bennet, Pottergate st.
-Hammond, Jonathan, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Hammond, William, Cross lane
-Hardy, John, Golden Ball square
-Hardy, Jonathan, Upper Westwick st.
-Harold, Philip, Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Harrison, Robert, Elm hill
-Harrison, William, Bridewell alley
-Harvey, John, 11, London street
-Hawes, Samuel, Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Haylett, David, Pottergate street
-Hewitt, G., West End st., Heigham
-High, Jacob, Tinkler’s lane
-Holl, George, All Saints’ green
-Holl, William, Castle street
-Holl, W. G., Suffolk st., Union place
-Holmes, Robert, St. Giles’
-Homes, John, Surrey street
-Horth, William, Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Howard, James, Bridge st., St. Miles
-Howard, R., St. Miles’ church alley
-Howard, Samuel, Peacock street
-Howes, Abraham, Rampant horse st.
-Howes, Charles, Magdalen street
-Howes, Richard, Magdalen street
-Howes, Thomas, Russell street
-Howes, William, Heigham Causeway
-Hudson, G. E., West Pottergate street
-Hudson, John, West Pottergate street
-Hunt, Joseph William, Trafalgar st.
-Hurry, John, Cross lane, St. George’s
-Jordan, Mrs. R. E., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Kedenton, S., Bridge st., St. Andrew’s
-Kent, Robert, London street
-Knights, Robert, Eldon row, Chapel field road
-Lake, James, Red Lion street
-Lamb, Frederick, Adelaide street
-Lambert, Charles, Fishgate street
-Lanham, Gilbert, Lower King street
-Larke, Edward Norman, Ber street
-Larkman, James, Tinkler’s lane, Dereham road
-Larn, Samuel, Magdalen street
-Larn, W., St. Margaret’s church alley
-Lee, William, All Saints’ green
-Levern, James, Calvert street
-Littell, Charles, White Lion street
-Lock, Henry, St. Stephen’s street
-Lombe, William, St. James’ street
-Loombe, Thomas, Timberhill street
-Mann, Samuel, Magdalen street
-Marshall and Goffin, Palace street
-Mason, Thomas, Long row, Hall road
-May, James, Upper St. Giles’
-Maydwell, James, Bethel street
-Merry, Robert John, King street gates
-Minns, William, Rising Sun lane
-Moore, Luke, Upper Heigham
-Morter, William, Ber street
-Munford, S., Mount St. Helen, Thorpe
-Nobbs, James, St. George’s Bridge st.
-North, Thomas, Ber street
-Norton, George, St. Stephen’s street
-Norton, James, Brazen Doors road
-Palmer, Robert, Rose Valley terrace, Unthank’s road
-Phill, Ambrose, Willow lane
-Pond, James, Adelaide street
-Pratt, John, Coslany street
-Pratt, Thomas, Union place
-Ralph, John, King st., Crook’s place
-Ramsey, James, Ber street
-Randall, James, Magdalen street
-Reynolds, Laban, Chapel st., Crook’s place
-Roberts, James, Timberhill street
-Ruburt, Justus, Lower Westwick st.
-Sacret, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Sampson, H., Charles street, Heigham
-Sampson, William, 24, Bethel street
-Scott, John T., Magdalen street
-Scott, John, Ber Street gates
-Seer, William George, Botolph street
-Severn, James, Calvert street
-Shephard, W., Mill lane, New Catton
-Skilling, William, St. George’s plain
-Smith, Henry, Ber street
-Smith, W., Chapel loke, Surrey road
-Smith, W. W., Trory st., Lakenham
-Snelling, William, Orford hill
-Sursham, Henry D., Ten Bell lane
-Taylor, Henry, Boarded court, Ber st.
-Tench, James, Spitalfields
-Terrington, W., Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Thirtle, James, Lower Westwick st.
-Thirtle, Thomas, Bridewell alley
-Thompson, Daniel, Upper King st.
-Thompson, John, St. Peter’s steps, Market place
-Thompson, Thomas, Botolph street
-Tinkley, Mrs. E., Rampant Horse st.
-Toll, William, Ber Street gates
-Toogood, William, Aylsham road
-Turner, Charles, Mousehold
-Turner, William, jun., Palace street
-Utting, John, Gildengate street
-Utting, Robert, Ber street
-Ward, Thomas W., St. Benedict’s st.
-Warne, Samuel, Russell street
-Watering, Jeremiah, Southwell street
-Webster, Robert, Lower Westwick st.
-Webster, S., 14, Timberhill street
-White, George, Upper Goat lane
-Willement, John, Dereham road
-Williamson, Mrs. M. A., St. Stephen’s street
-Woolmer, Clement A., St. George’s Bridge street
-Wright and Base, London street
-Wright, Thomas, Pump street
-
-
-_Boot and Shoe Manufacturers_ (_wholesale_) _see also Boot and Shoe
-makers_—
-
-
-Abbott, William, 22, Magdalen street
-Banham, John, Botolph street
-Barber, Thomas, 6 General’s buildings, near the Barracks
-Barker, Benjamin, & Co., York Tavern passage, Orford hill
-Barker, B., Hall road, Lakenham
-Bostock, E. and T. (top makers), Swan lane and Pottergate street
-Boston, William, Orford hill
-Brett, Isaac, Upper King street
-Burrows, W., St. Clement’s church alley
-Buttifant, T., Adelaide st., Heigham
-Caspar, George, & Co., Wensum street
-Clarke, Henry and George S., Gildengate street
-Clarke, John, Distillery street
-Colby, John, King’s buildings, Union place
-Cook, Robert, Pottergate street
-Copperwheat, Charles, Back Mill st., Crook’s place
-Coppin, Edward, 8, York place, Chapel Field road
-Cousins, Thomas, 61, Bethel street
-Crisp, George, Vauxhall street
-Cunningham, Edwin, Ebenezer street
-Davies and Son, Calvert street
-Dean, James, Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Ford, William, & Son, Colegate street
-Freeman, Edward, St. Martin’s lane
-Fryer, William, Ber street
-Gibson, Robert, St. Stephen’s street
-Groom, George, St. Stephen’s street
-Harris, James Thomas, Ber street
-Harrison, Alfred, Bridewell alley
-Hipper W., Upper Westwick street
-Hogg, Noah, Sussex street
-Homan and Co., Bethel street
-Horne, Robert, Little London street
-Hotblack, John, & Co., Orford hill
-Jennings, Samuel, Theatre street
-Johnson, Gilman, and Co., Pottergate street
-Joseph and Samuel, Timberhill
-Kemp, William and Son, Pitt street
-Lincoln, James, 14, Pottergate street
-Lloyd, J. A. and Co., Davey place
-Lulham, Edwin W., Bethel street
-Martin, Benjamin A., St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Martin, G. and R., St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Mayfield, James, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Middleton, John, St. Augustine’s st.
-Oxborough, B., Richmond hill
-Palmer and Hardman, Manchester buildings, Union place
-Pigg, Samuel and Sons, Haymarket
-Pond, James, Barrack yard, St. Miles’
-Reynolds, L., St. Catherine’s plain
-Rogers, Samuel, Gun lane
-Soman, David, Muspole street
-Stapleton, Robert, corner of Pottergate street and St. John’s street
-Suffolk, G., Fountain square, Union sq.
-Swann, James, Magdalen street
-Tillyard and Howlett, St. George’s pl.
-Tillyard and Son, Elm hill
-Trueman, James, Pottergate street
-Watling, Simon, Cowgate street
-Whitlan, Henry, Adelaide street
-Winter, Charles, Upper market
-Woodgate, Philip, Castle street
-Woodrow, W., Church walk, Lakenham
-Woodyard, James, Oak street
-Wortley, Thomas, William street
-Wyatt, Henry, Upper King street
-
-
-_Box Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Palmer, J., Lower Westwick street
-Rudd, Mrs. H., St. Stephen’s Back st.
-Saul, Joseph, West Pottergate street
-
-
-_Brass Founders_ (_see also Iron and Brass Founders_)—
-
-
-Warner, William and Co., St. Giles’ street
-
-
-_Brass Turners_—
-
-
-Minns, Robert, Mousehold
-
-
-_Braziers_, _Tin-plate Workers_, _&c._
-
-
-Alden, Robert, St. Stephen’s plain
-Ashen, Robert, St. Stephen’s street
-Bedford, P., Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Callow, W. J., Golden Ball street
-Goreham, John, William street
-Hayward, Carif, Ber street
-Pearson, John, St. Augustine’s
-Olley, Stephen B., St. Benedict’s st.
-Rose, William, Gildengate street
-Smith, William, St. Benedict’s street
-Stevens, Charles F., Magdalen street
-Thompson, C., Rampant Horse street
-Thompson, Henry, St. Julian’s street
-Vincent, Henry, Lower Westwick st.
-Vincent, Henry and Son, Upper Westwick street
-Waite, George, Redwell street
-Webber, Joseph, Pitt street
-Wood, John, Magdalen street
-Wright, Daniel, Pitt street
-
-
-_Brewers_—
-
-
-Arnold, George and Alfred Robert, St. Margaret’s plain
-Banham, George, King street
-Bullard, R., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Clarke, Charles, Coslany street
-Hubbard, James, Magdalen street
-Morgan, J. B. and H., King street
-Phillips, John, Eagle and Child, Golden Ball street
-Sexton, Edward, Whalebone inn, New Catton
-Steward, Patteson, Finch, and Co., Pockthorpe
-Webster, William, Ber street
-Weston, C., St. George’s Bridge street
-Youngs, Crawshay, and Youngs, King street
-
-
-_Bricklayers and Plasterers_—
-
-
-Adkin, W., Trory st., Unthank’s road
-Alderson, W. H., St. Andrew’s hill
-Barber, W., St. Martin’s Palace plain
-Barnes, Jacob, West Pottergate street
-Berwick, W., Suffolk st., Union place
-Betts, John, West Pottergate street
-Blyth, John, John street
-Britcher, Charles, Pitt street
-Britcher, Thomas, Pottergate street
-Brooks, H., Hall road, Lakenham
-Brown, C., Hall road, Lakenham
-Brown, John, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Bunn, Charles, Julian street
-Bush, John, Union place
-Curtis, George, Scoles’ green
-Freeman, J., Nelson street, Heigham
-George, Robert M., St. Benedict’s st.
-Goose, Robert, Julian street
-Greengrass, Thomas, Elm hill (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 22)
-Holden, James, Ber street
-Hood, J. H., Rupert st., Union place
-Hook, Joseph John, Brazen Doors rd.
-Howard, Charles H., Bishopgate st. (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 32)
-Howard, Everett and Thomas, Peacock street
-Howard, James, King street
-Howard, John, Fishgate street
-Howard, Thomas, Bishopgate street
-Humphery, William, Pump street
-Lacey, John Greenwood, Ber street
-Lacey, William, The White Horse, Castle hill
-Livock, Samuel, West Wymer street
-Mills, George Thomas, (plasterer) St. Benedict’s street
-Mitson, James, Pump street
-Newman, W., Raglan st., Heigham
-Page, Jeremiah, Rising Sun road
-Park, Clare, sen., Oak street
-Parnell, Richard, Coachmakers’ Arms, Bethel street
-Pearson, Edward, Bank street
-Playford, A., St. George’s Bridge st.
-Pleasants, Philip, Magpie road
-Pye, William, St. Andrew’s hill
-Quantrell, William, Unthank’s road
-Read, Chas., Globe street, Union place
-Rolls, Edward, Holl’s lane
-Russell, George Robt., Southwell st.
-Sexton, Horace, Lower Westwick st.
-Sexton, Robert Watling, Calvert st.
-Spink, J., Jubilee place, Heigham rd.
-Spinks, Samuel, King Street gates
-Steward, W., East End, Thorpe ham.
-Stirgess, G., Dingle’s row, New Catton
-Thompson, Mrs. S., St. Augustine’s
-Tillett, Leonard, Lower Westwick st.
-Townshend, William, Bethel street
-Underwood, H., St. Margaret’s plain
-Underwood, John, King street
-Warnett, Charles, Lower King street
-Whales, M., Distillery yd., Coslany st.
-Wilkins, John, St. Martin’s lane
-Wiseman, Robert, Muspole street
-Wright, James, Ber street
-Wurr and Page, Grapes’ hill
-Young, James, Dereham road
-
-
-_Brick_, _Tile_, _and Pipe Makers_—
-
-
-Blake, George, Brazen Doors road
-Blake, Robert, Brazen Doors road
-Dawson, George, Brazen Doors road
-Mills, James, (brick, tile, and pipe works) Castle meadow and Thorpe
-Murrell, Gibbs H., Duke’s palace
-Pinnick, Robert, Silver road
-Sayer, Daniel, Oak street
-Underwood and Gaze, Chalk hill, Thorpe
-
-
-_Brokers_ (_see Furniture Brokers_)
-_Brush Makers_—
-
-
-Abel, Frederick, Unthank’s road
-Candler, John, Rampant Horse street
-Cooke, Samuel, 6, Davey place
-Edgar, Thos., Chapel st., Crook’s pl.
-Gay and Co., Upper market
-Gooch, Thos., 7, Grout’s thoroughfare
-Harper, Jas. K., St. Benedict’s street
-Johnson, Edwin, Devonshire place, Holl’s lane
-Livock, James, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Lord, George, Lower Westwick street
-Mallett, H., Cross lane, St. George’s
-Page, S. D., and Son, (wholesale) 23, Old Haymarket
-Rix, Henry, Duke street
-Rogers and Page, (wholesale) Wensum street
-Scott, Peter Thomas, White Lion str.
-Warnes, Thomas, City road, Heigham
-Winter, Wm., Chapel st., Crook’s pl.
-
-
-_Builders_—
-
-
-Aldous, J. F., St. Stephen’s street
-Amies, John, Hall road, Lakenham
-Atkins, Richard, 27, Bethel street
-Bell, George, Peacock street
-Berwick, Wm., Suffolk street, Union place
-Bishop, Wm. A., Magdalen street
-Booking, Thomas, St. Benedict’s plain, Pottergate street
-Brooks, James, Tabernacle street
-Brooks, T., Bridge st., St. Andrew’s
-Brown & Bailey, West Pottergate st.
-Brown, John, William street
-Brown, John, Thorpe Hamlet
-Burrell, Benjamin, Lower King street
-Cattermoul, J. O., Pitt street
-Curtis and Balls, West Pottergate str.
-Darkins, Canuel, Magdalen street
-Dawes, Robert, Dereham road
-Ellis, John, Oak street
-Fairman, Thomas, 5, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Fisher, Thomas, Museum court, St. Andrew’s
-Ford, Robert, St. George’s plain
-Foulger, Horatio, Chapel field road
-Fox, John, Heigham Causeway
-Freeman, J., Nelson street, Heigham
-Frost and Son, 7, Chapel field road
-Gaze, Matthew, King street
-George, Robert, Muspole street
-George, W. M., Pottergate street
-Gilbert, William, St. Augustine’s
-Goose, Robert, Julian street
-Griffin, Eliza, Cow hill
-Hall, Samuel, Pottergate street
-Harper, A. P., Trafalgar st., Lakenham
-Hewitt, James, St. Augustine’s gates
-Hood, Robert, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Hood, William, Sussex street
-Houghton, Robert, Ber street
-Howard, Charles H., Bishopgate st. (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 32)
-Howard, James, King street
-Lacey, George Plummer, Surrey rd.
-Lacey, Horace, Surrey street
-Lacey, James, Surrey street
-Lacey, W. R., St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Leach, Philip, St. Martin’s lane
-Ling, George, All Saints’ green
-Lucas, Brothers, Thorpe Railway station
-Meachen, George, Barn road
-Meachen, John, West Pottergate st.
-Meachen, Stephen H., William street
-Minns and Foyson, Castle meadow
-Moore, William, King street
-Murray, Joshua, Prospect place, Lakenham
-Newham, John, Hall lane, Lakenham
-Norton, Henry, Chapel Field road
-Nudds, William, Chatham pl., Chapel Field road
-Page, Jeremiah, Rising Sun road
-Pearson, Edward, Bank street
-Plummer and Bloom, Bethel street
-Read, James, Prince’s street
-Rump, Robert and James, Colegate st.
-Sexton, Horace, Lower Westwick st.
-Sexton, Robert Watling, Calvert st.
-Sinclair, John, Magdalen street
-Spaul, William B., Lower close
-Spink, J., Jubilee pl., Heigham road
-Taylor, James W., Whitefriars’ street
-Trowse, W. and C., St. Julian’s street
-Ulph, Frederick, Ber Street gates
-Wales, John, Kimberley street
-Walker, Thomas, Upper Westwick st.
-Warnett, Charles, Lower King street
-Watson, James, Philadelphia
-Watson, James Crane, John street, Rose lane
-Webster, Wm., Golden Ball street
-White, Jeremiah, Thorn lane
-Wordingham, Wm., St. Catherine’s pl.
-Worman, James, Castle meadow
-Wright, William, Richmond hill
-Young, James, Dereham road
-
-
-_Butchers_—
-
-
-Adcock, R., (pork) St. Benedict’s st.
-Archer, Jesse, Pitt street
-Baker, James, Oak street
-Bale, George, St. Benedict’s street
-Barber, Benjamin, Adelaide street
-Beaumont, John (pork) Finket st.
-Blake, Robert, Lower Westwick street
-Blake, Samuel, Bridewell alley
-Blazeby, William, Scole’s green
-Boatwright, Richard, (pork) Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Brewster, James, Upper Heigham
-Bridges, John, Heigham street
-Brighton, Robert, Heigham street
-Brown, Elizabeth, Bishopgate street
-Bunn, Thomas C., Distillery street
-Bushel, W., Norfolk st., Union place
-Cannell, B. (pork), St. James’ street
-Chapman, Abel, Magdalen street
-Chapman, S., Upper St. Giles’ street
-Chapman, Thomas R., Market-place
-Clarke, Isaac, St. Augustine’s
-Clarke, Samuel, Unthank’s road
-Cobb, Robert L., Magdalen street
-Coldham, H., Bridge st., St. George’s
-Cork, Mary Ann, St. Augustine’s gates
-Cottam and Brewster, Market-place
-Cottam, Thomas, Upper Heigham
-Cross, William, Rose lane
-Cubitt, John (pork), Julian street
-Curme, George, Magdalen street
-Dawson, Jonathan, Magdalen street
-Dawson, Philip, jun., Magdalen street
-Delf, Susan, Rupert street
-Dent, Dowson, Ber street
-Dent, Thomas, Ber street
-Denny, Thomas, Trowse
-Dixon, Richard, Upper Westwick st.
-Drake, Caroline (pork), New Catton
-Drakes, Benjamin, New Catton
-Ellwood, Henry, Timberhill street
-Fisher, Edward, Ber street
-Fisher, Mary Ann, Distillery street
-Fitt, William, Ber street
-Folk, Charles, Gildengate street
-Fussey, Susan, Ber street
-Gardner, Maria (pork), Barn road
-Gibbs, Rudd William, Palace street
-Gibson, Samuel, Gildengate street
-Girling, Robert, St. Benedict’s street
-Goodson, William, Dereham road
-Gowing, Samuel, St. Benedict’s gates
-Graver, John, Lower King street
-Gray, Mary Ann (pork), Upper Westwick street
-Greengrass, John, West End street
-Greeves, Benjamin T., Market-place
-Greeves, Henry, Market-place
-Guyton, J. T., Upper Westwick street
-Hall, Charles, Upper King street
-Hall, Frederick G., Chapel field road
-Harley, J. P., St. Benedict’s street
-Henderson, W., Church st., Lakenham
-Hindle, Maria, Pump street
-Holland, Francis, St. Benedict’s road
-Hook, Joseph, St. Stephen’s street
-Howard, William (pork), Catton road
-Isbill, Charles, Charing cross
-Ives, Charles, Magdalen street
-Iveson, Mrs. Rebecca, Union street, Crook’s place
-Jacobs, John, St. Catherine’s plain
-Jackson, Edward, Pottergate street
-Jones, James, Grove place, Lakenham
-Kent, Mary, St. Benedict’s street
-Kett, P. M., Magpie road
-King, Edward, Southwell street, Lakenham
-Lamb, James, Market place
-Lamb, Leonard, Ber street
-Lamb, L., Rupert street, Union place
-Lamb, Thomas, (pork) St. James’ st.
-Lamb, William, (pork) Grapes’ hill
-Mann, Henry, (pork) Elm hill
-Manthorpe, James, Lower King street
-Mason, John, Golden Ball street
-Mason, Samuel, Norfolk street, Union place
-Meen, Henry P., St. Stephen’s
-Middleton, Robert, (pork) Cherry street, Lakenham
-Miller, Geo. M., St. Catherine’s plain
-Minns, David, St. Benedict’s street
-Motts, John, West End st., Heigham
-Patrick, Charles, St. Margaret’s plain
-Porter, Robert, (pork) Lower King st.
-Pycroft, Mrs. A., 53, St. Stephen’s st.
-Pycroft, Nathaniel, Red Lion street
-Rayner, James, Bartholomew street
-Rayner, James, Nelson terrace, Dereham road
-Redgment, K., Rupert street, Union place
-Reynolds, William, Ber street
-Rudd, Noah, Duke street
-Rudling, William, Ber street
-Rudrum, Christopher, Lower King st.
-Savage, Mrs. Mary, Cowgate street
-Savage, R., Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Seeley, William, (pork) Pottergate st.
-Self, Mrs. Mary, Tombland
-Simpson, T., Charles st., Heigham
-Smith, Jonas, (pork) Rising Sun lane
-Squires, J., Chapel st., Crook’s place
-Steward, Matthew, St. James’ street
-Stockings, Mark, St. Stephen’s street
-Summer, David, (pork) Elm hill
-Thetford, William, (pork) Trowse
-Underwood, C., West Pottergate st.
-Walker, James, Coslany street
-Watts, Thomas, Willow lane
-Wells, W., 1, Norfolk terrace, Union pl.
-Willgrass, John, Ber street
-Woodcock, Samuel, (pork) Palace str.
-Wright, T., Long row, New Catton
-
-
-_Butter Factors_ (_see Cheese and Butter Factors_)—
-_Button Factor_—
-
-
-Moore and Co., 81, St. Giles’ street
-
-
-_Cab Proprietors_ (_see Fly Proprietors_)—
-_Cabinet Makers_—
-
-
-Abel, Daniel, Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Bacon, Charles, Muspole street
-Barnes, James, Surrey grove
-Bexfield, Thomas, Bethel street
-Birch, Benjamin, Timberhill street
-Bultitude, Edward, Charing cross
-Buttifant, John, St. Ann’s terrace, Synagogue street
-Chamberlin, William, Calvert street
-Clarke and Hunter, Dove street and Pottergate street
-Cordran, William, Chapel field road
-Corrick, William, St. Giles’ street
-Craske, James, Lower Goat lane
-Crawfoot, William, Ber street
-Crowe, J., and Son, St. Stephen’s st.
-Dawson, Jabez, 17, Distillery street
-Freeman and Wells, 37, London street
-Furse, James, Prince’s street
-Hales, James, St. John’s street
-Hales, Walter, Wellington terrace, Union place
-Hare, Charles, West Pottergate street
-Horsley, William, St. Augustine’s
-Huby, Edward, Lower Westwick st.
-Keeble, James, John street
-Kerry, John, St. Benedict’s street
-Key, Robert, Holl’s lane, Dereham rd.
-Kirkham, Dennis, Redwell street
-Lay, George, Bethel street
-Manthorpe, James, Lower King street
-Mason, Robert, Infirmary road
-Miller, George R., St. Andrew’s hill
-Neve, Charles and J., Ber street gates
-Norris, Mrs. James, Charing Cross
-Norris, Samuel, Elm hill
-Nurse, Robert, Castle street
-Pooley, Samuel, St. John’s street
-Pooley, William, Charing Cross
-Pigg and Greenwood, 14, London st.
-Robertson, H., Grove rd., Lakenham
-Roe, John, Ber street
-Rudd, Thomas, Ber street
-Scott, R. B., Charing cross and St. John’s street
-Sparks, William, Fye bridge
-Sturley, Charles, Pottergate street
-Tann, S. W., Upper Westwick street
-Thirkettle, —, Scoles’ green
-Trevor, Henry, Post Office street
-Tyce, George, 16, Charing cross
-Varley, John, Rope’s yard, Surrey st.
-Wells, William, Castle meadow
-Woods, John Robert, Red Lion street
-
-
-_Candle Manufacturers_ (_see also Tallow Chandlers_)—
-
-
-Brock, George, St. Augustine’s gates
-Howes, Ann and Son, Grapes’ hill
-
-
-_Cane Workers_—
-
-
-Chapham, George Henry, Ber street
-Dyer, John J., Ber street
-
-
-_Cap Makers_—
-
-
-Allured, James, Timberhill street
-Boatwright, J., St. Saviour’s Church alley
-Haldinstein, Philip, Bridewell alley
-Nichols, Henry, Pottergate street
-Southon, Edmund, St. James’ street
-
-
-_Card Makers_—
-
-
-Compere, Thomas Bond, St. Martin’s at Palace
-
-
-_Carmen_—
-
-
-Gibson, J., Mousehold heath
-Jarvis, Henry, (railway and general) Lucas’ wharf, Thorpe hamlet (_see
-Advertisement_, _p._ 35)
-Pickford and Co., (S. D. Rudrum) Duke’s Palace wharf
-Stubbs, G., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Stubbs, Hugh, Stamp Office yard, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Worman, Robert, Grapes’ hill
-
-
-_Carpenters and Joiners_ (_see also Builders_)—
-
-
-Addison, Benjamin, Magdalen street
-Aldous, John F., St. Stephen’s street
-Amies, John, Hall road, Lakenham
-Bailey, Isaac, West Pottergate street
-Bell, Rebecca, Peacock street
-Boatwright, James, Fishgate street
-Brooks, James, Tabernacle street
-Brown, John, Thorpe hamlet
-Brown, P., City road, Heigham fields
-Colman, John D., Magdalen street
-Curtis, Joseph, Botolph street
-Custance, Jonathan, Magdalen street
-Daines, Robert, Hall road, Lakenham
-Daplin, Mark, (and gig builder) Lothian street
-Daws, Robert, Dereham road
-Doughty, John, Mill st., Union place
-Ellis, John, Oak street
-Finch, John, Trowse
-Fisher, Thomas, Museum court, St. Andrew’s
-Fisher, William, St. Paul’s terrace, Cowgate street
-Ford, Robert, St. George’s plain
-Fox, John, Heigham Causeway
-Fox, Thomas, Heigham street
-Frost and Son, 7, Chapel Field road
-Gaze, Matthew, King street
-George, William M., Pottergate street
-Gower, James, St. Julian street
-Hall, Samuel, Pottergate street
-Harper, Andrews Pask, Trafalgar st., Lakenham
-Harrison, Isaac, John street, Heigham
-Hewitt, James, St. Augustine’s gates
-Hood, William, Sussex street
-Houghton, Robert, Ber street
-Howard, William, Bishopgate street
-Howell, James, St. Augustine’s
-Howlett, Robert, St. Augustine’s
-Hunn, Philip, Rising Sun lane
-Lacey, W. R., St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Leach, Philip, St. Martin’s lane
-Le Grys, William, Trowse
-Leist, James, Wensum street
-Lovett, Geo., West End st., Heigham
-Martins, Josiah, Trowse
-Meachen, George, Barn rd., Heigham
-Middleton, Alfred, Trowse
-Murray, J., Prospect place, Lakenham
-Newham, J., Hall lane, Lakenham
-Norton, Henry, Chapel Field road
-Norton, William, Upper Heigham
-Norton, Henry, John st., Union place
-Nudds, William, Chatham place, Chapel Field road
-Ollett, Mat., Trafalgar st., Lakenham
-Osborne, K. S., Southwell street, Lakenham
-Page, Samuel, West Pottergate street
-Poll, John, Oxford st., Unthank’s road
-Rainbird, Samuel, Elm hill
-Read, James, Prince’s street
-Reeve, Fred., Lower Westwick street
-Rolling, E., Grove hill, St. Giles’ rd.
-Slipper, Charles, Pig lane
-Smith, S. E., City road, Lakenham
-Spencer, Jonathan, Trowse
-Suffolk, William, Ber street
-Taylor, James W., Whitefriars’ street
-Ulph, Frederick, Ber Street gates
-Wales, John, Kimberley street
-Walker, Thomas, Upper Westwick st.
-Walmsley, G. W., West Pottergate st.
-Ward, James, St. Andrew’s hill
-Warren, Reuben, Russell street
-Watson, James, Philadelphia
-Watson, E. C., Chapel st., Crook’s pl.
-Watson, Jas. C., John st., Rose lane
-White, Jeremiah, Thorn lane
-Winter and Rowland, King street
-Wood, John, Union place
-Wordingham, Wm., St. Catherine’s pl.
-Wright, William, Richmond hill
-
-
-_Carriers_ (_see Carmen_)—
-_Carters_ (_see Carmen_)—
-_Carvers and Gilders_—
-
-
-Boswell, William, Magdalen street
-Cook, Joseph, St. Faith’s lane
-Culyer, Thomas, (ecclesiastical and cabinet), Castle meadow
-Dawes, Lawrence, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Freeman, William, Pottergate street
-Freeman, W., jun., Rampant Horse st.
-Gilman, John, 26, London street
-Howard, John, Bethel street
-Marsham, Edward, St. Stephen’s Church alley
-Miller, George R., St. Andrew’s hill
-Nurse, Robert, Castle street
-Robinson, Christopher, Pottergate st.
-Root, Robert, Golden Dog lane
-Tarte, William, Botolph street
-Townshend, S. T., jun., Charing cross
-Watson, Daniel F., All Saints’ green
-Wilkin, Charles, Wensum street
-
-
-_Cattle Dealers_—
-
-
-Baxter, John, Ber street
-Bilby, Walter, New Catton
-Dawson, John, Magdalen street
-Fromow, S., Grove place, Surrey road
-Smith, W., Newman’s yard, Ber street
-Stroyan, R., (salesman) Bracondale
-Webb, G., Julian street, Julian place
-
-
-_Cement Dealers_—
-
-
-Colman and Glendenning, Rampant Horse street
-Taylor, Mrs. William, King street
-
-
-_Chair Makers_—
-
-
-Bangay, George, Oak street
-Batley, William, Lower Westwick st.
-Chapham, George Henry, Ber street
-Cordean, William, 7, Crescent place, Chapel Field road
-Dawson, Jabez, 17, Distillery street
-Hare, Charles, West Pottergate street
-Meek, J., Charing cross
-Osborne, Richard N., Muspole street
-Pearce, William, World’s End lane
-Scott, Charles T., Gildengate street
-Varley, John, Rope’s yard, Surrey st.
-
-
-_Cheese and Butter Factors_—
-
-
-Butcher, Robert and Nephew, Queen street
-Freeman and Nash, Upper market
-Hough, J. and Son, Castle meadow
-Nash, Joseph, Post Office street
-Pratt, William, Wensum street
-Smith, John, Stamp Office yard, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-
-
-_Chemist_—_Analytical_—
-
-
-Sutton, Francis, Bank plain (_see Advertisement_)
-
-
-_Chemists and Druggists_—
-
-
-Andrews, Brothers, (and wholesale) Colegate street
-Arnold, Edward, (and wholesale) Orford hill
-Bliss, Joseph James, Magdalen street
-Boughen, Hugh, St. Augustine’s
-Burrows, Barnard L., Ber Street gates
-Caley, Albert J., London street
-Cooke, William, St. Giles’ street
-Cottingham, Joseph J., 1, St. Giles’ st.
-Cubitt, George and Son, 11, the Walk
-Dixon, Benjamin, King street
-English, Joseph, St. Giles’ street
-Fitch and Chambers, Market place
-Gardiner, William, Dove street
-Harper and Sutton, Bank plain
-Hooper, John, Hall road, Lakenham
-Hulme, John Hughes, St. Andrew’s Hall plain (_see Advertisement_, _p._
-11)
-James, Henry, Oak street
-Lay, William Robert, Rupert street
-Melton, Frederick, St. Benedict’s street
-Miles, Charles, St. Stephen’s street
-Moore, James B., Robinson’s terrace, Rose lane
-Orris, George, St. James’ street
-Patman, George, Ber street
-Peggs, James O., Golden Ball street
-Pitts, Robert Christopher, St. Giles’ st.
-Row and Bridges, St. Stephen’s
-Row and Co., (manufacturing) Surrey grove
-Rudd, John, St. George’s plain
-Searby, Wright and W. Martin, White Lion street
-Slade and Rapier, (homœopathic) London street
-Smith and Sons, (and wholesale) Market-place, and Magdalen street
-Spatchett, James, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Stark and Company, (agricultural) Duke’s Palace bridge
-Taylor, William, Magdalen street
-Thompson, Henry, St. Stephen’s plain
-Watson, Gilbert P., King street
-Wheeler, F., Swan lane, London st.
-
-
-_Chimney Sweepers_—
-
-
-Bowgen, J. H., Lower Westwick str.
-Copeman, George, St. Stephen’s plain
-Crisp, William, Lower Westwick str.
-Finch, James, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Finch, William, St. Miles’ Church st.
-Roe, Isaac, Magdalen street
-
-
-_China_, _Glass_, _and Earthenware Dealers_, _&c._—
-
-
-Downing, Joseph, 22, The Walk
-Gill, John, St. Giles’ street
-Hansell, Sarah, St. Augustine’s street
-Hyams, Emanuel, St. Andrew’s plain
-Kiddell, Joshua, Timberhill street
-Lovick and Co., St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Meadows, Cornelius, Magdalen street
-Meadows, George, Westlegate street
-Murrell, James, Chapel Field road
-Onley, William Daniel, Golden Lion, Brazen Doors road
-Smith, John, Timberhill street
-Wimperis, William, Cowgate street
-Yates, William, Davey place
-Yexley, W., Jubilee pl., Dereham rd.
-
-
-_Circulating Libraries_ (_for Public Libraries see under Public
-Information_)—
-
-
-Giddens, Mrs. S., St. Stephen’s street
-Lain, Edward, Elm hill
-Spence, G., Bridge street, St. George’s
-
-
-_Clothiers and Dealers_—
-
-
-Atkins, Elizabeth, Lower Westwick st.
-Balls, Robert, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Bayes and Sons, Orford hill and Red Lion street
-Blyth, William, Coach and Horses’ road, Union place
-Bourt, John, Lower Westwick street
-Browne, George, Orford hill
-Burrows, R., Lower Westwick street
-Butler, James, Lower Westwick street
-Butler, William, St. Lawrence
-Batterbee, James, St. Benedict’s street
-Comer, Ann, St. Benedict’s street
-Cox, Mary, Lower Westwick street
-Dowson, John, Ber street
-Francis, Joseph, Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Fromow, John, Lower Westwick street
-Green, Edward, Lower Westwick st.
-Green, James, Lower Westwick street
-Hare, Mrs. E., Lower Westwick street
-Housedane, J., Lower Westwick street
-Kilburn, William, St. Benedict’s street
-Lake, James, Red Lion street
-Lorkin, Mrs. V., Lower Westwick st.
-Metcalf, Simon, St. Benedict’s street
-Mickleburgh, J. H., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Poulter, Mrs. M., Lower Westwick st.
-Nichols, Elizabeth, Upper Goat lane
-Riches and Skoyles, (tailors and outfitters) Davey place
-Rivett and Harmer, (wholesale) Old Post Office yard
-Stallard, Joseph William, (tailor and outfitter) Orford hill
-Steward, James, (tailor and outfitter) Tombland
-Warlett, Mrs. Phœbe, Coslany street
-Watson, James H., 2, Charing cross
-Webster, Robert, St. Lawrence steps
-Womack, George, (wholesale) White Lion street and Davey place
-
-
-_Coach and Gig Builders_—
-
-
-Harcourt, A., Chapel Field road
-Hart, Philip Woodrow, Chapel Field road and Red Lion street
-Howes, Joseph and James, Red Lion street
-Howes, Thomas Self, Castle meadow and Rose lane
-Jolly, Charles W., St. Stephen’s gates
-Kett, James, St. Giles’ street
-Meadows, J., St. Andrew’s Bridge st.
-Morris, George, Magdalen street
-Rudling, James, Palace street
-Smith, George, St. Stephen’s square
-Spratt, William, Chapel field
-Thorn, Charles, St. Giles’ gates
-Tillett, William, St. Augustine’s
-
-
-_Coal Merchants and Dealers_ (_see also Merchants_)—
-
-
-Austin, Owen, Oak street
-Balls, Jonas, (salesman) City road, Heigham fields
-Banister, J., Trafalgar st., Lakenham
-Baxter, William, King street
-Beckham, Robert John, Magdalen st.
-Blyth, John, sen., Quay side
-Blyth, John, Quay side
-Boardman and Sursham, Wensum st.
-Bowgen, J. H., Lower Westwick st.
-Bright, John, Lower Westwick street
-Brooks, Anthony and James, Barn rd.
-Burcham, Samuel, Oak street
-Burrows, George, Water lane, Fishgate street
-Burrows, Lewis, Cowgate street
-Butler, Mary, Lower Westwick street
-Buttle, Richard, Quay side
-Campling, Peter, Pottergate street
-Cozens, James and Son, Upper Westwick street
-Crowe, Edward, Lower Westwick st.
-Cupper, J., St. Stephen’s Back street
-Dawbarn, James, Castle meadow
-Dunn, James, Quay side
-Eastern Counties’ Compy., London st.
-England, William, Synagogue street
-Fitzgerald, Abraham, Cowgate street
-George, Michael R. D., Quay side
-Gibson, G., Chapel street, Crooks pl.
-Golden, William, Ber street
-Haslip, J., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Heazle and Co., Lower Westwick st.
-Kett, Henry W., Hall rd., Lakenham
-Lamb, Benjamin C., Magdalen street
-Linstead, George, Southwell street
-Mealing and Mills, Lower King st.
-Merry, R., Victoria Railway Station
-Mickleburgh, Robert, Nelson street
-Mills, James, Castle meadow
-Mollett, Rizen, Magdalen street
-Nobbs, S., Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Orsborne, Edward, Quay side
-Pepworth, James, Victoria station
-Porter, Robert, 2, West End terrace, St. Giles’ hill
-Read, G., Badding lane, Quay side
-Read, Thomas W. and Co., Trowse mills, and Cannon wharf, King st.
-Read, William, Elm hill
-Suffolk, E., King street, Crook’s place
-Taylor, William, Coslany street
-Thomas, John, Quay side
-Vyall, Daniel, St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Vyall, Henry M., Chapel Field road
-Warnes, Robert, Foundry bridge
-Waterson, Joseph, Quay side
-Wilde, John, Lower King street
-Wittrick, Samuel, Vauxhall street
-Woods, William, Union place
-
-
-_Coffee and Eating Houses_, _Boarding Houses_, _&c._—
-
-
-Aberdeen, William Charles, (and Pie house) 3, Dove street
-Bullen, Miss E., Bridewell alley
-Burton, George, Castle hill
-Crowe, Charles, Elm hill
-Dean, Alfred, Upper Market
-Fountain, Mrs. M. A., London street
-Frost, William, 2, Upper Walk
-Hemnell, Johnson, Rose lane
-Lee, George, Market place
-Leverett, George, St. Benedict’s gates
-Nicholls, John, Market place
-Rix, George, Golden Ball street
-Seeley, E. and H., St. Stephen’s plain
-Stamp, William, Colegate street
-Sutton, J., (late Bennett’s) Commercial Boarding House, Exchange st.
-
-
-_Condensed Egg Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Thurgar and Co., King street
-
-
-_Confectioners_—
-
-
-Allen, Robt., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Batley, Richard, St. Catherine’s plain
-Benslyn, Thomas, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Borrett, Wm., Lower Westwick street
-Brighten, C. G., St. Stephen’s gates
-Brock, Samuel, St. Augustine’s street
-Bullen, William Vincent, Golden Ball street (_see Advertisement_, _p._
-14)
-Burrage, Edwin, Church street
-Chiddick, Francis J., Magdalen street
-Daines, Richard, (sugar boiler) St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Fuller, William H., Theatre street
-Goldsmith, Thomas, St. Stephen’s
-Haddon, Mrs. M. A., Rose lane
-Hall, Miss Harriet, Gildengate street
-Hannant, Nathaniel, Magdalen street
-Harrison, Edward, Church street
-Harvard and Co., (wholesale and retail) the Walk
-Hatcarton, Joseph, Bedford street
-Havers, Saml., St. Miles’ Church alley
-Hick, William, St. Andrew’s hall pln.
-Hipperson and Jennings, Davey place
-Hunt, James, St. Stephen’s street
-Hunt, John, Upper Westwick street
-Johnson, John Sewell, Cowgate street
-Johnson, S., Rampant Horse street
-Kahler, John Henry, Rose lane
-Lake, Samuel, Colegate street
-Lemon, Thomas, All Saints’ street
-Lock, Charles, King street
-Marston, Rd., 13, Gentlemen’s Walk
-Parr, John, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Pinching, William, Bethel street
-Reeve, Charles, Upper Westwick st.
-Rose, Thomas, St. Benedict’s street
-Scotton, Mary, Red Lion street
-Silvey, William, White Lion street
-Skipper, Henry, Magdalen street
-Smith, John Joseph, Ber street
-Smith, John William, Dove street
-Smith, William R., Palace street
-Snelling, Jas. G., Rampant Horse st.
-Tate, George, Coslany street
-Tuck, Robert, Wensum street
-Tuck, Robert D., Vauxhall street
-Tuck, Robert A., Lower Goat lane
-Wilson, G., Queen st. (and wholesale)
-Winter, George, Timberhill street
-Woodward, C., Trory st., Unthank’s rd.
-
-
-_Coopers_—
-
-
-Amy, W., Spitalfields, Thorpe hamlet
-Banham, George, King street
-Carpenter, Robert, Oak street
-Coldham, Alfred, Dereham road
-Cook, John, Botolph street
-Culyer, Charles A., Rampant Horse st.
-Death, John, Bishopgate street
-Edwards, James, Infirmary road
-Merry, John, Pottergate street
-Mousey, James, Thorn lane
-Plumstead, Samuel J., Coslany street
-Scott, Benjamin, Chapel Field road
-Shepherd, Isaac, Magdalen street
-Short, H., St. George’s Middle street
-Stacey, Anthony, Thorpe hamlet
-Taylor, James W., White Friars’ str.
-Taylor, John W., Upper Westwick st.
-
-
-_Copper-plate Printers_—
-
-
-Brown, Wm. and Co., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Dallinger and Son, 12, Davey place
-Emslie, James and Son, Back of the Inns (_see Advertisement_, _page_ 15)
-Hall, William, White Lion street
-
-
-_Coppersmiths_—
-
-
-Warner, Wm. and Co., 2, St. Giles’ st.
-
-
-_Cork Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Crosskill, Robert, jun., Bridge street, St. George’s
-Robinson, J., Bridge st., St. George’s
-Rose, George, 68, St. Stephen’s
-Wilson, Thomas, Golden Ball street
-
-
-_Corn Merchants and Dealers_ (_see also Merchants_)—
-
-
-Boardman and Sursham, Wensum street
-Claxton, Elizabeth, St. Augustine’s
-Freeman, Charles R., Upper market
-Goldsmith, Thomas, St. Stephen’s
-Larkman, W. A., Lower King street
-Matthews, William, (and hay) St. Martin’s Palace plain
-Osborn, Charles, Ber street
-Randle, William, Upper market
-Spanton, F. H., (and hay) Ber street
-Spratt, W., (and hay) Market place
-Watling, Robert, Cinder Ovens yard, King street
-Williamson, H. W., St. Stephen’s street
-Williamson, John A., (and seed) Duke’s Palace street
-Woolnough, M., Ber street
-
-
-_Corn Millers_—
-
-
-Baldwin, Charles and Co., St. Mary’s Grist Mill, Pitt street
-Cannell, Peter, Mousehold heath
-Culley, Henry Utting, Lower Westwick street
-Feltham, Barnabas, New Lakenham
-Hammond, John, Catton hill
-Randle, William, Upper market
-Read, Randall, Magdalen street
-Read, Thomas W. and Co., Trowse mills, and Canon wharf, King street
-Reynolds, John, Philadelphia
-Wells, William Harrison, New mills
-
-
-_Corset Makers_ (_see Stay and Corset Makers_)—
-_Cow Keepers_—
-
-
-Arms, William, Parry’s buildings, Philadelphia
-Bayfield, Andrew, Lakenham
-Carter, John, Catton road
-Chandler, Samuel, St. Stephen’s rd.
-Claxton, George, Baker’s road, St. Augustine’s
-Douglass, John, Silver road
-Hubbard, James, Northumberland st., Heigham
-Huggins, Edward, Hall road
-Tallowin, Samuel, Hellesdon road
-Tibbenham, William, Newmarket rd.
-Wigg, John, Vauxhall street
-
-
-_Cutlers_ (_Manufacturing_)—
-
-
-Allison, Mrs. S., St. Peter’s
-Branch, George, Golden Ball street
-Lister, John, 10½, Old Haymarket
-Sawyer and Co., 42, London street
-Scott, James, St. Andrew’s hill, corner of London street
-
-
-_Cutlers_ (_Working_)—
-
-
-Allison, Mrs. Sophia, St. Peter’s steps
-Huggins, James, Rising Sun lane
-Hunt, John, Upper Westwick street
-Pearson, James, St. Andrew’s hill
-Scott, James, St. Andrew’s hill, corner of London street
-Southgate, Benjamin, St. Martin’s lane
-Sutton, Samuel, Royal Hotel street
-Thornton, William, Grapes hill
-Whitlam, Thos., West Pottergate str.
-
-
-_Curriers_ (_see also Leather Merchants_)—
-
-
-Archer, S., Peacock street, St. Paul’s
-Armes, Robert, Dove street
-Beare, Samuel Shalders, Bridge street
-Blackburn, James, Castle meadow
-Blackburn, J. B., St. Stephen’s plain
-Curtis, William, Upper Westwick str.
-Gooch, Samuel Irwin, 9, Davey place
-Leamon, Robert, Upper Market (and Whitwell)
-Marston, A. A., Timberhill street
-Page, George, and Son, Magdalen str.
-Phillips, William, All Saints’ street
-Rudd and Paston, Grapes’ hill
-Sayer, Wm., Upper Westwick street
-Sidney and Armes, Dove street
-Tillyard and Howlett, St. George’s pl.
-Woods, George John, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-
-
-_Debt Collectors_ (_see Rent and Debt Collectors_)—
-_Dentists_—
-
-
-Barker, J., Bedford st., Unthank’s road
-Boulger, Patrick Joseph, Willow lane
-Bridgeman, William K., 69, St. Giles’
-Brownfield, John, Magdalen street
-Dearle, George, Exchange street
-Gunton, Alfred, 79, St. Giles’ street
-Harcourt, Walter, St. Giles’ street
-Hay, William, Post-office street
-Neep, Edward, Post-office street
-Offord, James S., Theatre street
-Suggett and Dunsford, St. Giles’ street
-White, Richard J., St. Giles’
-
-
-_Drapers_—
-
-
-Abbott, Edward J., Exchange street
-Aikin, Francis, St. Benedict’s road
-Aldous, James, Trafalgar street, New Lakenham
-Aldrich, John, West Pottergate street
-Allen & Co., (woollen) Bank plain
-Armstrong, H., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Armstrong, Mary, Dereham road
-Austria, Anne, 5, Orford hill
-Barker, B., (woollen) Orford hill
-Betts, John, Market-place
-Bishop, George, Old Haymarket
-Bond, William, (woollen) London st.
-Bullard, William (woollen) 14, Exchange street
-Caley, Nathaniel Henry, London st.
-Cannell, Albert F., Lower Goat lane
-Chamberlin, Sons, & Co., (wholesale and retail) Market-place
-Coleman, Mrs. Ruth, London street
-Coleman, George Lovick (wholesale and retail) Market-place
-Coleman, Henry Bevely, Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Cowan, A., (travelling) Lady’s lane
-Crisp, J. W., (woollen) Castle meadow
-Cundall, Benjamin and Son, The Walk
-Deigham, Peter, (travelling) Duke st.
-Delf, William Stannard, Tombland
-Diggins, G., Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Dixon, E. L., (linen) Magdalen street
-Don, John, Golding street
-Duffield, H., (woollen) 12, Exchange street (_see Advertisement_, _page_
-13)
-Edwards, William P., St. Stephen’s st.
-English and Son, London street
-English, J., (woollen) 45, London st.
-Fairchild, Mary Ann, Spitalfields
-Fairweather, Lydia, (linen) London st.
-Fiske, Francis R., London street
-Flood, Harriet, St. Martin’s lane
-Flower, Jonathan, Wensum street
-Foulsham, Francis, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Fraser, John, (linen) Dereham road
-Frazer, W., Exchange st. (wholesale)
-Garrett, John, Pottergate street
-Gooderson and Moll, Upper Market
-Gunton, John Hamnell, Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Hall and Ilott, Waterloo house, St. Stephen’s
-Hall, James, Somerleyton street
-Hart, William, St. Benedict’s street
-Henderson, John, (travelling) Dereham road
-Hill, Michael, Colegate street
-Hipper, Mary Ann, St. Benedict’s street
-Hook, Joseph, Brazen Doors’ road
-Howard, Anna, St. Stephen’s street
-Huson, R., Bridge street, St. George’s
-Jackson, Joseph, All Saints’ green
-Jeffries, Robert, King street
-Jones, Mrs. E., (linen) Briggs’ street
-Keown, Mr., Valentine street
-Kett, William Woodhouse, (linen) London and Exchange streets
-Livock, W. T., (woollen) London st.
-Lovick and Johnson, (woollen) London street
-Mace, Elizabeth, Grapes hill
-Mallett, F. and C., (woollen) London street
-Marshall, Joseph, (woollen) Rampant Horse street
-Mc’llmorrow, John, (travelling) Coslany street
-Mc’Keown Henry, (travelling) St. Lawrence lane
-Mitchell, William, (travelling) Dereham road terrace
-Newstead, William, (linen) Lower Goat lane
-Oughton, W., Kimberley street, Unthank’s road
-Parker, James, St. Catherine’s plain
-Pigg, Samuel, and Sons, (woollen) Haymarket (wholesale)
-Piggott, John Henry, (linen) St. Stephen’s street
-Piper, William, (linen) London street
-Pope, William, (linen) 23, Bethel st.
-Powell, Robert, (family linen) 36, London street
-Reid, John C., (travelling) Douro terrace, Heigham road
-Reid, Samuel, (linen and woollen) St. Andrew’s hall plain
-Rix, William, Pump street
-Rust, James B., Bethel street
-Sayer, Richard H., Unthank’s road
-Scott, William, St. Stephen’s
-Skelton, John S., (woollen) St. Giles’
-Slater, Joseph, (woollen) Tombland
-Smith, George, (linen) Ber street
-Smith, Samuel J., Magdalen street
-Snowdon, Henry, (linen and woollen) Bridge street, St. George’s
-Snowdon, J. C. and Co., (linen and woollen) 9, The Walk
-Sommerville, J. J. and R., Magdalen street
-Starling, C. G., (linen) White Lion st.
-Stocks, Alfred J., (linen) Briggs’ st.
-Sutton, Henry M., St. Augustine’s
-Sutton, M. D., (woollen) St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Talbot, George, (woollen) Bridge st., St. Andrew’s
-Taylor, Wm. S., (woollen) Prince’s st.
-Todd, J. and Son, (woollen) Queen st.
-Todd, W. A., (woollen) 16, London st.
-Towler, Miss H., (linen) Fye Bridge
-Trackson, James, (travelling) Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Wade, Mrs. F., (woollen) Redwell st.
-Wardle, Sarah, (linen) St. Mary’s pl.
-Watts and Graham, (travelling) Dereham road
-Wills, George E., Heigham street
-Womack, George, (woollen) White Lion street and Davey place
-Woods, James M., (linen) 67, St. Stephen’s street
-Wright, James, (linen) Ber street
-
-
-_Dressers_—
-
-
-Gedge, George, Coslany street
-Minns, J., St. Clement’s Church alley
-Sexton, Joseph, Calvert street
-Stark and Co., Duke’s Palace bridge
-Ulph, William, Lower Westwick str.
-
-
-_Dyers_—
-
-
-Allen, Bryant, Scoles’ green
-Barber, Samuel, Timberhill street
-Baxter, Benjamin, St. Paul’s street
-Breeze, Henry C., Bridge street, St. George’s (_see Advertisement_, _p._
-13)
-Briggs, William Henry, New Catton
-Brook, Edmund, King street
-Brown, Benjamin, Robson’s yard, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Brown, Mrs. Sarah, Tombland
-Campling, Alfred, Botolph street
-Carter, John, All Saints’ green
-Cooke, Hannah, Coslany street
-Cooke, Harriet, St. Augustine’s
-Furse, Mrs. Maria, St. Augustine’s
-Furse, William, Peacock street
-Gedge, George, Coslany street
-Groom, George, Brazen Doors road
-Harper, George, Calvert street
-Harper, Joseph, St. George’s Bridge st.
-Harris, Zebediah, 38, Pottergate st.
-Hawes, James, Nelson street
-Houghton, D., 4, Upper St. Giles’ st.
-Houghton, John, Ten Bell lane
-Hubbard, Sarah, Golden Dog lane
-Jarrett, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Jay, Joshua, Bethel street
-Metcalf, Francis, Colegate street
-Mills, James, Coslany street
-Nicholds, Charles, Somerleyton street, Unthank’s road
-Parker, B., Twiddy’s court, Ber street
-Reeve, James, Duke street
-Sexton, Joseph, Calvert street
-Stark and Co., Duke’s Palace bridge
-Skelton, Joseph, Gildengate street
-Ulph, William, Lower Westwick st.
-
-
-_Earthenware Dealers_ (_see China_, _Glass_, _and Earthenware Dealers_)—
-_Embroidery Designer_—
-
-
-Ganley, James, London street
-
-
-_Engineers_ (_see also Agricultural Implement Makers_)—
-
-
-Campling, James, Golden Ball street
-Cudbard, Charles, Theatre street
-Gaze, William, Pitt street
-Gaze, William, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Hines, Charles, Muspole street
-Holmes and Sons, Prospect place and Castle hill (_see Advertisement_,
-_pp._ 2 and 3)
-Howard, Riches, and Watts, Duke’s Palace Iron Works (_see Advertisement_,
-_p._ 6)
-Le Fevre, Thomas, St. Stephen’s st.
-Olley, William and Co., Dereham rd.
-Parkinson, John W., Globe st., Union place
-Shalders, J., (hydraulic) Bank plain (_see Advertisement_, _page_ 17)
-Sharon, Anthony, Pottergate street
-Slack, Jacob H., Grapes’ hill
-Slack, Robert H., Cow hill
-Smithdale, Thomas, King street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 9)
-Sparke and Co., Thorn lane and Castle hill (_see Advertisement_, _pp._
-36, 37, 33)
-Turner, J. M., St. Martin’s at Palace
-Watts, James, Bishopgate street
-Winkle, John, St. Benedict’s gates
-
-
-_Engravers_—
-
-
-Brown, W., Broad st., St. Andrew’s
-Dallinger and Son, 12, Davey place
-Emslie, James and Son, Back of the Inns (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 15)
-Hall, William, White Lion street
-Marrison, Robert, Great Orford street
-Searles, G., Trory st., Unthank’s road
-
-
-_Farmers_—
-
-
-Alborough, Thomas, Trowse
-Colman, William, St. Giles’ road
-Dawson, George, Brazen Doors road
-Emery, George, Coach and Horses rd.
-Fitt, Richard, Earlham road
-Gowing, George, Trowse
-Jarvis, William, Trowse
-Long, John, Silver road
-Mace, Robert, Distillery street
-Mace, Robert, Upper Heigham street
-Plant, James, Trowse
-Pratt, William, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Reynolds, Joshua, Philadelphia
-Stanhaw, George, St. Giles’ street
-Stonex, W., Hall road, Lakenham
-
-
-_Fellmongers_—
-
-
-Chapman, Matthew, Upper Heigham
-Dye, William, St. Martin’s gates
-Wills, William, Heigham street
-
-
-_Figure and Model Makers_—
-
-
-Bianchi, Giovanni, Bridge street
-
-
-_Firework Makers_—
-
-
-Baxter, Neville P., Brazen Doors rd.
-Coe, George, Bull close
-Wilson, W., Church street, Lakenham
-
-
-_Fish Curers_—
-
-
-Appleton, William, St. Augustine’s
-Townshend, Samuel, Pottergate street
-
-
-_Fishmongers_—
-
-
-Allen, Robert, Newbegin’s yard, St. Mary’s plain
-Andrews, Charles, Crow’s yard, Upper Westwick street
-Appleton, Thomas, St. Augustine’s
-Aston, Isaac, St. James’ street
-Augood, Henry, Rising Sun lane
-Bagshaw, Joseph, St. Stephen’s street
-Brown, Thomas, Fishmarket
-Campling, John, Magdalen street
-Cannon, Goss W. S., Fisher’s lane
-Clayton, George, Fishmarket
-Colman, Charles, Fishmarket
-Dack, Jonathan, Fishgate street
-Davis, James, Fishgate street
-Easton, Isaac, St. James’ street
-George, Robert, St. Benedict’s street
-Grand, John, (salesman) Lady’s lane
-Gurney, Charlotte, Cowgate street
-Hare, William, Fishmarket
-Hurrell, William, Magdalen street
-Jay, Charles, Market-place
-Jay, George, Fishmarket
-Knights, George, Heigham street
-Moy, G., St. Margaret’s Church alley
-Moy, William, Cowgate street
-Palmer, Edmund, King street
-Parker, Thomas, St. Stephen’s
-Phillips, Francis, Finket street
-Pratt, William, Market-place
-Roundtree, Chas., Crow’s yard, Westwick street
-Roundtree, Charles, Barrack street
-Seaman, Samuel, Bull close
-Taney, William, Timberhill street
-Towler, John Burrows, Lady’s lane
-Tuffield, William, Badding lane, St. Martin at Palace
-Waters, John, Ber Street gates
-Weavers, William, Austin’s court, Bethel street
-Worledge, John, Gildengate street
-Wright, John, Oak street
-
-
-_Flour Dealers_—
-
-
-Bollard, William, Suffolk st., Union place
-Cook, Ann, Pitt street
-Freeman, Charles R., Upper market
-Randle, William, Upper market
-Spice, Thomas, Duke street
-Woolnough, M., Ber street
-
-
-_Fly Proprietors_—
-
-
-Brunning, John, St. Catherine’s plain
-Darsley, William, (hackney master) St. Stephen’s street
-Foster, G., Norfolk hotel, St. Giles’
-Kett, James, St. Giles’ street
-Moll, George, St. Giles’ street
-Padgett, John, Rampant Horse street
-Shorten, Jas., Bull inn, Magdalen st.
-Snowling, John, Duke’s Palace street
-Tattam, Richard, Lady’s lane
-Wilson, Alexander, St. Stephen’s square
-
-
-_Fowl Dealers_ (_see also Poulterers_)—
-
-
-Crotch, William, Oak street
-Smith, Samuel, Scoles’ green
-Smith, William, Coburg street
-
-
-_French Polishers_—
-
-
-Alderman, Henry, Ber street
-Bunting, R., Lower Westwick street
-Fenn, James, Ber street
-High, John, St. Benedict’s street
-King, Leonard, Lower King street
-Mingay, F., Chapel st., Crook’s place
-Spalding, James, St. Andrew’s hill
-
-
-_Fringe_, _Lace_, _and Damask Warehouses_—
-
-
-Gooch, Joshua, 3, Dove street
-Stewart, Charles Keith, (manufacturer) St. Giles’ street
-
-
-_Fruiterers_ (_see also Green Grocers_)—
-
-
-Bullard, Robert, Swan lane
-Bullen, W. V., Golden Ball street
-Cohen, Philip, Swan lane
-Cousins, James, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Dady, Daniel, St. Stephen’s street
-Graver, Abraham, Magdalen street
-Middleton, R., Cherry st., Lakenham
-Newton, Alfred, Lower Goat lane
-Newton, William, Swan lane
-Sloper, John, Queen street
-Snelling, J. G., Rampant Horse st.
-
-
-_Furniture Brokers_—
-
-
-Aldhouse, Hannah, St. Augustine’s
-Archer, Henry, Ber street
-Butcher, Simon, St. Augustine’s
-Canham, Sarah, Ber street
-Cooper, William, Baker’s road, St. Augustine’s
-Crickmore, William, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Crowfoot, William, Ber street
-Cubitt, Thomas, Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Durrant, Zachariah, Coslany street
-Hagon, William, Oak street
-Hall, S., Bridge street, St. George’s
-Jarrett, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Kemp, James, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Kerry, George, St. Mary’s
-Larkman, Henry, St. Benedict’s street
-Loose, James, Botolph street
-Martin, Robert, Quay side
-Mayhew, George, Dereham road
-Mingay, Fred., Chapel st., Crook’s pl.
-Moll, Richd., St. John’s Maddermarket
-Partridge, John J. B., Ber street
-Pentin, James, Chapel Field road
-Penton, James, Magdalen street
-Plumstead, Samuel J., Coslany street
-Rudd, Thomas, Ber street
-Scott, Mrs. E., Charing cross
-Scott, George J., Timberhill street
-Scott, W. J., Bridge st., St. George’s
-Seaman, Coriolanus, St. James’ street
-Skoyles, William, St. Benedict’s st.
-Smith, Benjamin, Upper Westwick st.
-Stangroom, Henry, Gildengate street
-Stimpson, James, Orford hill
-Sutton, Robert, Magdalen street
-Thompson, Miss M., Oak street
-Thorpe, Thomas E., Colegate street
-Thurston, William, Oak street
-Townshend, C., St. Martin’s plain
-Turrell, Josiah, Coburg street
-Vincent, H., St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Vincent, H. and Son, Upper Westwick street
-Wade, James, Fishgate street
-White, W., St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Wilsea, John, Bridge st., St. Miles’
-
-
-_Furriers_—
-
-
-Bayes, Wm., Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Claxton, Wm. and Geo., Horn’s lane, King street
-Edwards, Miss Ann, Castle meadow
-Fletcher, Sarah, Finket street
-Fox, J., (manufacturer) 11, The Walk
-Potter, Thomas and Co., 5, The Walk
-Vincent, James, Red Lion street
-
-
-_Game Dealers_, _Poulterers_, _&c._—
-
-
-Bagshaw, George, Coslany street
-Bagshaw, Joseph, St. Stephen’s street
-Barnard, John, Fye bridge
-Colman, Charles, Fishmarket
-Engall, Joseph, St. Augustine’s street
-Smith, S., (poulterer) Scoles’ green
-Stubbs, C., (poulterer) Golden Ball st.
-
-
-_Gardeners_—
-
-
-Ainslie, Charles, (jobbing) Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Allen, Francis, Dereham road
-Bartram, Henry, Cherry street
-Bennett, Jabez, Infirmary road
-Booty, John, St. Stephen’s road
-Chapman, Luke, Dereham road
-Clarke, John, Heigham causeway
-Cork, John, Brunswick road
-Douglass, John, Silver road
-Elmer, John, Lower close
-Farrow, Thomas, Newmarket road
-Ford, John, Pitt street
-Frost, Hezekiah, Lower close
-Fuller, John, Thorpe hamlet
-Graves, John, Dereham road
-Green, John, Asylum lane, Heigham
-Hall, Jonathan, Somerleyton street
-Harper, Henry, Fisher’s lane
-Harris, Thomas, King street
-Hayward, John, Trowse
-Howes, James, Magdalen street
-Jarvis, William, (market) Trowse
-Jay, James, Upper King street
-Jennis, John, Lower Westwick street
-Langley, John, (market) Holl’s lane
-Marsham, J., (market) Upper Heigham
-Moore, R., (market) Bishopgate street
-Newman, Henry, Oak street
-Osborn, William, New Catton
-Parfitt, C., (landscape) Sussex street
-Smith, Edward, Dereham road
-Sparkhall, John, Nelson street
-Sutton, John, Lower King street
-Trollop, George, Southwell road
-Woolbright, Robert, Lower close
-
-
-_Gas Fitters_—
-
-
-Campling, Thomas, Coslany street
-Hall, James, 10, Magdalen street
-Howes, William C., Ber street
-Land, William, St. Peter’s Mancroft
-Leach, George, (and bell hanger) Lower Goat lane
-Pank, A., Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Self, Thomas, Tombland
-Self, Thomas, Pottergate street
-Waite, George, Redwell street
-
-
-_Gig Makers_ (_see also Coach and Gig Builders_)—
-
-
-Dixon, Fuller, John street, Rose lane
-Foulger, Robert, Ber street
-
-
-_Ginger Beer_, _Lemonade_, _Soda Water_, _&c._, _Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Covell, John, Elm hill
-Gower, Thomas, Gun lane
-Hill, Richard, Cow hill
-Hunt, James, 62, St. Stephen’s street
-Key, S., Mansfield’s yd., St. Stephen’s
-Moore, Foster G., Colegate street, St. George’s
-
-
-_Glass Dealers_ (_see China_, _Glass_, _and Earthenware Dealers_)—
-_Glass Stainers_—
-
-
-Cullyer, William F., Ten Bell lane
-King, John and James, Prince’s st.
-
-
-_Glovers_—
-
-
-Amies, Benjamin, St. Catherine’s pln.
-Asker, George Henry, 20, The Walk
-Bird, Henry, Briggs’ street
-Boughen, William, Bank plain
-Boughten, Samuel, Red Lion street
-Comer, James, Magdalen street
-Cubitt, Thomas, Coslany street
-Daines, Mrs. Mary, Church street, St. Julian’s
-Lincoln, Morris, Chapel st., Union pl.
-Mills, C., (maker) Golden Ball street
-Oxley, Richard, 6, London street
-Seager, Elizabeth and Son, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Smith, Mrs. Sarah, Magdalen street
-Stocks, Alfred Joseph, Briggs’ street
-Theobald, T. and Son, London street
-Tomlinson and Co., Castle street
-Youels, William, St. Catherine’s plain
-
-
-_Grainers and Decorative Painters_—
-
-
-King, J. and J., Prince’s street
-Martin, Thomas, Museum court, St. Andrew’s
-Pullen, Mase, and Furse, St. Lawrence lane
-Walker and Bird, Surrey street
-
-
-_Glass_, _Stone_, _and China Mender_—
-
-
-Malbon, Benjamin, St. Faith’s lane
-
-
-_Grease Manufacturer_—
-
-
-Hough, Joseph, Castle meadow
-
-
-_Green Grocers_—
-
-
-Able, William, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Allen, John, Lower Westwick street
-Allmer, George, King street
-Ames, Frances, Dereham road
-Appleton, Christopher, Gildengate st.
-Attle, Hannah, Finket street
-Barnes, Robert, Foundry Bridge
-Batchelder, Thomas, Ber street
-Blyth, James, Julian street
-Blyth, Sarah, Coslany street
-Boughton, Richard, St. Stephen’s st.
-Breeze, Mary, Cross lane, St. George’s
-Brooks, David, Lower Westwick street
-Browes, James, Lower King street
-Brown, James, Colegate street
-Butcher, Simon, St. Augustine’s street
-Butcher, William, Elm hill
-Butter, Caroline, Bull close
-Campling, George, Magdalen street
-Chapman, J., St. Miles’ church alley
-Chapman, John, Union place
-Chesteney, R., Upper St. Giles’ street
-Churchyard, John, Coburg street
-Clark, Ann, Ber street
-Cletheroe, James, Oak street
-Cogman, James, Oak street
-Copley, George, Pottergate street
-Crosskill, R., Bridge st., St. George’s
-Crosskill, William, Oak street
-Dady, Daniel, St. Stephen’s street
-Davidson, William, Cowgate street
-Dawes, Lawrence, William street
-Denny, J., Union street, Crook’s place
-Drake, John, Ber street
-Eagleton, Elizabeth, Pump street
-Ellis, Mary, St. Mary’s
-Ellis, Thos., Cubitt’s court, Bethel street
-Ellis, William, Oak street
-Ellis, William, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Fiddament, James, Ber street
-Fitt, John, Botolph street
-Folkard, George, Oak street
-Francis, Thomas, Timberhill street
-Furze, Robert, Heigham street
-Gardiner, Maria, Upper Westwick st.
-Gay, Samuel, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Gazely, James, Lower Westwick street
-Gowing, Samuel, St. Benedict’s gates
-Green, James, Philadelphia
-Gurney, C., Cherry street, Lakenham
-Hansell, W., Chapel st., Union place
-Harbord, H., St. Stephen’s back street
-Harmer, James, Red Lion street
-Harris, James, Ber street
-Harris, Thomas, King street
-Harrison, Mrs. M. A., Queen street
-Hayhoo, Thomas, St. Augustine’s st.
-Holman, George, King street
-Holmes, George, St. Augustine’s
-Houghton, Thomas, Barrack street
-Howard, George, Little Orford street
-Howes, William, Cowgate street
-Jackson, Hannah, Pump street
-Jermy, J., Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Kemp, James, St. Lawrence lane
-Lamb, Andrew, Heigham street
-Larkman, Wm., St. Augustine’s gates
-Leamon, George, Bull close
-Linstead, Charles, Lower King street
-Lockwood, L., St. Miles’ Church alley
-Lovick, Mary Ann, Ber street
-Marshall, Robert, Lower Westwick street
-Mason, Peter, Infirmary road
-Miller, William, Heigham street
-Moon, Robert, New Catton
-Moore, Abraham, Barrack street
-Moore, James, City road, Heigham
-Morse, Joshua, Prince’s street
-Nobbs, Robert, Heigham street
-Osborn, William, New Catton
-Parr, James, King street
-Perfect, Joseph, Lower Westwick str.
-Pitcher, Thomas, Rose lane
-Powell, Edward, Chapel Field road
-Pond, Margaret, Ber street
-Raby, William, Fishgate street
-Raven, Robert, Tinkler’s lane
-Robinson, Thomas, St. Benedict’s st.
-Rope, William, Rising Sun lane
-Salmons, John, Lower King street
-Savary, David, Rupert street
-Slipper, E., Grove pl., New Lakenham
-Spooner, Maria, Ber street
-Staff, Charles, Ber street
-Stalweather, Frederick, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Steward, Mary, St. Benedict’s street
-Stygals, William, Ber street
-Swash, Robert, St. Mary’s plain
-Taylor, George, Rupert street
-Taylor, George, Rose lane
-Thompson, John, King street, Crook’s place
-Thorn, William, Magdalen street
-Thurtell, Henry, King street
-Tinkler, George, Magdalen street
-Tiptod, Benjamin, Coburg street
-Trollop, George, Southwell street
-Trory, William, Bethel street
-Turner, Thomas, Ber street
-Turner, William, St. James’ street
-Valentine, Elizabeth, St. Swithin’s
-Walker, John, Ber street
-Ward, Elizabeth, St. Benedict’s street
-Watching, Thomas, Heigham street
-White, Richard, Palace street
-Willement, George, Coburg street
-Williams, Thomas, Crook’s place
-Woods, William, Union place
-Woollinger, John, St. Augustine’s str.
-Wright, George, Upper Westwick str.
-
-
-_Grocers and Tea Dealers_—
-
-
-Aldous, J., Trafalgar st., Lakenham
-Aldrich, John, West Pottergate street
-Aldridge, Mrs. Susanna, Church walk, Lakenham
-Avey, Thomas, Ber street
-Back and Co., 3 and 4, Haymarket
-Baker, Charles, Redwell street
-Banham, Francis, Old Haymarket
-Barnard, Alfred, King street
-Barrow, Henry, White Lion street
-Bateman, Benjamin, Magdalen street
-Bateman and Co., (tea and coffee dealers) London st. and Swan lane
-Bealby, Robert, William street
-Beecheno, Frederick, London street
-Belding, William, (and wholesale) 1, Magdalen street
-Belding, William, New Catton
-Bell, Matthew, (Lock and Key) Ber st.
-Bennett, Mrs. Emily, Ber street
-Bennett, James, (and importer of leeches) Tombland
-Bensley, William, Union place
-Betts, Henry, Southwell street
-Bexfield, James, Rising Sun lane, Golden Ball street
-Bexfield, R., Trory st., Unthank’s road
-Blyth, John, St. Martin’s gates
-Boardman, James T., (wholesale) Cundall’s court, Gentleman’s walk
-Bream, Charles John, (wholesale) Upper market
-Brook, Thomas Verlander, (tea and coffee) Bethel street
-Brown, Henry, 14, The Walk
-Brown, John, Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Brown, Hall, Ber street
-Browne, Samuel, Palace plain
-Brussey, Benjamin, St. Augustine’s st.
-Bugden, Thomas and Edward, (wholesale) St. Mary’s plain
-Bungay, Elizabeth and Ann, Trowse
-Butcher, Robert, and Nephew (wholesale) Bank plain and Queen street
-Cannell, Hannah, Unthank’s road
-Cannell, James, Upper Westwick st.
-Capes, George, (tea only) Nelson street, Heigham
-Caston, John, St. Benedict’s gates
-Chamberlin, James, Post Office street
-Chapman, Thomas, (tea) 4, Keyzor’s terrace, Unthank’s road
-Clark, Maria, Lower Westwick street
-Coman, H. & Co., St. Benedict’s street
-Cooper, Thomas, St. Augustine’s
-Copeman and Sons, 12, The Walk (and wholesale)
-Dakin & Co. (tea & coffee) Davey place
-Dawson, George, Vauxhall street
-Dawson, Samuel, Oak street
-Ducker, J. F., Lower Westwick street
-Dunham, John, Trory st., Lakenham
-Durrant, Elizabeth, Mariners’ lane
-Durrant, Henry, Ber street (_see advertisement_, _page_ 10)
-Durrant, Robt., Church st., St. Miles’
-Dye, L., St. Augustine’s church alley
-Dye, M., (tea dealer) Little London st.
-Ely, Hannah, Pitt street
-Felstead, Jas., Regent st., Union place
-Fenn, Robert, Magdalen street
-Fisher, James C., 62, St. Stephen’s st.
-Fisher, Robt., Bridge st., St. George’s
-Fisher, Robert, St. Martin’s gates
-Fitch, Charles, Coslany street
-Forster, Samuel, Pockthorpe
-Forster, T., Queen st., Crook’s place
-Foster, Joseph, (tea) Sussex street
-Freeman and Nash, (wholesale) Upper market
-Garnham, W., Hall road, Lakenham
-Gill, James, Lower Westwick street
-Girling, S., Lower Westwick street
-Goggs, William, St. Giles’ gates
-Golder, Edward, Oak street
-Goldsmith, Charles, Surrey street
-Goldsmith, Jas., 34, St. Stephen’s st.
-Grimes, Ruth, Botolph street
-Haddon, Mrs. Mary Ann, Rose lane
-Haines, Brothers, 58, St. Stephen’s (_see advertisement_, _page_ 18)
-Hall, James, Somerleyton street
-Hannah, Peter (tea dealer) 33, Pottergate street
-Hannant, Richard, King street
-Harden, Charles, Heigham street
-Hardy, James, Rampant Horse street
-Harrison, J., Globe st., Union place
-Hart, William, St. Benedict’s street
-Harvey, Samuel, Fishgate street
-Harwin, James, (tea) 3, Charles street, Heigham
-Herring, Edward, Lower King street
-Hewett, Alfred, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-High, George, New Catton
-Hill, John, Vauxhall street
-Hill, John, Cowgate street
-Hill, John, St. Augustine’s
-Hodds, Catherine, Ber street
-Holmes, James, King street
-Hook, Joseph J., Brazen Doors road
-Howard, Robert, New Catton
-Howes, Ann, and Son, St. Giles’ hill
-Howlett, Eliza, Lower Westwick str.
-Howlett, Thomas, Lower Westwick st.
-Hunt, John, Quay side
-Hutton, John, (tea) Old Haymarket
-Jarvis, Joseph, Fishgate street
-Jeckell, George, Ber street gates
-Jeffries, Robert, King street
-Kedge, Thomas, Ber street
-Kemp, Mary, (tea) Golden Dog lane
-Kerrison, James, Timberhill street
-King, Russell, Ber street
-Ladyman, Joseph Harrison, (tea) Market-place
-Lake, William, St. Stephen’s
-Lambert, Fras., (tea) Lower Goat lane
-Lammas, Brothers, (tea) Market-place
-Le Strange, Thomas, Pump street
-Linstead, Robert, Duke street
-Lock, Henry, St. Augustine’s (_see Advertisement_, _page_ 18)
-Lovett, James, King st., Crook’s place
-Lowe, Joseph, Gildengate street
-Mackley, Maria, Pottergate street
-Manser, William, Thorn lane
-Mayhew, George, Dereham road
-Mayston, Edward, (tea) Distillery st.
-Meadows, Jonathan, Coslany street
-Mc’Michael, Jas., (tea) Valentine st.
-Middleton, Matthew, (tea) Oak street
-Miles, Susan, Oak street
-Minns, Isaac, King street
-Money, James, Bethel street
-Morris, William, Bishopgate street
-Muskett, James, (tea) Charles street, Heigham
-Neale, Jas. F., St. Andrew’s hall plain
-Neve, Mary Ann, St. Martin’s gates
-Newman, Henry, Oak street
-Newson and Co., Stump cross
-Nightingale, R. W., St. Stephen’s str.
-Nightingale, W. R., (tea-dealer) St. Augustine’s
-Norton, Robert, Fye bridge
-Nunn, Jonathan, Heigham street
-Parker, Frederick, King street
-Parker, William, (tea and coffee) Valentine street, Dereham road
-Peacock, James, Pottergate street
-Pratt, William, Wensum street
-Proudfoot, Elizabeth and Ann, Trowse
-Pulham, William, St. Mary’s plain
-Pulham, William, Oak street
-Pye, Wm. M., St. Augustine’s street
-Read, Charles T., Unthank’s road
-Read, William Dring, Orford hill
-Reid, John C., (tea) Douro terrace, St. Giles’ road (travelling)
-Riches, E., Church street, St. Julian’s
-Rix, Charles Edward, Dereham road
-Rouse, Harriet, St. Stephen’s street
-Rout, George, Cowgate street
-Rudd, James, St. Catherine’s plain
-Rudd, Robt., Coslany street, St. Miles’
-Rumbold, J., Howard st., Lakenham
-Rump, Thomas, Golden Ball street
-Sadd, David, Gloucester place, St. Catherine’s plain
-Scott, John, Ber street gates
-Scott, William, Magdalen gates
-Scrutton, Henry, Bethel street
-Seaman, Richard, Gildengate street
-Selby, Charles James, Pitt street
-Self, Thomas, Oak street
-Seppings, W., West End st., Heigham
-Sexton, John, Scoles’ green
-Shalders, Edward, St. Benedict’s street
-Shreeve, George, Tinkler’s lane
-Sidney and Ladyman, (tea, wholesale) The Walk; and Ludgate hill, London
-Simpson, Robert, Magdalen street
-Smith, Henry, King st., Crook’s place
-Smith, John, (tea) Timberhill street
-Snelling, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Spencer, I., St. Mary’s Church alley
-Springhall, Benjamin, New Catton
-Springall, James, (and wholesale) Tombland
-Stafford, T., Chapel st., Crook’s place
-Stangroom, Robert, Fishgate street
-Stonex, James, Tinkler’s lane
-Storey, William, Bull close
-Sussams, William S., Heigham street
-Taylor, W. H. and Co., (and wholesale) Haymarket
-Taylor, W. J., Mill lane, New Catton
-Temple, Robert, Ber street
-Thompson, James, Cross lane, St. George’s
-Thompson, Joseph, St. Stephen’s st.
-Thouless, J., Lothian st., Heigham
-Thurlow, William, Philadelphia
-Tidd, Robert, Oak street
-Tills, Benjamin, Magdalen street
-Towler, Edward W. R., Magdalen st.
-Turner, Sarah, John street, Heigham
-Turrell, James, Ber street
-Tuttle, John, Mill street, Lakenham
-Vassar, J., West End st., Heigham
-Walters, William, Ber street
-Warner, Walter Waite, (tea) All Saints’ green
-Watson, James, (tea) Calvert street
-Watts and Graham, (tea) Dereham road (travelling)
-Websdale, James, Lower King street
-Weeds, Mary Ann, Bishopgate street
-Whall, R., King st., Crook’s place
-Whitrick, J., West Pottergate street
-Whitaker, William, Lower King st.
-Wicks, Robert, Ber street
-Wild, Edward, 11, Old Haymarket
-Williams, Josiah, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Williams, J., Globe st., Union place
-Williams, John H., Duke street
-Wilson, Mrs. M., Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Wisker, Robert N., Tinkler’s lane
-Wolton, Durrant, and Co., 47, London street
-Young, Thomas, Magdalen street
-
-
-_Gun Flint Cutter_—
-
-
-Sires, James, Alma terrace, St. Augustine’s road
-
-
-_Gun and Pistol Makers_—
-
-
-Cartwright, H., Rampant Horse str.
-Jeffries, George, Golden Ball street
-Marrison, Robert, Great Orford street
-Marrison, S. Ray, Great Orford street
-Whall, Ann, Little London street
-
-
-_Gutta Percha Depots_—
-
-
-Shalders, John, Bank plain
-Snelling, William, Orford hill
-Thompson, John, St. Peter’s steps, Market-place
-
-
-_Haberdashers_—
-
-
-Brown, M., Bridge street, St. George’s
-Cartwright, Mrs., Magdalen road
-Fairweather, Mrs. Lydia, London str.
-Fickling, Harriet, St. Catherine’s pln.
-Henney, Charity, Eagle terrace, Newmarket road
-Lovick and Johnson, London street
-Moore and Co., 81, St. Giles’
-Rump, John, 8, Old Haymarket
-Smith, William, 11, Lower Goat lane
-Spauls, M. A., 7, Briggs’ street
-Towler, Miss Hannah, Fye bridge
-Waller, Elizabeth, Calvert street
-Warman, Zachariah W., Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-
-
-_Hairdressers_—
-
-
-Allen, William, Magdalen street
-Amies, Benjamin, St. Catherine’s pln.
-Bailey, S. John, West Pottergate str.
-Bayes, Wm., Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Betts, T., Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Bilby, William, Pitt street
-Boughton, Samuel, Red Lion street
-Bullen, William Vincent, Golden Ball street (_see Advertisement_)
-Buttifant, Davis, Golden Ball street
-Castle, W., Upper market
-Crask, Henry, Coburg street
-Crotch, Matthew, St. James’ street
-Dew, Edmund B., Upper market
-Dunn, Samuel, Magdalen street
-Edwards, Edward, M., 40, London st.
-Fairman, William, Barrack street
-Ferra, John, King street
-Gaze, Samuel, Lower Westwick street
-Gedge, Wm., Upper Westwick street
-Gerard, William S., Botolph street
-Girdlestone, R., 8, Upper St. Giles
-Gray, James, Rose lane
-Hallows, Joseph, Royal Hotel street
-Harmer, Elizabeth, Ber street
-Harpley, Thomas, Cowgate street
-Hartley, William, Little Orford street
-Hill, Robert, Red Lion street
-Hinds, Robert, St. Benedict’s street
-Holmes, Robert, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-Kemp, George Pank, Exchange street
-Lanham and Sword, 4, St. Giles’
-Lincoln, M., Chapel st., Union place
-Lofty, James, Colegate street
-Marsh, Edward, Lower King street
-Mason, Henry, Ber street
-Moore, Isaac, West Pottergate street
-Moore, James, Ber street
-Moore, William, Ber street
-Nobbs, James, Oak street
-Nunn, John, St. Augustine’s
-Parnell, William, Oak street
-Plumstead, Frederick, Magdalen str.
-Plumstead, Robert, Wensum street
-Powell, John, St. Benedict’s street
-Quinton, Benjamin, Thorn lane
-Rainbird, Jonathan, Market-place
-Randall, Thomas, Union place
-Ray, J. A., Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-Riches, Edward, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Riches, H., Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Riches, Robert, Timberhill street
-Seager, Elizabeth and Son, St. John’s
-Seager, Robert, Castle meadow
-Stigles, Daniel, Fishgate street
-Swash, Sarah Ann, St. James’ street
-Thorpe, Thomas, Coslany street
-Thorpe, William, St. Stephen’s street
-Tyzack, William, V., 13, London str.
-Wade, Robert, Bank street
-Ward, Charles P., White Lion street
-Ward, Isaac, West Pottergate street
-Webster, John, Ber street
-Whall, Wm., Mill lane, New Catton
-Wilding, Henry, 42, London street
-Woodward, Henry, Lower King street
-
-
-_Harness Makers_ (_see Saddlers and Harness Makers_)—
-_Hatters_—
-
-
-Allured, James, Timberhill street
-Beatley and Son, London street
-Brown and Barker, London street
-Everett, William W., Red Lion st.
-Jennings, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Livock, William Thomas, London st.
-Markham, John, West Pottergate st.
-Norton, Francis J., Back of the Inns
-Potter, Thomas and Co., 5, The Walk
-Sommerville, J. J. and R., Magdalen street
-Todd, John and Son, Queen street
-Todd, William A., 10, London street
-Tomlinson and Co., Castle street
-Vincent, James, Red Lion street
-Womack, George, White Lion street and Davey place
-
-
-_Havel Makers_—
-
-
-Barstead, Ann and Esther, Alms’ lane, Gildengate street
-Hart, Robert, Golden Dog lane
-
-
-_Herbalists_ (_see Medical Botanists_)—
-_Hoop Maker_—
-
-
-Shields, D., Prospect square, Scoles’ green
-
-
-_Horse Breakers_—
-
-
-Abel, John, Chapel Field road
-Andrews, William, Westlegate street
-Feek, William, West Pottergate street
-Lemon, William, St. Stephen’s square
-Pratt, Richard Jeremiah, Northumberland street, Heigham
-
-
-_Horse Dealers_—
-
-
-Abel, John, Chapel Field road
-Andrews, William, Westlegate street
-Feek, William, West Pottergate street
-Robinson, James, Victoria street
-Seaman, David, Chapel Field road
-
-
-_Horse and Gig Letters_—
-
-
-Beddingfield, Nelson, Westlegate str.
-Howman, Wm., White Lion, Oak street
-Kett, James, St. Giles’ street
-Padget, John, Rampant Horse street
-Spinks, James, Surrey street
-
-
-_Horse-hair Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Burrell, John, Gildengate street
-Finch, William, (and crinoline) Prince Regent, Weaver’s lane
-Gunton, Thomas, Oak street
-Kemp, James, Bridge street, St. Giles’
-Sadler, James, sen., Oak street
-Sadler, James, jun., Oak street
-Tolladay, Joseph, Lower Westwick street
-
-
-_Hosiers_—
-
-
-Asker, George Henry, 20, The Walk
-Austrin, Mrs. Ann, 5, Orford hill
-Bird, Henry, Briggs’ street
-Boughen, William, Bank plain
-Fairweather, Mrs. Lydia, London str.
-Kent, Henry, 3, London street
-Lane, Joseph, All Saints’ green
-Littell, Charles, White Lion street
-Markham, John, West Pottergate st.
-Oxley, Richard, 6, London street
-Page, Joseph, 13, Briggs’ street
-Piggott, John H., St. Stephen’s street
-Rump, John, 8, Old Haymarket
-Rust, Mrs. H., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Smith, George, Ber street
-Starling, Charles G., White Lion street
-Stocks, Alfred Joseph, Briggs’ street
-Theobald, T., and Son, London street
-Tomlinson and Co., Castle street
-
-
-_Hotels_ (_see Publicans_)—
-_Hotpressers_—
-
-
-Barker, T., Rosemary lane, Distillery street
-Bayfield, William H., Gildengate str.
-Blake and Everett, Gildengate street
-Gedge, George, Coslany street
-Howes, James, St. Miles’
-Howes, T., Church street, St. Miles’
-Metcalf, Francis, Colegate street
-Stark and Co., Duke’s palace
-
-
-_Iron and Brass Founders_—
-
-
-Barnard, Bishop, and Barnards, Market place and St. Miles’
-Barnard and Boulton, London street and Castle street
-Barnes, John, Hank’s yd., St. Miles’
-Blyth, R. and F., Ber street
-Campling, James, Golden Ball street
-Hewitt, George, Orford hill
-Howard, Riches, and Watts, Duke’s Palace Iron Works
-Murrell, W. and Co., Crook’s place
-Smithdale, Thomas, King street (_see Advertisement_, _page_ 9)
-Sparke and Co., Thorn lane and Castle hill (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 36,
-37, 38)
-Thompson, Robert, jun., Phœnix Iron Works, St. Clement’s
-Turner, James Mangles, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Wright, Jacob, St. Mary’s foundry, Muspole street
-
-
-_Ironmongers_—
-
-
-Barnard, Bishop, and Barnards, (manufacturing and general) St. Miles’ and
-Market place
-Barnard and Boulton, (manufacturing and general) London street and Castle
-street
-Bayfield, Ann and Sons, 34, Magdalen street
-Browne, J. and Sons, 4, Upper market
-Buttifant, Henry, Grapes’ hill
-Buttifant, Henry and Josiah, William street, Heigham
-Colman and Glendenning, Rampant Horse street
-Cubitt, Samuel Durrant, (wholesale) Mitchell’s court, Market place
-Flatt, John, Magdalen street
-Flatt, William, 52, St. Stephen’s st.
-Havers, Charles, Charing cross
-Hornor, Robert T., Post Office street
-Howlett and Co., 6, Old Haymarket
-Kiddell, Joshua, Timberhill street
-Parlour, Henry E., 15, London street
-Pigg, Edmund, (furnishing and general) St. Stephen’s
-Pinson, Henry, Bank plain
-Piper and Pigg, 5, London street
-Stevens, Gardner C., Orford hill
-Thompson, Robert, Castle street and Colegate street (and wholesale)
-Thorns, Robert and Co., Exchange street (and wholesale)
-White, Frederick, St. Faith’s lane
-
-
-_Italian Warehousemen_ (_see also Grocers_)—
-
-
-Back and Co., 3 and 4, Haymarket
-Belding, W., Magdalen street
-Butcher, R. and Nephew, Bank plain
-Copeman and Sons, The Walk
-Hardy, James, Rampant Horse street
-Lake, W., Surrey corner, St. Stephen’s
-Newson and Co., Stump cross
-Wolton, Durrant and Co., London st.
-
-
-_Ivory Turner_—
-
-
-Hines, Charles, Muspole street
-
-
-_Jewellers_ (_see Silversmiths and Jewellers_)—
-_Jewellers_ (_working_)—
-
-
-Davis, Mark, Ber street
-Hayward, J. J., Little Loudon street
-James, B., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Smith, Samuel H., Back of the Inns
-
-
-_Land Surveyors_ (_see Surveyors_)—
-_Last and Boot-tree Makers_—
-
-
-Alden, James, Ber street
-Barnard, John, Coslany street
-Barnard, Stephen, (and patten maker) Oak street
-Curtis, John, Fishgate street
-Fisher, George, Union place
-Good, T., Bridge street, St. George’s (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 13)
-Joyce, James, Ber street
-Palmer, William, Timberhill street
-
-
-_Lath Benders_—
-
-
-Beaney, John, Dial yard, Coslany str.
-
-
-_Law Stationer_—
-
-
-Stevens, John Thos., Castle meadow
-
-
-_Leather Merchants and Cutters_ (_see also Curriers_)—
-
-
-Armes, Robert, Dove street
-Beare, Samuel Shalders, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Blackburn, J. B., St. Stephen’s plain
-Bostock, Edwin and Thomas, Swan lane and Pottergate street
-Brooks, Cooper, St. Stephen’s plain
-Cooke, E., St. John’s Maddermarket
-Curtis, Wm., Upper Westwick street
-Foulsham, Henry, Magdalen street
-Gibson, Robert, St. Stephen’s street
-Gooch, Samuel Irwin, 9, Davey place
-Hotblack, John and Co., Orford hill
-Howell, William, Lower Goat lane
-Leamon, Robert, (and tanner) Upper market, and Whitwell
-Marston, A. A., Timberhill street
-Martin, Benjamin A., St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Martin, G. and R., St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Page, George and Son, Magdalen str.
-Phillips, William, All Saints’ street
-Sayer, William, Upper Westwick str.
-Sidney and Armes, Dove street
-Tillyard and Howlett, St. George’s plain
-Ulph, Thomas, 1, Dove street
-Winter, Charles, Upper market
-Wood, George James, Sussex street
-Woods, George John, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-
-
-_Letter Founder_—
-
-
-Cohen, Mrs., Scole’s green
-
-
-_Lime Burners_—
-
-
-Cattermoul, John O., Pitt street
-Ewing, John W., Exchange street and Eaton
-Pearce, Philip, The Compasses, Upper King street
-Pennick, Robert, Silver road
-Poll, Robert, Dereham road
-Underwood and Gaze, Chalk hill, Thorpe
-Varvil, James, Trowse Newton
-
-
-_Linen Drapers_ (_see Drapers_)
-_Lithographers_—
-
-
-Browne, William and Co., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Dallinger and Son, 12, Davey place
-Emslie, James and Son, Back of the Inns (_see Advertisement_)
-Hall, William, White Lion street
-Loades, Benjamin, 55, Pottergate st.
-
-
-_Livery Stable Keepers_—
-
-
-Beddingfield, Nelson, Westlegate st.
-Cook, Ann, Pitt street
-Mayhew, J., Hales’ court, Chapel field
-Platten, Mrs. Mary, Upper Surrey st.
-Spinks, James, Surrey street
-Sword, John, Rose lane
-
-
-_Locksmiths_ (_see Whitesmiths_, _&c._)—
-_Lodging House Keepers_—
-
-
-Aldridge, Mrs. Susan, 4, Grapes hill
-Allcock, Trivett, Tombland
-Arnott, Robert, Distillery street
-Bensley, John, Mousehold
-Berwick, Mary, Mount Pleasant
-Brown, Henry, William street
-Brown, Wm., John street, Rose lane
-Brown, Mrs., Bloomsbury place, Rose lane
-Cannell, Elizabeth, Unthank’s road
-Cattermoul, Mrs. E., St. Benedict’s pl.
-Cawdron, Henry, Bethel street
-Chaplin, George, Lower close
-Chettleburgh, Henry, 55, St. Giles’ st.
-Church, Mrs. M., Theatre street
-Cobin, William, Pottergate street
-Cook, Ann, St. Faith’s lane
-Cooper, Mrs. Sarah, Lower close
-Culyer, Mrs. Ann, Grapes hill
-Curtis, Sarah, White Friars’ street
-Ellis, Mrs. Priscilla, 15 and 16, Chapel Field
-Goulty, Charles, 3, Vauxhall terrace, Julian place
-Hardy, Mrs. Ann, 8, St. Stephen’s sq.
-Hicks, Ann, Pitt street
-Hopkins, Stephen, Lower close
-Hopson, Mrs. C., 14, Castle meadow
-Horner, Mrs., St. Mary’s alley
-Housego, Jemima, Rose lane
-Howard, A., Grove place, Lakenham
-Howes, J., Bridge street, St. George’s
-James, Grace, Rose lane
-Ladell, Sarah, Magdalen street
-Leman, Mrs. Emily, Bethel street
-Lusher, Mrs. D., 36, Victoria street
-Middleton, Thos., St. Stephen’s gates
-Morrish, Emily, Windsor terrace, Grove road
-Paine, Mrs. Mary, Elm hill
-Paston, Charles, Ber street
-Powley, William, Theatre street
-Rackham, Mrs. H., Mount Pleasant
-Reynoldson, Mrs. M. L., St. Lawrence lane
-Riches, Mrs. Ann, Brunswick road
-Sainty, Mary, Bethel street
-Sapey, J., St. Stephen’s Church lane
-Saul, Sarah Ann, Surrey road
-Seeley, E. and H., St. Stephen’s plain
-Sharp, Mrs. L., Chapel Field road
-Sparkhall, Emily, Jay’s terrace, Rose lane
-Stebbings, Mrs. Sarah, Rose lane
-Studwell, Mrs. S., St. Benedict’s road
-Tann, Mary A., Hall road, Lakenham
-Tomlinson, Hannah, Bank plain
-Tuck, James Stannard, Surrey street
-Weavers, Elizabeth, 1, Pottergate str.
-Whaites, Mrs. H., Surrey street
-Wigg, Sarah, Jay’s terrace, Rose lane
-Wittrick, Henry, Priest’s buildings, St. Stephen’s road
-
-
-_Lucifer Match Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Lincoln, John, Pump street
-Mace, Gilbert, Barrack street
-Pearce, Thorne, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Staff, John, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Dunn, William, Silver road
-
-
-_Maltsters_ (_see also Brewers_)—
-
-
-Arnold, G. and A. R., St. Margaret’s
-Browne, F., King street
-Bullard, R., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Clarke, Charles, Coslany street
-Cozens, J. and Son, Upper Westwick street
-Mealing and Mills, Lower King st.
-Morgan, J. B. and H., King street
-Read, Thomas W. and Co., Trowse mills, and Cannon wharf, King street
-Redgrave, J., St. Miles’ Church street
-Sexton, E., Whalebone inn, New Catton
-Steward, Patteson, Finch and Co., Pockthorpe
-Weston, C., St. George’s Bridge st.
-Youngs, Crawshay, and Youngs, King street
-
-
-_Masons_ (_see Stone and Marble Masons_)—
-_Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Allen, George, St. Stephen’s factory
-Barber, John Lee and Co., (cotton) St. Martin’s lane
-Berry, Richard, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Blakely, William, Pitt street
-Bolingbroke, Charles and Frederick, St. Clement’s Church alley
-Caley, Nathaniel Henry, London st.
-Clabburn, Sons, and Crisp, Pitt street
-Clarke, John, Calvert street
-Colman, J. and J., (mustard, starch, and blue) Stoke mills and Carrow
-works
-Copestake, Moore, Crompton and Co., (lace and muslin); manager, Mr.
-William Gibson, The Chantry
-Creasby, Edmund, (hosiery, elastic web and belt) Colegate street
-Crisp, Thomas Dawson, Pitt street
-Cubitt, Stannard, St. George’s plain
-Cundall, Benjamin and Son, (shawl) The Walk
-Day, Thomas S., (silk) Sussex street
-Geary, William, Gildengate street
-Grout and Co., (silk and mourning crape) Lower Westwick street
-Hinde, E. and F., Botolph street
-Jay, George, (mohair) King street
-Kemp, James, (crinoline) Bridge st., St. Miles’
-Mallett, C., (silk) Fishgate street
-Mallett, Joseph H., (mohair) Lower King street
-Middleton and Answorth, Calvert st.
-Miles, Stephen, St. Augustine’s street
-Perowne, James J., 1, William street
-Skelton, John, Fishgate street
-Stannard, Cubitt, St. George’s plain
-Sultzer, J. and Co., St. Augustine’s st.
-Thurgar and Co., (mustard and condensed egg) King street
-Towler, Rowling, and Allen, Elm hill
-Widdows, Francis, Cowgate street
-Willement, Richard, Calvert street
-Willett, Nephew and Co., Pottergate street
-Williams, Case, and Potter, Calvert street
-Wright, John and Son, Elm hill
-
-
-_Manure Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Bagshaw George, Coslany street
-Parker, Thomas, St. Stephen’s
-Pointer, William, Mousehold
-Powell, William, Oak street
-Reynolds, E., Pockthorpe hamlet
-Stark and Co., Duke’s palace (works at Rockland St. Mary)
-
-
-_Marine Store Dealers_—
-
-
-Bridges, William, Coslany street
-Brooks, John, Golden Ball street
-Cullingford, F., St. Benedict’s street
-Cullingford, Thomas, Botolph street
-Cullingford, William, Ber street
-Gardiner, William, St. Paul’s street
-Ineson, Joseph, Elm hill
-Pearson, William, Grapes hill
-Plunkett, David, St. Martin’s walls
-Wenn, William, Cowgate street
-
-
-_Mattress Makers_—
-
-
-Conyers, M., St. Benedict’s churchyard
-Tolladay, J., Lower Westwick street
-
-
-_Medical Botanists_—
-
-
-Brightwell, Thomas, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Johnson, Samuel, Vauxhall street
-Matthews and Son, Dereham road
-Roberts, Henry, Rising Sun road
-Stigles, Daniel, Fishgate street
-
-
-_Merchants_—
-
-
-Barber and Son, (corn) Old Haymarket
-Barber, Alfred Wilsea, and Co., (general) Duke’s palace
-Barnard, John, (corn and hay) Golden Ball street
-Bateman, J. and Son, (wool, silk, yarn, and cotton) Gildengate street
-Batson, Edward, (corn) Magdalen st.
-Bircham and Pyle, (corn) Wensum st.
-Boardman and Sursham, (hop, corn, and coal) Wensum street
-Brown, Frederick, (corn) Lower King street
-Brown, George, King street
-Bullard, Richard, (corn and coal) Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Barcham, Samuel, (corn and coal) Oak street
-Clabburn & Sparks, (corn) Magdalen street
-Clarke and Reeve, Duke’s palace wharf
-Claxton, William and George, (skin) Horn’s lane, King street
-Cook, Edward, (corn) Infirmary road
-Cozens, James and Son, (corn and coal) Upper Westwick street
-Crisp, John, (corn) Cinder Ovens yard, King street
-Culley and Hart, (general) Duke’s palace
-Davey, Thos., and Son, (silk) Pitt st.
-Dawbarn, James, (coal and salt) Castle meadow
-Dowson, Benjamin Utting, (corn and coal) Duke’s palace
-Dunmore, Robert, (corn and seed) St. Benedict’s street
-Dunmore, Thomas, (corn) Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Eastern Counties’ Company., (coal) London street
-Everett, Thomas, Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Girling, William, (corn, hay, and straw) Golden Ball street
-Gorell, Robert Atkinson, (cotton and silk) Muspole street
-Hart, John, (corn and timber) St. Giles’ street
-Hawkes, Robert, (wool) Willow lane
-Hazlewood, C. J., (corn) Weaver’s lane
-Hill, E. R., (corn) 2, Exchange street
-Jecks, William and Charles, (timber) St. Faith’s lane
-Kerry, Henry Watson, (coal) Hall road, Lakenham
-Ketton, James, (oil cake) Rose lane
-Kitton, George, St. Faith’s lane
-Lamb, Benjamin Charles, (coal) Magdalen street
-Larkman, William Augustus, (corn) Lower King street
-Legood, Samuel, (hay) Prospect square
-Leney, Samuel, Thorpe hamlet
-Leveux and Co., (wine and spirit) agent, W. E. Filbey, Stamp Office yard
-Lord, John, (wool and yarn) Duke street
-Manser, William, (timber) Thorn lane
-Mealing and Mills, (coal) Lower King street
-Merry, Robert, (coal) Victoria Railway station
-Mills, James, (coal) Castle meadow
-Mollett, Rizen, (coal) Magdalen street
-Morris, John, (slate) Lower King str.
-Osborn, Charles, (corn) Ber street
-Orfeur, John, (timber), Fishgate street
-Pepworth, J., (coal) Victoria station
-Phillips, Robert, White Lion street
-Pigg, Frederick, (mahogany and deal) St. George’s Bridge wharf
-Pope, Robert, W. St. Benedict’s street
-Porter, Robert, (coal) 2, West-end terrace, Grapes hill
-Pymar, John, (wool and silk) Castle meadow
-Read, Gurney, (coal) Badding lane, Quay side
-Read, Thomas W. and Co., (corn and coal) Trowse mills and Cannon wharf,
-King street
-Read, William, (coal) Elm hill
-Redgrave, Joseph, (corn) St. Miles’ Church street
-Reynolds, E. and Co., (oil) King str.
-Roe, John C., St. George’s plain
-Saul, Wm. S., (timber) Pottergate str.
-Scales, Jeremiah, (timber) Chapel Field road and Oxford street
-Sheppard, Robert, (hop and seed) Weston’s court, Upper market
-Springfield, Son, and Nephew, (silk) St. Martin’s lane
-Stark, Wm. and Co., Duke’s Palace bridge
-Steward, Robert and Co., (timber) King street
-Towell, Wm., (seed) Upper King str.
-Watling, Robert, (corn) Cinder Ovens yard, King street
-Williamson, Henry, (corn, flour, and seed) St. Stephen’s street
-Wolton, Durrant, and Co., (hops) London street
-
-
-_Midwives_—
-
-
-Cox, Sarah, Oak street
-Dowde, Mary Eve, St. Margaret’s Church alley
-Elvin, Mary, Ber street
-Fuller, Maria, Ber street
-Martins, Sarah, St. Martin’s lane
-Whitehead, Mary, Sussex street
-
-
-_Millers_ (_see Corn Millers_)—
-_Milliners_, _Dressmakers_, _&c._—
-
-
-Ames, Mrs. Edward, Distillery street
-Andrews, Mrs. E., West Pottergate st.
-Angell, Susannah, Calvert street
-Balls, Hannah, Pitt street
-Belden, Miss S., Ber street
-Bloomfield, Amelia, Botolph street
-Blythe, Louisa, St. Augustine’s
-Botton, Ann Elizabeth, New Catton
-Boyce, Harriet, Redwell street
-Bradfield, Mrs. R., West Pottergate st.
-Breeze, Miss H. S., Rupert street
-Brett, Sophia, Union place
-Browes, Miss Pamela, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Brown, Miss Ann, Mariners’ lane
-Brown, Miss A. M., Muspole street
-Brown, Eliza, Norfolk street
-Brown, Maria, Bridge st., St. George’s
-Brundall, Mrs. M. A., Upper King st.
-Bugg, Mrs. H., St. Augustine’s street
-Bulgin, H., (wholesale mourning milliner) Freeman’s villas, Unthank’s rd.
-Burton, Emma, Trafalgar street
-Chambers, Sarah, Ber street gates
-Chandler, Miss H., St. Stephen’s road
-Clark, Mrs. S., Vauxhall street
-Clarke, Eliza, King street
-Clarke, Eliza M. and C., 37, Pottergate street
-Clarke, Mary Ann, Upper King street
-Claxton, Louisa, Fishgate street
-Coble, The Misses, Elm hill
-Cogman, Mrs. Emma, Prince’s street
-Cole, Mrs. Harriet, Lower King street
-Colman, Sarah, Bethel street
-Cook Charlotte, 50, St. Giles’ street
-Cooper, Mrs. Honor, Stepping lane
-Cooper, Jane, Magdalen street
-Copeman and Bell, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Crowe, Ann, Ten Bell lane
-Cunningham, Mrs. M. A., 4, Duke st.
-Curme, Elizabeth, Magdalen street
-Dade, Charlotte, 3, Swan lane
-Daniels, Miss Hannah, Magdalen st.
-Davy, Miss Jane, Upper St. Giles’ st.
-Deigham, Mrs. Sophia, Duke street
-Denmark, Rebecca, New Catton
-Dickinson, Mrs. S. C., St. Stephen’s rd.
-Dove, Ann, Rupert street
-Downes, Catherine, Cowgate street
-Downes, Maria, Duke street
-Drake, Mrs. Mary, All Saints’ green
-Elliott, Miss Mary, Bank street
-Evans, Misses Lucy and Emma
-Fairhead, Louisa, Pottergate street
-Fitzgerald, Louisa, Cowgate street
-Foley, Mrs. Susan, Union place
-Ford, Ann, Wellington lane, St. Giles’
-Ford, Elizabeth, Pitt street
-Fuller, E., Pitt street
-Goading, William, Red Lion street
-Godferey, Elizabeth, Duke street
-Goffin, Mrs. Mary, Golden Dog lane
-Goldspring, Mary Ann, William street
-Gooch, Phœbe, Thorn lane
-Goose, Mrs. Emma, 15, Briggs’ street
-Goreham, Sarah, Lothian street
-Gosnold, Ellen Sarah, Surrey road
-Green, Miss Ann, Post Office street
-Green, Hannah, St. Catherine’s terrace
-Green, Mary Ann, Colegate street
-Grice, Mrs. Mary Ann, Gildengate st.
-Gunton, Elizabeth, Julian street
-Hall, H., Cowgate street
-Havers, Amelia, Fishgate street
-Haward, The Misses, Theatre street
-Hewitt, Charlotte, West Pottergate st.
-Hewitt, L., Lothian st., Dereham rd.
-Hill, Miss Clara, Red Lion street
-Holmes, Mary Ann, Museum court, St. Andrew’s
-Homewood, Miss Anna, Brazen Doors road
-Houghton, Miss L., Upper Market
-Howard, Miss Ann, Theatre street
-Howard, Mrs. Emily, St. Faith’s lane
-Howes, Deborah, Magdalen street
-Hughes, Ann, Upper Westwick street
-Hurn, Mary and Elizabeth, Bank st.
-Isbell, Miss Maria, Charles street
-Iungus, Miss Kate, Theatre street
-Jeffries, Mrs. Emily, 56, St. Giles’
-Johnson, Harriet, Lower Westwick st.
-Keeble, Mrs. Harriet, Rose lane
-Kew, Louisa, 45, Upper St. Giles’
-King, Matilda and Rachel, Calvert st.
-Kingdom, The Misses, Sussex street
-Knevett and Hall, Magdalen street
-Knevett, Harriet, Upper Westwick st.
-Knowles, Mrs. H., Rising Sun lane
-Lambert, Mrs. Eliza, Kimberley st.
-Lawter, E., St. Julian’s street, Thorn lane
-Lilly, Mrs. Maria, Bishopgate street
-Lohr, Mrs. Lydia, 6, Briggs’ street
-Love, Miss Amelia, Kimberley street
-Mace, Mrs., Lothian street
-Maltman, Janet, St. Benedict’s road
-Manning, The Misses M. and C., Wellington st., Union place
-Margarson, Mrs. Ann, Alma square, Julian place
-Middleton, Mrs. M., Bishopgate st.
-Miles, Mrs. E., 5, Theatre street
-Miller, Mrs. E., Westlegate street
-Moore, Mrs. M. E., Coburg street
-Moore, Mrs. Sarah, Grapes’ hill
-Mortimer, Miss, Willow lane
-Murrell, Miss M. A., Trowse
-Newham, Miss M., William street
-Newhouse, Miss S., St. Paul’s Back lane
-Norton, Mrs. P., Lower Goat lane
-Page, Mrs., 4, Jay’s terrace, Rose lane
-Palmer, Sophia, Ber street
-Parfitt, Mrs. Martha, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Parker, Miss Mary, Bethel street
-Parr, Caroline, Ber street
-Parsley, Maria, Grapes’ hill
-Paston, Caroline, Grapes’ hill
-Payne, Miss E., 64, Bethel street
-Pearson, Miss H., St. Andrew’s hill
-Perry, Mrs. Mary, Bethel street
-Pigg, Mrs. E., William st., Heigham
-Piggin, Miss Mary Ann, Surrey st.
-Pilgrim, Mrs. M. A., Pottergate street
-Potter, Mrs. H., Little London street
-Pope, Mrs. William, 23, Bethel street
-Press, Miss Sarah, Rupert st., Union place
-Quintin, Mrs. H., Grout’s thoroughfare, Timberhill street
-Read, Mrs. C., 23, Alma square, Julian place
-Reeve, Louisa, Lower Westwick st.
-Riches, Lucy, Queen street
-Roper, Agnes, Ten Bell lane
-Rudd, Mary Ann, Calvert street
-Sawford, Ann Maria, Cow hill
-Scofield, Susan, Upper St. Giles’
-Scott, Miss E., Crescent place, Chapel Field road
-Severn and Blackwell, Botolph street
-Shalders, Mrs. C., Bethel street
-Sharman, Miss Rachel, Eldon row, Chapel Field road
-Sharon, Mrs. R., Pottergate street
-Shaw, Miss E., Douro terrace, St. Giles’ road
-Short, Mrs., Trory st., Unthank’s road
-Short, Miss Mary, 4, Gildengate st.
-Sibley, Mrs. R., Fisher’s lane
-Sissen, Miss L., Rose lane
-Skipper, Mrs. R., Surrey road
-Smith, M. A., Rigby’s court, St. Giles’
-Sparke, Miss E., Chapel Field road
-Spurgeon, E., Suffolk st., Union place
-Stannard, Harriet, Infirmary road
-Starling, Mrs. S., Chapel st., Union place
-Starling, Miss R., West Pottergate st.
-Stearman, Eliza, Whitefriars’ street
-Steward, Miss M. A., St. Martin at palace
-Steward, Miss Mary, Little Globe street, Union place
-Thirkettle, Mrs. M. A., Timberhill st.
-Thompson and Corrick, 60, St. Giles’ street
-Tomlinson, Miss A., Bishopgate street
-Townshend, Miss Sarah, Botolph str.
-Tye, Jemima, Ber street
-Vincent, E., St. Miles’ Church alley
-Walker, Mrs. Ann, Peacock street
-Waller, Elizabeth, Calvert street
-Ward, Mrs. Maria, Albemarle street, Crook’s place
-Wardle, Sarah, St. Mary’s plain
-Weavers, Miss F. M., John st., Rose la.
-Websdale, Harriet, Surrey street
-Webster, Emma, Philadelphia
-Webster, Mrs. S. A., Botolph street
-Wild, Elizabeth, Cowgate street
-Williamson, Mrs. T., Duke’s palace
-Wortley, Miss Martha, 5, Briggs’ str.
-Youell, C., Globe street, Union place
-Youels, William, St. Catherine’s plain
-Zobel, Mrs. M., Rupert street
-
-
-_Millinery Establishments_ (_see also Milliners and Dressmakers_)—
-
-
-Fairweather, Mrs. L., London street
-Howard and Co., London street
-Huson and Co., London street
-Jones, Elizabeth, Briggs’ street
-Lohr, Lydia, Briggs’ street
-White, Anna and D., London street
-
-
-_Millwrights_—
-
-
-Brown and Wright, King street
-Campling, James, Golden Ball street
-Dobson, James, Calvert street
-Fulcher, William, Mousehold heath
-Gaze, William, St. Paul’s Back lane
-Holmes and Sons, Prospect place works, Globe lane
-Howard, Riches, and Watts, Duke’s Palace iron works
-Smithdale, Thomas, King street, (_see Advertisement_, _page_ 9)
-Wright, John, Alma terrace, St. Augustine’s road
-
-
-_Music Warehouses_ (_see Pianoforte and Music Warehouses_)—
-_Musical Instrument Makers and Repairers_—
-
-
-Dambrock, John, Ber street
-Gooderham, Samuel, Elm hill
-Madge, Giles, Botolph street
-Smyth, William, Union place
-
-
-_Mustard Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Colman, J. and J., Carrow and Stoke Holy Cross
-Thurgar and Co., King street
-
-
-_News Agents_—
-
-
-Bramwell, D. K., 9, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Darken, James, Little London street
-Daynes, John, Back of the Inns
-Hill, Lot, Bridewell alley
-Jeary, Robert, Bridewell alley
-Nockall, Mrs. E., 2, Lower Goat lane
-Rumball, J. G., Vauxhall st., Union place
-Walker, R., Church street, St. Miles’
-Willsea, Mrs. H., Orford hill
-Woodcraft, James, Fishgate street
-Woolnough, T., Prince’s street
-
-
-_Nurserymen_, _Seedsmen_, _Florists_, _&c._—
-
-
-Allen, Robert, Grove place, Lakenham
-Bell, J., Exchange st. and Bracondale
-Booty, John, St. Stephen’s road
-Brown, David, 41, London street (_see Advertisement_)
-Ewing, J. W., Exchange st. and Eaton
-Hill, John, Newmarket road
-Hussey, Wm., St. Catherine’s plain
-Jay, Benjamin, St. Faith’s lane
-Lawes, Robt. C., (seedsman) Julian st.
-Nunn, John, St. Augustine’s
-Reynolds, W., Hall road, Lakenham
-Smith, Wm., Nelson street, Heigham
-Soons, John, St. Augustine’s
-Steward, John, Exchange street
-
-
-_Oil Cake Manufacturer_—
-
-
-Ketton, John, Rose lane
-
-
-_Oil and Colormen_ (_see Ironmongers_)—
-_Opticians_—
-
-
-Allen, John B., London street
-Dixon, Thomas, 6, Bridewell alley (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 8)
-Keyzor, Michael, St. Giles’ street
-Piggin and Dyball, Post Office street
-Sawyer and Co., 42, London street
-
-
-_Organ Builder_—
-
-
-Noble, Mark, bazaar, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-
-
-_Out-fitters_ (_see Clothiers and Tailors_)—
-_Painters_ (_see Plumbers_, _Glaziers and Painters_, _and also Grainers_,
-_&c._)—
-_Paper Bag Makers_—
-
-
-Page, S. D. and Son, 23, Old Haymarket
-Thorndick and Co., Prince’s street
-
-
-_Paper Hangers_ (_see also Upholsterers_)—
-
-
-Kirkham, Dennis, Redwell street
-Mounsear, William, Pottergate street
-Tarte, William, Botolph street
-
-
-_Paper Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Butcher, Brothers, Palace plain
-Nash, W. S., Lower Westwick street
-Robberds and Money, Chapel Field road (mills at Lyng)
-
-
-_Patten and Clog Makers_—
-
-
-Bradfield, Frederick, Little London st.
-Cook, Samuel, 6, Davey place
-Harper, James K., St. Benedict’s st.
-Rogers and Page, Wensum street
-Scott, Peter Thomas, White Lion st.
-
-
-_Pawnbrokers_—
-
-
-Ballord, Edmund, All Saints’ green
-Boston, William, Orford hill
-Christie, Thomas, Colegate street
-Cott, Thomas, Pottergate street
-Green, W. P., St. Martin’s at Palace pl.
-Griggs, F. W., Upper King street
-Harvey, Isaac, William street
-Havers, William, St. Paul’s plain
-Johnson, A., Lower Westwick street
-Joseph and Samuel, Timberhill
-Knights and Ballord, All Saints’ green
-Knights, Charlotte, Ber street
-Knights, James, Upper Westwick st.
-Morgan, W. R., St. Saviour’s lane
-Owen, Thomas, Colegate street
-Pitcher, H., St. John’s Maddermarket
-Shalders, Noah, Westlegate street
-Sheward, William, Lower King street
-Woodrow, Thomas, St. Miles’
-
-
-_Perambulator and Invalid’s Carriage Maker_—
-
-
-Boswell, T., St. John’s Maddermarket
-
-
-_Perfumers_—
-
-
-Asker, George Henry, The Walk
-Edwards, Edward M., 40, London st.
-Lanham and Sword, St. Giles
-Plumsted, Robert, Wensum street
-Tyzack, Wm. V., 13, London street
-Wilding, Henry, 42, London street
-
-
-_Photographic Artists_—
-
-
-Ames, Edward Cooper, Distillery st.
-Boswell, — Magdalen street
-Childs and Curry, Golden Ball street
-Freeman, W., jun., Rampant Horse street
-Huggins, John, 17, Davey place
-Ord, William, Westlegate street and Rose lane
-Rogers and Havers, (and dealers in photographic apparatus, &c.) 5, Davey
-place
-Sawyer and Co., (and dealers in photographic goods) 42, London st.
-Taney, William, Timberhill street
-Webb, John, Cowgate street
-
-
-_Physicians_—
-
-
-Copeman, Edward, St. Giles’ plain
-Dalrymple, Donald, Surrey street
-Dove, Harry, Tombland
-Eade, Peter, Queen street
-Hartman, Francis A., Surrey street
-Hutchison, Charles, Surrey street
-Johnson, James, The Chantry
-Ranking, William H., St. Giles’ st.
-
-
-_Pianoforte and Music Warehouses_—
-
-
-Darken and Colsey, 6, London street
-Fish, Wm., Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Howlett, William, 2, The Walk
-
-
-_Pianoforte Makers_—
-
-
-Russell and Son, Magdalen street
-
-
-_Pianoforte Hammer Rail Maker_—
-
-
-Cary, J. H., St. James’ factory
-
-
-_Picture Dealer_—
-
-
-Wigger, J. H. A., Bethel street
-
-
-_Pill Box Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Betts, Osborne, Waterloo road, New Catton
-Blackmore, A., West Wymer street, Heigham
-Britton, John, Oak street
-Bull, George, Silver street
-Dunn, William, Silver road
-Lincoln, John, Pump street
-Parker, William, Sussex street
-Saul, J., West Pottergate street
-Snelling, Robert, (paper) Hawthorn row, West End street, Holl’s lane
-
-
-_Plane Makers_ (_see also Tool Makers_)—
-
-
-Griffiths, Hannah, Lower Goat lane
-Leist, James, Wensum street
-Stone, Henry, Magdalen street
-
-
-_Plasterers_ (_see Bricklayers and Plasterers_)—
-_Plumbers_, _Painters_, _Glaziers_, _&c._—
-
-
-Atwood, Thomas, Pottergate street
-Barker, Robert, Orford hill
-Belson, Robert, King street
-Blythe, Eldred, (Nursery tavern) Nelson street, Heigham
-Bowen, William, Pottergate street
-Brady, Alfred T., Hall rd., Lakenham
-Bray, Charles, Timberhill street and Castle hill (_see Advertisement_,
-_p._ 15)
-Bunting, John, St. Giles’ road
-Burgess, Robert, Chapel Field road
-Campling, Thomas, Coslany street
-Candler, John, St. Saviour’s lane
-Clabburn, James, Oak street
-Cletheroe, James, City road, Heigham
-Cooke, James, Scoles’ green
-Cooper, William, (Plough inn) St. Benedict’s street
-Cousins, William, Lady’s lane
-Dabson, Thomas, Botolph street
-Delph, William, St. Augustine’s
-Devereaux, Edmund, Gildengate st. (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 27)
-Dawson, Edward, Duke street
-Dunn, Richard, Surrey grove
-Dye, Christopher, Barrack street
-Ellingham, Henry, Elm hill
-Gilbert, Samuel James, Grapes’ hill
-Gooch, George Carver, King street, (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 21)
-Green, John, Pottergate street
-Hall, James, All Saints’ green
-Hall, James, 10, Magdalen street
-Hardy, W. E., 5, Little London st.
-Harvey, William, William street
-Hawes, George, Mariner’s lane
-Hazelwood, C. A., Trafalgar street
-Hill, John, Orford hill
-Howard, James, St. Stephen’s street
-Homes, William C., Ber street
-Hubbard, Henry, Westlegate street
-Jay, John, St. Andrew’s hill
-Jones, Peter, St. Andrew’s hill
-Jones, W., St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Kerr, John, Lower Goat lane
-King, John and James, Prince’s street
-King, Thomas Charles R., Tombland and Elm hill
-Lacey, John, St. Margaret’s lane
-Love, Charles, Palace street
-Mansfield, James, St. Stephen’s street
-Mason, J., Elm terrace, New Catton
-Norman, Robert, 6, York place, Chapel Field road
-Paston, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Quadling, Henry, Lower King street
-Read, George, Bartholomew street
-Read, Joseph J., Julian street
-Say, Mrs. Sarah, 14, St. Giles’
-Scott, W., Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Self, Thomas, Tombland
-Starland, George and E., Surrey street
-Surflin, William, Bank street
-Taylor, William James, New Catton
-Thwaites, Isaac M., Thorn lane
-Turner, J., (painter) St. Lawrence lane
-Turner, John J., (painter) Barn road
-Weeks, William, St. Augustine’s street
-Wilde, Frederick, St. Stephen’s street
-Winter, William, Timberhill street
-Wordingham, Robert, Rose tavern, Hall road, Lakenham
-Wright and Son, Mission place, King street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 34)
-Wright, Walter, Surrey place
-
-
-_Printers_ (_letter-press_)—
-
-
-Bacon, Richard N., 12, London street
-Bardwell, Marcus G., Prince’s street
-Barnes, Charles, Bedford street
-Colby, Richard, Golden Dog lane
-Cundall, Miller, and Leavins, Rampant Horse street
-Davy, John, St. Clement’s Church alley
-Daynes, Samuel, St. Stephen’s
-Fletcher, Josiah, 8, The Walk
-Iungius, Mrs. Jemima, Pottergate str.
-Jarrold and Sons, London and Exchange streets
-Kerr, Stephen John, All Saints’ green
-Lemmon, Robert, Willow lane
-Matchett and Stevenson, Chronicle office, Market place
-Norfolk News’ Proprietors, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Norman, Benjamin, Old Haymarket
-Otty, Philip, Orford hill
-Page, S. D. and Son, 23, Old Haymarket
-Parkinson, John W., Globe street, Union place
-Pigg, Henry, 7, London street
-Soman and Howes, St. Andrew’s hill
-Stacy, Henry W., Haymarket
-Stevens, Wm. H., Upper Goat lane
-Stewardson, W. H., Little London st.
-Thorndick and Co., Prince’s street
-Upcroft, William, Fishgate street
-Walker, R., Church street, St. Miles’
-
-
-_Professors and Teachers_—
-
-
-Beauchamp, Miss, (music) Heigham road
-Buck, Zachariah, (doctor of music) Upper close
-Bunnett, Edward, (music) The Close
-Burton, Frederick C., (music) St. Stephen’s road
-Caro, Rev. Simon, (languages) Ber st.
-Carver, Miss C. E., (music) Douro terrace, Heigham grove
-Chilvers, James, (music) Pitt street
-Clarke, Frederick Edward, (tunist) Prince’s street
-Cox, William Henry, (music) Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Critchfield, S., (music) Upper King st.
-Crook, Madame Oury and Miss Clarissa, (dancing and singing) Tombland
-Curtis, Lambert G., (music and singing) 57, St. Giles’ street
-Dodd, Miss Harriet, (music) Chapel Field road
-Finegan, Thomas W., (languages) Cow hill
-Fish, William, (music) Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Fitzgerald, Charles, Rose lane
-Freeman, James, jun., (music) Caledonia terrace, Dereham road
-Fuller, H. N., (music) Trafalgar st.
-Gaul, E. J., (music) Magdalen street
-Gooderham, Samuel, (tunist) Elm hill
-Harcourt, James, Colegate street
-Hastings, G., (music) Somerleyton st.
-Heaviside, J., (drawing and painting) Church st., St. Simon’s
-Hill, Horace, (music) 46, Pottergate street
-Hill, J. F., (music) St. Giles’ terrace
-Howlett, H., (music) St. Benedict’s road
-Howlett, Walter, (music) Valentine street
-Howlett, William, (music) The Walk
-Jackson, H. C., (music) Fishgate st.
-Jackson, James, (music) Cowgate st.
-Jackson, W., (music) Prince’s street
-Jackson, William, sen., (music) Fishgate street
-Klein, Herr Hermann, (German)—German Master at the Grammar School—Bridge
-st., St. Andrew’s
-Ladbrooke, John Barney, (drawing) Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Lantenant, Camille Louis, (languages) Prince’s street
-Larkman, W., (singing) Gildengate st.
-Littlewood, F. B., (music) Colegate st.
-Madge, Robert A., (music) Pitt street
-Mann, H., (music) John st., Rose lane
-Noverre, F., (dancing) Theatre square
-Noverre, Miss Josephine, (singing and the concertina) Theatre square
-Noverre, Miss Sophia, (pianoforte and harp) Theatre square
-Nursey, Claude L., (drawing) Government School of Art
-Paston, B., (music) Till’s court, Ber street
-Plummer, Miss Elizabeth, (music) St. Andrew’s
-Pace, W. H., (music) Somerleyton st.
-Rudd, Henry, (singing) Duke street
-Scott, John, (languages) Bank street
-Slonitz, Leopold, (languages) Bethel street
-Springfield, Thomas, (calisthenics) Kimberley street
-Tayler, Francis G., (music) Grove place, Lakenham
-Thurgar, A. H., (languages) St. Catherine’s plain
-Trory, John (music) Elm hill
-Vlieland, Jerome N., (languages) Redwell street
-Widdows, Charles, (music) John st., Rose lane
-
-
-_Provision Dealers_—
-
-
-Brown, Charles, 57, St. Stephen’s st.
-Burton, Gent, 12, Dove street
-Harley, John P., St. Benedict’s street
-Howman, Samuel, Upper Market
-Kerrison, James, Magdalen street
-Nash, Joseph, (and cheese and bacon factor) Post Office street
-Norton, Robert, Fye bridge
-Parish, J., Mill lane, New Catton
-Pull, Elizabeth Mary, Bull close
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-
-_Publicans_ (_see also Beer Retailers_)—
-
-
-Adam and Eve, Howes, R. H., Tabernacle street
-Adelphi, Browne, J., White Lion st.
-Albert Tavern, Coleman, S., Ber st.
-Albion House, English, Mrs. Sarah, Market place
-Albion Tavern, Middleton, Thomas, Heigham
-All Saints, Payne, John, All Saints’ green
-Allies, Cattermoul, William, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Allies Tavern, Bennett, John, Upper Heigham
-Alma Tavern, Bush, Rebecca, Pottergate street
-Anchor, Turner, Joseph, Surrey st.
-Anchor, Osborn, C., Ten Bell lane
-Anchor of Hope, Sparrow, Charles, Bracondale
-Angel, Dover, Charles, New Catton
-Angel, Harris, William, Trowse
-Artichoke, King, R., Magdalen gates
-Bakers’ Arms, Myhill, Ann, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Bakers’ Arms, Ives, John, Ber street
-Bakers’ Arms, Betts, J., Coslany st.
-Bakers’ Arms, Higgins, Henry, St. Clement’s hill, New Catton
-Balloon, Crowe, E., Lower Westwick street
-Bank Tavern, Surflin, W., Bank st.
-Barley Mow, Carter, W., Haymarket
-Barn Tavern, Coldham, James, St. Benedict’s
-Bartholomew Tavern, Thouless, W., Thorn lane
-Bath House, Hughes W., St. Martin’s at Oak
-Bear Inn, Ames, R., Market place
-Bear and Staff, Smith, J., Fisher’s la.
-Bee Hive, Gearing, James, St. Stephen’s gates
-Bee Hive, Green, William Dann, St. Paul’s plain
-Bee Hive, Loveday, George, St. Martin’s Palace plain
-Bee Hive, Payne, Sarah, Cowgate st.
-Bee Hive, Rackham, John, St. Benedict’s street
-Bess of Bedlam, Baker, J., Oak street
-Bell Hotel, Murnane, J., Orford hill and Castle hill
-Bell Hotel Tap, Decaux, William, Castle meadow
-Bird in Hand, Taylor, William J., New Catton
-Bird in Hand, Ward, W., Barrack st.
-Black Chequers, Radford, William, Cowgate st.
-Black Eagle, Dawson, George, Vauxhall street
-Black Horse, Abray, I., St. Giles’ rd.
-Black Horse, Aylmer, J., Wensum st.
-Black Horse, Moll Robert, St. Giles’
-Black Horse, Rix, W., Finket street
-Black Prince, Goddard, Thomas, Upper walk
-Black Swan, Storey, David, Upper market
-Boarded House, Knights, Susannah, Castle hill
-Boar’s Head Hotel, Figg, George, Surrey street
-Bolingbroke’s Stores, King, James, Bank plain, London street
-Bowling Green, Porter, James, Chapel field
-Bowling Green Tap, Travis, Samuel, Theatre street
-Boy and Cup, Root, Christiana, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Brazen Doors Tavern, Moore, George, Lame Dog road
-Bricklayers’ Arms, Powell, Sarah, Union place
-Bricklayers’ Arms, Storey William, Bull close
-Bricklayers’ Arms, Powell, Mrs., Union place
-Bricklayers’ Arms, Thurlow, Henry, Castle hill
-Bridge House, Tidman, Robt., Thorpe hamlet
-Bridge Tavern, Cattermoul, Thomas Matthews, Wensum street
-British Lion, Clarke, T., Coburg str.
-Britons’ Arms, Carr, Charles, Elm hill
-Buff Coat Inn, Daniels, Joseph, Buff Coat lane
-Bull, (Snow’s Chop House) Campling, William, Market place
-Bull, Parkerson, Robert, Bull close
-Bull, Thurston, Daniel, St. Stephen’s
-Bull, Shorten, James, Magdalen street
-Bull, Kent, Charles, St. Paul’s street
-Bull’s Head Tavern, Carver, William, Ber street
-Butchers’ Arms, Legood, E., Ber str.
-Bushel, Gidney, S., St. Augustine’s
-Cabinet-makers’ Arms, Kenney, E. Thomas, Bedwell street
-Canteen, Thompson, George, The Barracks, Pockthorpe
-Cardinal’s Cap, Walker, George, Upper Westwick street
-Carpenters’ Arms, Baker, Robert, Thorn lane
-Carpenters’ Arms, Youngs, W., Trowse
-Carrow Inn, Orsborn, R., Carrow rd.
-Castle Hotel, Taylor, Mrs. Mary, Castle hill
-Castle Tavern, Walker, John, Thorpe hamlet
-Cat and Fiddle, Hennery William, Magdalen street
-Cat and Fiddle, Bell, M., Botolph str.
-Catherine Wheel, Felstead, Robert, St. Augustine’s
-Cattle Market, Smith, Benjamin, Cattle Market
-Cellar House, Golding, John, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Cellar House, Pigg, J., Pockthorpe
-Champion Inn, Barnard, J., Golden Ball street
-Chequers, Betts, John, Castle ditches
-Chequers, Radford, Mrs. C., Cowgate street
-Chequers, Beck, S., Castle meadow
-Cherry Tree, Hewitt, Tutell, Hall road, Lakenham
-Cherry Tree, Newman, John, Gildengate street
-Church Style, Easto, G., Upper market
-Cinder Ovens, Sandall, Edward H., King Street gates
-Cirque Unique, Testar, Charles, Upper Westwick street
-City Arms, Howes, George Smith, St. Andrew’s Hall plain
-City of Norwich Inn, Green, John, Westlegate street
-Club House Tavern, Calton, John D., Old Post Office court
-Coach and Horses, Smith, Mrs. E., Union place
-Coach and Horses, Fearnside, Benj., Red Lion street
-Coach and Horses, Cattermole, D., Thorpe road
-Coach and Horses, Daines, Elizabeth, Bethel street
-Coachmakers’ Arms, Parnell, Richard, Bethel street
-Coachmakers’ Arms, Thurling, Jas., St. Stephen’s gates
-Cock, Burrows, J., Upper St. Giles’
-Cock, Moore, D. W., Upper King st.
-Commercial Boarding House, Crickmore, Henry, Exchange street
-Compasses, Pearce, P., Upper King street
-Coopers’ Arms, Hubbard, H., Prince’s street
-Cork Cutters’ Arms, Robinson, John, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Corn Exchange Tavern, Brown, Rose Ann, Little London street
-Cow and Hare, Armes, S., Heigham street
-Cow Inn, Cooper, Samuel, Cow hill, St. Giles’
-Cricketers’ Arms, Wood, Robert, Red Lion street
-Crocodile, Harding, L., Heigham st.
-Cross Keys, Pratt, J., Magdalen st.
-Crown, Middleton, J., St. George’s Bridge street
-Crown and Angel, Daynes, Mrs. M., St. Stephen’s street
-Crown and Anchor, Butcher, Robert, St. Augustine’s street
-Crown Inn, Townshend G., Elm hill
-Crown Point Tavern, Murrell, G., Trowse
-Crystal Palace, Barber, A., Dereham road
-Cupid and Bow, Matthews, William, St. Martin’s Palace plain
-Curriers’ Arms, Norton, Maria, Union street, Crook’s place
-Curriers’ Arms, Woodhouse, Joshua, St. Stephen’s Back street
-Curriers’ Arms, Rouse, J., St. Giles’ street
-Curriers’ Arms, Nichols, W., Pottergate street
-Dial Inn, Burdett, J., Dereham road
-Distillery, Nicholls, E., Dereham road
-Dog, Wigger, John, St. Paul’s plain
-Dolphin, Maxwell, T., Upper Heigham
-Dove, Lovergan, F., St. James’ street
-Dove, Roll, Mrs., Muspole street
-Dove, Ellis, B., Lower Westwick st.
-Duke of Sussex, Stangroom, J., St. Augustine’s
-Duke of Wellington, Clements, R., Chapel street
-Duke of Wellington, Self, James, St. Stephen’s street
-Duke of Wellington, Spencer, Isaac, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Duke of Wellington, Fitt, Edward, Wellington street
-Duke of York, Drake, B., Church path, Lakenham
-Duke of York, Howard C., Thorpe hamlet
-Duke’s Palace, Snowling, J., Duke’s Palace street
-Duke’s Tavern, Hinchley, Samuel, Tombland
-Duncan Arms, Burrows, William, Magdalen street
-Eagle, Minns, Susanna, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Eagle, High, G., West Pottergate str.
-Eagle, Burgess, R., Lower Westwick st.
-Eagle, Cattermoul, J., Newmarket rd.
-Earl of Leicester, Riches, Thomas, Dereham road
-Earl of Leicester, Edwards, Charles, Brazen Doors’ road
-Eastern Counties’ Railway Tavern, Warnes, Elizabeth, Foundry bridge
-Eastern Union Railway Tavern, Wilde, Matthew, St. Stephen’s
-Eight Ringers, Cunningham, Thomas, Coslany street
-Elephant and Castle, Parkerson, Jude, King street
-Elm Tavern, Rust, Robt., Prince’s st.
-Elm Tavern, Spencer, R., Catton rd.
-Excise Coffee House, Plane, Richard, Lower Goat lane
-Express Train, Hatch, W., Rose lane
-Factory Tavern, Newland, William, St. Martin’s at Palace
-Fighting Cocks, Mills, J., Coslany st.
-Fleckered Bull, Engall, T., Ber street
-Fleece Inn, Barley, Mrs., Bridewell alley
-Flower in Hand, Delph, T., Pitt street
-Flower Pot, Nichols, Edward, Oak st.
-Fortune of War, Campling, Samuel, Calvert street
-Foundry Bridge Tavern, Browne, L. Anstead, Rose lane
-Fountain Inn, Debbage, James, St. Benedict’s gates
-Freemasons’ Arms, Sands, John, Southwell street, Lakenham
-Free Trade Tavern, Atkins, Henry, St. Augustine’s
-Free Trade Tavern, London, William, Rose lane
-Free Trade Tavern, Rice, James, William street
-French Horn, Betts, Thomas, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Gardeners’ Arms, Arnup, Charles, Pockthorpe
-Gardeners’ Arms, Chapman, Philip, Tinkler’s lane
-Gardeners’ Arms, Cooper, Thomas, Timberhill street
-General Windham, Wiley, S. H., Cowgate street
-George Inn, Warner, H., Old Haymarket
-George the Fourth, Decks, J., Ber st.
-Gibraltar, Wills, Anthony F., Upper Heigham
-Gin Shop, Fitt, Eliza, Castle meadow
-Globe Inn, Roll Robert, Globe street, Union place
-Globe Tavern, Moore, J., Globe lane
-Goat, Newman, W. H., Upper Goat lane
-Gold Beaters’ Arms, Laskey, Mary A., Bethel street
-Golden Ball, Girling, William, Golden Ball street
-Golden Can, Peed, F., Gildengate st.
-Golden Can, Yellop, Robert, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Golden Fleece, Copley, J., Fishgate street
-Golden Lion, Onlay, William D., Brazen Doors’ road
-Golden Lion, Riches, Henry, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Goose and Gridiron, Butcher, James, St. Stephen’s street
-Grapes Hotel, Clarke, J., St. Giles’ gates
-Grapes, Rumbold, J., Howard street, Lakenham
-Grapes Tavern, Mace, Mary Ann, Church street, St. Miles’
-Grapes, Daniels, Richd., Red Lion street
-Green Dragon, Balls, James, Little London street
-Greenhill Gardens, Winter, Mrs. T., St. Augustine’s
-Greyhound, Smith, George, Rampant Horse street
-Greyhound Gardens, Shickle, Robert, Ber street
-Griffin, Jeffries, Leamon, King street
-Griffin, Thompson, M., Barrack street
-Guildhall, Strachan, J., Market place
-Half Moon, Pretty, W., Dereham rd.
-Half Moon, Brazell, R., Upper market
-Hampshire Hog, Cutting, William, St. Swithin’s Church alley
-Heart’s Ease, Sayer, Benj., Thorpe hamlet
-Hen and Chickens, Fenn, Thomas, St. Mary’s plain
-Hero of the Redan, Bright, Zachariah, Thorpe hamlet
-Hoop Inn, Amies, J., St. Stephen’s rd.
-Old Lobster Inn, Amies, John, Pottergate street
-Hope Brewery, Brown, Frederick William, St. Saviour’s lane
-Hope Tavern, Middleton, J., Calvert st.
-Horse Barracks, Petch, H., Barrack st.
-Horse and Groom, Newby, James, Back of the Inns
-Hotpressers’ Arms, Rox, R., Coslany st.
-Imperial Arms, James, Wm., Upper King street
-Jack of Newbury, Upcroft, James, Magdalen street
-John Bull, Lock, William, Union street, Crook’s place
-Jolly Brewers, Cubitt, T., Magdalen st.
-Jolly Butchers, Dambrock, J., Ber st.
-Jolly Farmers, Powley, R., Castle hill
-Jolly Farmers, Casson, Daniel Bell, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Jolly Gardeners, Arnup, Charles P., Silver street
-Jolly Gardeners, True, William J., Brunswick road
-Jolly Gardeners, Weeks, Henry, Infirmary road
-Jolly Maltsters, Dewing, E., King st.
-Jolly Maltsters, Wenn, William, Cowgate street
-Jolly Skinners, Pratt, John, Oak str.
-Jubilee, Byles, Robert, Ber street
-Keel and Wherry, Cooper, Jeremiah, Lower King street
-Key and Castle, Porter, Thomas, St. Martin at Oak
-Kimberley Arms, Chettleburgh, T., Trory street, Unthank’s road
-King’s Arms, Yaxley, Mrs., St. Augustine’s
-King’s Arms, Townshend, William, Bethel street
-King’s Arms, James, Henry, Bishop bridge
-King’s Arms, Jolly, John, Hall road, Lakenham
-King’s Arms, Smith, Joseph, Oak st.
-King’s Arms, Spanton, F. H., Ber st.
-King’s Head, Doughty, R., Davey pl.
-King’s Head, Rix, R., Upper St. Giles’
-King’s Head, Middleton, John, Magdalen street
-King’s Head, Menton, Mrs. Mary A., Gildengate street
-King of Prussia, Moy, W., Ipswich road
-Lamb, Websdale, Mrs. F., Old Haymarket
-Lame Dog, Sloper, J., Lame Dog rd.
-Light Horseman, Kent, T., Barrack street
-Lily Tavern, Mortimer, J. T., Ber st.
-Lime Kiln Inn, Fox, Henry, Trowse
-Little Buck, Rudd, Elizabeth, Oak st.
-Little John, Fox, James, Alma street, Heigham
-Lock and Key, Bell, Matthew, Ber st.
-Locomotive, Skippon, W., Rupert st.
-London Coffee House, Sapey, T., Rampant Horse street
-London Tavern, Liddelow, Robert, St. Andrew’s hill
-Lord Camden, Bruff, Robert, Charing cross
-Lord John Russell, Betts, Charles A., Dereham road
-Lord Nelson, Murrell, W., Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Lord Nelson, Phillips, W., Timberhill street
-Lord Nelson, Tuck, J., Market place
-Lord Nelson, Watts, S., Dereham road
-Lord Raglan, Mann, C., Pockthorpe
-Magpie, Dunthorne, J., Magpie road
-Maid’s Head, Webster, W., Wensum street
-Maid’s Head Tap, Newhouse, E., Pig lane, Palace plain
-Malt and Hop Tavern, Gooch, Noah, Charing cross
-Market House, Trumbetta, William, Weaver’s lane
-Mariners’ Arms, Stafford, Robert, Mariners’ lane
-Marquis of Gransby, Puxley, James, Bishopgate street
-Marquis of Gransby, Mackley, John, Barrack street
-Marquis of Lothian, Wilson, Robert, Lothian street
-Mischief Tavern, Mann, Joseph M., St. Paul’s Back lane
-Mitre Tavern, Salter, Wm., Rampant Horse street
-Moon and Stars, Williams, Mary Ann, Duke’s Palace street
-Morgan’s Cellar House, Wood, Geo., Lower King street
-Morning Mail, Blanden, Henry, Pottergate street
-Napier Tavern, Capp, E., Castle hill
-Nelson Tavern, Staff, Frederick, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Nelson Tavern, Salmon, John, West Pottergate street
-Nelson Tavern, Munford, George, Nelson street, Dereham road
-Norfolk Hotel, Foster, G., St. Giles’ st.
-Norfolk and Norwich Chop House, Bloomfield, George, Market place
-Norfolk Railway House, Nash, R. S., Foundry bridge
-Norfolk Tavern, Morter, Robt., Rupert street, Union place
-Norwich Arms, Peggs, G., Ber street
-Nursery Tavern, Blythe, Eldred, Nelson street, Heigham
-Old Crown, Calver, John F., Oak str.
-Old Friends, Nichols, John, Ber street
-Old Goat, Goat, C., Upper Goat lane
-Old Music House, Oliver, Elizabeth, Lower King street
-Old Star, Curson, William, Quay side
-Old Steam Packet Tavern, Cosgrove, Thomas Rolfe, Rose lane
-Orchard, Gardens, Warnes, Charles, Heigham street
-Orchard Tavern, Cooper, Robert, St. Faith’s lane
-Original Dun Cow, Mackley, Richard, St. Martin’s gates
-Ostrich, Towler, R. B., Plumstead rd.
-Oxford Tavern, Wells, Peter, Oxford street, Unthank’s road
-Palace Tavern, Price, John, Palace st.
-Paul Pry, Paston, Wm., Grapes’ hill
-Peacock, Colman, J., St. Stephen’s pl.
-Pelican, Sands, Isaac, Colegate street
-Perseverance Tavern, Nobbs, Edwd., Oak street
-Pheasant Cock, Blake, James, Ber Street gates
-Phœnix Brewery, Fisk, Adam, Magdalen street
-Pigeons, Newman, Mrs. S., Fishgate st.
-Pine Apple, King, S. B., St. Martin’s la.
-Pine Apple, Jarvis, William, Trowse
-Plasterers’ Arms, Burrage, William, Cowgate street
-Plough, Coe, Mark, Golden Ball street
-Plough, Cooper, W., St. Benedict’s st.
-Plumbers’ Arms, Adams, William, Cowgate street
-Plumbers’ Arms, Hewing, Joseph, Prince’s street
-Pope’s Head, Browsell, Wm., Upper market
-Portland Arms, Brett, Alethsa, Old Church road, Lakenham
-Post Office Tavern, Thurlow, Mrs. E., Post Office street
-Prince Albert, Daniels, T., Dove str.
-Prince Regent, Finch, W., Weavers’ la.
-Prince of Wales, Delph, William, St. Augustine’s
-Prince of Wales, Canner, John, Upper Westwick street
-Princess Royal, Bridges, Robert, Rampant Horse street
-Punch House, Dawson, William, Upper market
-Queen Adelaide, Marshall, J., Pitt st.
-Queen Adelaide, Armes, Daniel, West End street, Heigham
-Queen Anne, Raven, Edward, St. Miles’ Church street
-Queen’s Arms, Pye, Jabez, Pump str.
-Queen’s Arms, Minns J., Magdalen st.
-Queen, Caroline, Briggs, W., Oak str.
-Queen’s Head, Dunn, Jas., Quay side
-Queen’s Head, Love, William, Cowgate street, St. Paul’s
-Queen’s Head, Fox, I., Upper St. Giles’
-Queen Victoria, Roe, C., Pottergate st.
-Railway and Commercial Hotel, Mortimer, John Thursby, St. Giles’
-Railway Inn, Wilson, James, Trowse
-Rainbow, Thwaites, J., Lower King st.
-Rainbow, Hayne, Wm., Holl’s lane
-Rampant Horse, Louth, Robert, Rampant Horse street
-Rampant Horse, Norton, Henry, Fishgate street
-Raven, Rowland, Daniel, King street
-Red House, Butcher, Walter Whitton, Timberhill street
-Red Lion, Fletcher, Joseph, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-Red Lion, Gardiner, William, London street
-Red Lion, Rose, Wm., Magdalen str.
-Red Lion, Hewitt, George, Orford hill
-Red Lion, Howe, John, Magdalen st.
-Red Lion, Howard, T., Bishopgate st.
-Red Rose, Sweatman, Mrs. E., Back of the Inns
-Ribs of Beef, Rant, J., Wensum street
-Richmond Tavern, Youngs, Peter, Richmond hill
-Rifleman, Cudden, Mrs. A., All Saints’ green
-Rifleman, Campling, Jeremiah, Cross lane, Gildengate street
-Reindeer, Kerridge, J., St. Benedict’s road
-Rising Sun, Abel, J., Chapel Field rd.
-Rising Sun, Playford, William, Buff Coat lane
-Robin Hood, Gostling, R., Dereham rd.
-Rope-makers’ Arms, Tallowin, Saml., Hellesdon road
-Rope-makers’ Arms, Baldry, William, Hellesdon road
-Rose, Hogg, Henry, Magdalen street
-Rose, Wordingham, Robt., Hall road, Lakenham
-Rose, Nicholls, G. V., St. Stephen’s st.
-Rose, Thompson, Benj., Thorn lane
-Rose, Nicholls, John, City road
-Rose, Cobb, Leggatt, St. Augustine’s
-Rose, Smith, John W., corner of King street and Rose lane
-Rose, Burrell, Robert, Oak street
-Rose Tavern, Ramm, Robt., Palace st.
-Rose and Crown, Gibbs, R., Botolph st.
-Rose and Thistle Tavern, Armes, Frederick Thomas, Barn road
-Royal Exchange, Cubitt, J., Julian st.
-Royal Hotel, Heseltine, J., Market pl.
-Royal Hotel Tap, Gooch, Thomas H., Back of the Inns
-Royal Oak, Jarman, Thomas, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Royal Oak, Brown, Mary Ann, St. Augustine’s street
-Royal Standard, West, John, Chapel street, Union place
-Saracen’s Head, Newman, Richard, West Pottergate street
-Saracen’s Head, Scowen, John, St. Giles’ street
-Sardinian Tavern, Howard, James, St. Stephen’s street
-Sawyers’ Arms, Dunthorn, William, St. Paul’s plain
-Seven Stars, Denmark, W., Barrack street
-Shakespeare, Pye, R., 63, Pottergate street
-Shakespeare, Booth, T. R., Colegate st.
-Shakespeare, Hollis, R., Theatre st.
-Ship, Littlewood, E., Lower King st.
-Ship, Pallant, Robert, Thorn lane
-Ship, Riches, S., St. Peter’s Southgate
-Ship, Boyce, George, Mousehold
-Shirehall Tavern, Ling, Abraham, Castle meadow
-Shoulder of Mutton, Beckwith, B., St. Stephen’s street
-Shoulder of Mutton, Widdows, Mark, St. Andrew’s hill
-Sir John Barleycorn, Mason, Henry, Orford hill
-Somerset Tavern, Yallop, William, Union street, Crook’s place
-Somerleyton Tavern, Lines, Philip, Somerleyton street
-Sons of Commerce, Cox, E., Thorn ln.
-Southwell Arms, Brinkley, James, Front row, Lakenham
-Spear-in-Hand, Wyatt, J., Julian place
-Sportsman, Betts, R., Pockthorpe
-Spread Eagle Tavern, Gilbeigh, Mrs. Caroline, Old Haymarket
-Staff of Life, Harvey, S., Fishgate st.
-Stag, Wigg, E., St. Benedict’s street
-Star Commercial Inn, Watson, John, Old Haymarket
-Star and Crown, Emms, William, Timberhill street
-Steam Packet, Hilling, M., King st.
-Steam Packet, Curson, William, St. Catherine’s plain
-St. Julian’s Tavern, Lawrence, M. C., St. Julian’s
-St. John’s Head, Gent, D., Coslany st.
-St. Paul’s Tavern, Severn, Samuel, Cowgate street
-Suffolk Arms, Wilkinson, W., Oak st.
-Sun and Anchor, Thorpe, Thomas E., Colegate street
-Surrey Inn, Kett, Elizabeth, Grove plate, Lakenham
-Surrey Tavern, Scarlett, R., Surrey rd.
-Swan Hotel, Asker, Mrs. Elizabeth, Upper market
-Swan, Tuddenham, J., Cowgate street
-Swan, Kett, James F., Magdalen st.
-Swan, Mace, James, Swan lane
-Swiss Cottage, Laws, R., Dereham rd.
-Ten Bells, Brown, H., Upper Westwick street
-Theatre Tavern, King, S., Bethel st.
-Thorn Tavern, Dickerson, William Benjamin, Ber street
-Three Horse Shoes, Girdlestone, Thos., Palace street
-Three Kings, Riches, J., St. Benedict’s street
-Three Pigeons, Lane, J., Charing cross
-Three Tubs, Ulph, James, Barrack st.
-Three Tuns, Thompson, R., King st.
-Three Tuns, Plumstead, S., Coslany st.
-Tiger, Moy, James, Fishgate street
-Trafalgar Tavern, Scales, Mary Ann, Trafalgar street
-Trowel and Hammer, Spurling, Wm., St. Stephen’s road
-Trumpet, Fuller, R., St. Stephen’s st.
-Tuns, Kemp, William, St. Giles’ gates
-Tuns, Clarke, R. N., Whitefriars’ st.
-Tuns, Cowan, Mrs. C., All Saints’ grn.
-Turkey Cock, Swash, M., St. Simon’s Church street
-Two Brewers, Wallace, Jas., Maddermarket
-Two Brewers, Campling, George, Magdalen street
-Two-Necked Swan, Whitehead, Wm., Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Two-Necked Swan, Betts, James Geo., St. Stephen’s street
-Two Necked Swan, Andrews, James, Upper Walk, Market place
-Two Quarts, Asquith, William, Pottergate street
-Two Quarts, Rivett, John, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Unicorn, Brown, G., St. Stephen’s st.
-Unicorn, Easton, Isaac, St. Mary’s pl.
-Vauxhall Tavern, Bunn, C., Julian st.
-Victoria Spirit Vaults, Bowgen, John Hart, Lower Westwick street
-Victoria Tavern, Laws J., Magdalen st.
-Victoria Tavern, Hammond, John, Market place
-Victoria Tavern, Smith, Henry George, Adelaide street
-Victoria Tavern, Blackburn, William Berry, St. Stephen’s gates
-Vine Tavern, Mackley Thomas, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Waggon and Horses, Riley, Francis, Tombland
-Waggon and Horses, Wilsea, John, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Walnut Shades, Dady, Mrs., Old Post Office court
-Waterloo Tavern, Smith, Edward, Market place
-Waterloo, Moon, Robert, New Catton
-Waterman, Yeames, Samuel, King st.
-Waterman, Briggs, J., St. Margaret’s plain
-Waterman’s Arms, Moughton, John, St. Ann’s lane, King street
-Wellington Tavern, Freestone, Wm., Muspole street
-West End Retreat, Barnes, John Edward, Holl’s lane, Heigham
-Whalebone Inn, Sexton, Edward, New Catton
-Wheat Sheaf, Austin, William, St. Stephen’s street
-Wheat Sheaf, Baxter, R., Bethel str.
-Wheat Sheaf, Cole, E., Castle ditches
-Whip and Nag, Wallace, T., Pitt street
-Whitefriars’ Tavern, Dann, Isaac, Whitefriars’ street
-White Hart, Woolsey, S., St. Peter’s
-White Horse, Lacey, Wm., Castle hill
-White Horse, Mason, W., Magdalen st.
-White Horse, Grief, James, Trowse
-White Horse, Gibson, G., Crook’s pl.
-White Horse, Rix, William, Bridge street, St. Lawrence
-White Horse, Potter, George, Old Haymarket
-White Horse, Stubbs, Edward, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-White Horse, Coleman, Timothy, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-White Lion, Howes, J., Magdalen street
-White Lion, Lawn, William, St. Benedict’s street
-White Lion, Barber, William, St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-White Lion, Howman, William, Oak street, St. Martin’s
-White Lion, King, G., Prince’s street
-White Lion, Hall, Wm., St. Martin’s at Palace plain
-White Rose, Littleproud, Mrs. Susan, Back of the Inns
-Wild Man, Beeton, J., St. Andrew’s hill
-William the Fourth, Matthews, Geo., Mousehold
-William the Fourth, Ward, William, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-William the Fourth, Newby, Wm., Coburg street
-William the Fourth, Williamson, W., St. Augustine’s street
-William Tell, Kilburn, W., Castle hill
-Windham Arms, Aldous, John T., Trory street, Lakenham
-Windmill, Saul, John, Ber street
-Windmill Tavern, Baker, William, Mill lane, New Catton
-Wine Tavern, Laws, James, Upper St. Giles’
-Windsor Castle, Lambert, Martin, Pockthorpe
-Woolpack, Thrower, M., Golden Ball st.
-Woolpack, Barnes, M., St. George’s pl.
-World’s End, Drege, William, World’s End lane
-Wounded Hart, Houghton, Henry, Upper market
-Wrestlers, Fake, John, St. James’ st.
-Yarmouth Arms, Snelling, John, Pudding lane, Market place
-York Tavern, Eastaugh, Mrs. Mary, Castle meadow
-
-
-_Publishers_ (_see also Booksellers and Stationers_)—
-
-
-Blackie and Son, Upper St. Giles’ st. (John W. Nelson, agent)
-Fullarton and Co., 5, Davey place, (Paterson, Charles, agent)
-Harrison, Harrod, and Co., (directories) Somerleyton street
-Jarrold and Sons, London and Exchange streets
-London Printing and Publishing Co., (agent, Croxford, E., Magdalen st.)
-Virtue and Co., Jay’s terrace, Rose lane (F. Johnson, agent)
-
-
-_Pump Maker_—
-
-
-Shalders, J., (patent fountain) Bank plain (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 17)
-
-
-_Rag Merchants_—
-
-
-Bagshaw, George, Coslany street
-Cullingford, F., St. Benedict’s street
-Cullingford, Thomas, Botolph street
-Cullingford, William, Ber street
-Gardiner, William, St. Paul’s street
-Kent, Alfred, Upper Goat lane
-Newman, George F., King street
-
-
-_Register Offices for Servants_—
-
-
-Baker, Mrs. C., Redwell street
-Barker, Mrs. Mary, Orford hill
-Bayfield, Mrs. J. F., 7, Bank street
-Betts, John, Bethel street
-Cooke, Mrs. Eliza, St. Stephen’s gates
-Gaze, William H., Westlegate street
-Green, Miss Ann, Post Office street
-Johnson, Robert, Castle meadow
-Pitcher, Thomas, Rose lane
-Skipper, Henry, Magdalen street
-Whitehead, Mrs. A., Grapes’ hill
-
-
-_Rent and Debt Collectors_—
-
-
-Bardwell, George S., St. Stephen’s rd.
-Kerry, George, St. Mary’s
-Kerry, George Caythorpe, Elm hill
-Nockolds, Henry, Fox and Hounds’ court, Ber street
-Roach, Edward, Southwell road
-Stamp, W., Luckett’s court, St. Andrew’s
-
-
-_Rope_, _Twine_, _and Sacking Makers_—
-
-
-Archer, William, New Catton
-Bacon, Josiah N., 3, Davey place
-Clark, F. and Son, St. Clement’s
-Hindes, Henry and Son, Red Lion street and Magdalen street
-Hindes, W., Upper Westwick street
-Hurn, Daniel, Dove street
-Hurn, George, Dove street
-Nicholls, R., 11, City road, Lakenham
-Webb, William, jun., Magdalen street
-
-
-_Rulers_—
-
-
-Read, W. S., Elm hill
-Smith, W., Alden’s court, St. Stephen’s plain
-Steward, Samuel, Prince’s street
-
-
-_Saddlers and Harness Makers_—
-
-
-Abel, Cain, Golden Ball street
-Bowes, William, Upper Westwick st.
-Breese, Robert, Magdalen street
-Calver, John, All Saints’ green
-Chettleburgh, Robert, Tombland
-Dickerson, Richard, Castle hill
-Fuller, James, 23, Old Haymarket
-Gooch, Henry, St. James street
-Gowing, Charles, Castle hill
-Hallows, George, Rampant Horse st.
-Harbord, J. M., Upper St. Giles
-Howes, J. and J., Red Lion street
-Kemp, Thomas, Great Orford street
-Newton, J. and C., Lame Dog road
-Philo, Joseph, 44, London street
-Prentice, Samuel, Magdalen street
-Spratt, William, Chapel field
-Tooley, Peter, 3, Upper King street
-Wilkinson, Henry J., St. Giles’ street
-
-
-_Sail Maker_—
-
-
-Boult, Benjamin G., Barge yard, King street
-
-
-_Saw Mills_—
-
-
-Bird, Bailey, Philadelphia
-Cann, Samuel, Philadelphia
-Fitz-Patrick, James, Coslany street
-Gallant, George, Mousehold
-Saul and Frazer, St. Martin’s Palace plain
-
-
-_Sawyers_—
-
-
-Fryer, William, Union place
-Jennings, Samuel, Mousehold
-
-
-_Saw Makers_ (_see also Cutlers_)—
-
-
-Griffiths, Hannah, Lower Goat lane
-Kenyon, John, Lower Goat lane
-Lomas, William, Bridge street, St. Andrew’s
-
-
-_Scale_, _Beam_, _and Steelyard_, _Maker_—
-
-
-Stanley, George, Elm hill
-
-
-_Shawl and Dress Printers_—
-
-
-Price and Co., Bath House, St. Martin’s
-
-
-_Skipping Agent_—
-
-
-Barber, Henry, Lower Westwick st.
-
-
-_Shirt Makers_—
-
-
-Bird, Miss J., Timberhill street
-Boughen, William, Bank plain
-Fish, Mrs. Lucy, 51, Pottergate street
-
-
-_Shirt Makers_ (_continued_)—
-
-
-Kent, Henry, 3, London street
-Oxley, Richard, 6, London street
-Page, Joseph, 13, Briggs’ street
-
-
-_Shoe_ (_Ladies_) _and Fancy Warehouse_—
-
-
-Mingay, Geo. N., 7, Old Haymarket
-
-
-_Shopkeepers_ (_General_)—
-
-
-Allen, Thomas, Golden Ball street
-Anderson, William, Old church street, Lakenham
-Andrews, Thomas, St. Faith’s lane
-Annison, Robert, Little Globe street, Union place
-Armiss, Thomas, Barrack street
-Bacon, William, All Saints’ green
-Bancarlari, Dominico, Ber street
-Batson, John, Barrack street
-Bennett, John, St. Miles’ Church st.
-Bidwell, James, St. Faith’s lane
-Blyth, Josiah, (and baker,) Adelaide street, Heigham
-Blythe, Joshua, World’s End lane
-Bond, Elizabeth, Duke street
-Bond, George, Quaker’s lane
-Borking, T. P., Upper Westwick street
-Boulton, Edward, Gildengate street
-Brett, Thomas, Old Church street, Lakenham
-Brooks, William, Oak street
-Brown, Sophia, Philadelphia
-Bullard, Maria, Trowse
-Bunting, James, Coslany street
-Burrell, William, Cowgate street
-Burroughes, George, Magdalen street
-Butler, Thomas, Barrack street
-Campling, Paul, West Pottergate st.
-Carter, Henry, Cowgate street
-Carter, Thomas, St. James’ street
-Carver, Rebecca, 12, Surrey Terrace, Lakenham
-Carver, William, Ber street
-Carver, William, Trowse
-Catchpole, John, Cowgate street
-Cawdron, Henry, Bethel street
-Chapman, Mary Ann, Palace street
-Clarke, Royal, William street
-Claxton, Walter, New Catton
-Comer, Robert, Thorpe hamlet
-Cooper, J. D., Rampant horse street
-Copeman, E., Union st., Crook’s place
-Cork, Henry, Magpie road
-Creake, Elizabeth, Coburg street
-Cross, Daniel, Ber street
-Crotch, John, Barrack street
-Crowe, Elizabeth, Elm hill
-Cubitt, James, Lower King street
-Curtis, David, Philadelphia
-Curtis, Rebecca, Upper Regent street, Union place
-Davis, Thomas, Hall road
-Dawson, William, Magdalen street
-Dennington, Elizabeth, Silver street
-Drake, Mary, Church path, Lakenham
-Drake, Samuel, Lower Westwick st.
-Drege, William, World’s End lane
-Durrant, Mrs. M., Upper King street
-Dye, Henry, Upper King street
-Dyer, T., Union street, Crook’s place
-Earl, John, Magdalen street
-Edwards, James, St. Paul’s plain
-Evans, George, Barrack street
-Fair, Thomas, Bishopgate street
-Farrow, T., Chapel street, Union place
-Fisher, Mrs. Sarah, Oak street
-Flood, Francis, St. Martin’s lane
-Foster, John, Wellington street
-Foster, Thomas, West Pottergate st.
-Fountain, Elizabeth, Heigham street
-Francis, G., Trafalgar st., Lakenham
-Freeman, W., Chapel st., Union place
-Frost, Mary Ann, Magdalen street
-Gay, Edward, Heigham street
-Gedge, E. P., Brazen Doors road
-Gent, George, Bridge street, St. Miles’
-George, Robert Mills, St. Benedict’s st.
-Gibson, Alfred, Botolph street
-Gifford, Samuel, St. Benedict’s street
-Goreham, William, Rosemary lane
-Gravener, B., Lower Westwick street
-Green, Susan, St. James’ street
-Grief, Jonathan, Trowse
-Gurney, James, Julian street
-Hall, Jonathan, Somerleyton street
-Hardingham, William, Barrack street
-Hardyment, J., St. Benedict’s gates
-Hase, Thomas, Cowgate street
-Hill, Elizabeth, Upper King street
-Hill, Hezekiah, St. Augustine’s
-Holl, Charlotte, Peacock street
-Howell, Henry, Trafalgar street
-Howes, John, Bridge st., St. George’s
-Humphery, William, Pump street
-Hunn, Philip, Rising Sun lane
-Jackson, Wm., Coburg street
-James, John, Chapel st., Crook’s place
-Jay, Joseph, Lower King street
-Johnson, John, Ber street
-Kerridge, Elizabeth, St. Benedict’s st.
-Key, George, Oak street
-Key, Samuel, jun., Upper Heigham
-Kidd, Elizabeth, Cowgate street
-Knevett, Henry, Magdalen street
-Lacey, Esau, Bishopgate street
-Lake, John, Greyhound lane, St. Benedict’s road
-Large, John, Julian st., Julian place
-Larkman, James, Mousehold, Thorpe hamlet
-Larkman, William, Lower King st.
-Leeds, Sarah and Elizabeth, Tinkler’s lane, Heigham
-Llewfinly, Thomas, Cherry street, Lakenham
-Littleproud, James, Pottergate street
-Livingstone, Thomas, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Livock, Samuel, West Wymer street
-Loads, Henry, Lower King street
-Lockwood, M., St. Miles’ Church alley
-Long, Walter, Coslany street
-Lowne, James, Cowgate street
-Luckett, Henry, Pottergate street
-Mallett, Frederick, St. James’ street
-Mann, Joseph, St. Benedict’s road
-Mann, J., Oak street, St. Martin’s
-Marshall, Peter, Ber street
-Meek, Elizabeth, Tinkler’s lane
-Merris, William, New Catton
-Merry, Robert J., King Street gates
-Miles, John, Heigham Causeway
-Mortimer, William, Gildengate street
-Muirhead, Hannah, Colegate street
-Munday, T., Mill lane, New Catton
-Munford, G., Nelson st., Heigham
-Multitude, E., Cherry st., Lakenham
-Nockolds, Hannah, Barrack street
-Palmer, Thomas, Union place
-Parr, Thomas, Ber street
-Pearson, Robert, Cowgate street
-Pegg, Martha, Fisher’s lane
-Perowne, S., Nelson st., Heigham fields
-Pert, James, Magdalen street
-Pointer, Thomas, Magpie road
-Potter, Robert, St. Peter’s Southgate
-Press, Frederick G., Philadelphia
-Price, Joseph, Coslany street
-Prior, Robert, St. Martin’s at Oak
-Quantrell, Robert, Mousehold
-Quantrell, S., Chapel st., Union place
-Ransome, George, Bridewell alley
-Rattee, Charles, Grapes’ hill
-Rawling, Henry, West Pottergate st.
-Reynolds, Joseph J., Rupert street
-Roe, Samuel, Distillery street
-Royall, James, Elm hill
-Rushbrook, Robert, St. Julian’s st.
-Seaman, E., St. Martin’s at Palace
-Seaman, Henry, Old Church path, Lakenham
-Skoyles, Samuel, Barrack street
-Slaughter, C., St. Augustine’s street
-Smith, Alfred, Fishgate street
-Smith, Henry, Ber street
-Smith, James, Botolph street
-Smith, Miss L., Botolph street
-Spinks, James, St. Augustine’s gates
-Stannard, John, Magdalen street
-Steward, Henry, Bull close
-Stewardson, N. T., St. James’ street
-Storey, James, St. Augustine’s
-Stubbs, Maria, Barrack street
-Tench, James, Spitalfields
-Thompson, Benjamin, Thorn lane
-Thompson, Philip, Cherry street, Lakenham
-Tompson, Charles, Pitt street
-Turner, Sarah, Adelaide street
-Turrell, Joseph, Coburg street
-Tuttell, Anna Maria, Trafalgar street, Lakenham
-Tuttell, H., Trafalgar st., Lakenham
-Walker, Elizabeth, Ber street
-Waller, Martha, St. Paul’s opening
-Watering, J., Mill lane, New Catton
-Welch, Harriet, Lower King street
-Welch, Mary Ann, Lower King street
-Wiley, Samuel H., Cowgate street
-Willement, Mrs. Maria, St. Augustine’s street
-Willins, William, Castle meadow
-Wilson, Sarah, Barrack street
-Wood, Wm., Union street, Crook’s pl.
-
-
-_Shorthand Writers_—
-
-
-Algar, John G., (_Norfolk News_) Trory street, Unthank’s road
-Bayne, A. D., Portland place, Holl’s lane
-Bussey, H. E., (_Mercury_) Vauxhall st.
-Hanly J. Laffan, (_Chronicle_) Jubilee place, Heigham road
-Rogers, E. D., (_Norfolk News_) West parade, Earlham road
-Stafford, Hewley, (_Chronicle_) Mount Pleasant
-
-
-_Shuttle Maker_—
-
-
-Gaul, Edward John, Magdalen street
-
-
-_Silk Finisher_—
-
-
-Beloe, Henry, Coslany street
-
-
-_Silk Mercers_ (_see also Drapers_)—
-
-
-Abbot, Edward Jesse, Exchange st.
-Betts, John, Market place
-Blakely, E., West parade, Earlham rd.
-Caley, Nathaniel Henry, London st.
-Chamberlin, Sons and Co., Market place
-Coleman, Mrs. Ruth, London street
-Coleman, George L., Market place
-Cundall, Benjamin and Son, The Walk
-Edwards, Wm. P., St. Stephen’s st.
-Fairweather, Mrs. Lydia, London st.
-Fiske, Francis Robert, London street
-Kett, Wm. Woodhouse, London and Exchange streets
-Piper, William, London street
-Reid, Samuel, St. Andrew’s Hall plain
-Snowdon, H., Bridge st., St. George’s
-Snowdon, J. C. and Co., 9, The Walk
-Stocks, Alfred Josh., Briggs’ street
-
-
-_Silversmiths and Jewellers_—
-
-
-Allen, John Bonfield, 40, London st.
-Beha, Lickart and Co., St. Stephen’s plain
-Bell, Robert, Davey place
-Bloch, Israel, 47, Pottergate street
-Cooper and Son, 20, London street
-Dixon, Thomas, 6, Bridewell alley (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 8)
-Dodson, Wm. Robert, 27, London st.
-Etheridge, George, and William Ellis, 10, The Walk
-Gerard, William S., Botolph street
-Gunton, Henry, Briggs’ street
-Joseph and Samuel, Timberhill street
-Mackley, George Wm., Westlegate street
-Piggin and Dyball, Post Office street
-Priest, George, 3, Briggs’ street
-Rossi, George, Market place
-Salkind, S., (travelling) Gildengate st.
-Shalders, Noah, Westlegate street
-Shildrake, William, London street
-
-
-_Slate Merchants_—
-
-
-Culyer, E. S., Lower King street
-Morris, John, Lower King street
-
-
-_Soap Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Andrews, William, Fishgate street
-Brock, George, St. Augustine’s gates
-Durrant and Brock, St. Miles’
-
-
-_Soda Water Manufacturers_ (_see Ginger Beer_, _Lemonade_, _and Soda
-Water Manufacturers_)—
-_Solicitors_—
-
-
-Asker, Samuel Hurry, St. Giles’ street
-Atkinson, John G., Post Office street
-Bailey, E. C., Toll’s court, Briggs’ st.
-Bardwell, Everett, Lower close
-Beckwith, A. A. H., Palace street
-Blake, Francis John, Upper King st.
-Blake, John Joseph, Theatre street
-Blake, Keith, and Blake, The Chantry
-Brightwell and Son, Surrey street
-Cooper, John N. V., 3, The Crescent
-Cooper, Robert, Private Road villas, Unthank’s road
-Cullen, John B., Upper King street
-Dalrymple, Arthur, St. Giles’ street
-Dalton, Samuel, St. Giles’ terrace
-Daveney, Charles Burton, Bethel st.
-Day and Son, Upper Surrey street
-Dowson, John Withers, The Priory, Upper King street
-Durrant, George, Surrey street
-Dye, G. A., Broad street, St. Andrew’s
-Fickling, Robert, Prince’s street
-Field and Bignold, Upper Surrey st.
-Foster, Francis Gostling, St. Giles’ road
-Foster, (Sir Wm.) Sons, Burroughes, and Robberds, Crown Bank plain
-Fox, Frederick, Surrey street
-Fox, Thomas Colman, Victoria street
-Fraser, J. E., Bank chambers, Bank plain
-Freestone, Edward, Little Orford st.
-Gilman, Charles R., St. Giles’ street
-Gilman, Charles S., St. Giles’ street
-Goodwin, John, Willow lane
-Hansell, Henry, Upper close
-Hansell, Peter Edward, Upper close
-Jay and Pilgrim, Toll’s court, Briggs’ street
-Kerrison and Preston, Bank plain
-Kitson, John, Lower close and Thorpe hamlet
-Ling, Henry, Willow lane
-Mendham, Wace L., 8, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Miller, Son, and Bugg, Bank Chambers
-Mitchell and Clarke, Toll’s court, Briggs’ street
-Nixon, John Hindson, Bracondale
-Press, Edward, Tombland
-Pulley, Henry, Surrey street
-Rackham and Cooke, Tuck’s court, St. Giles’
-Robberds, John M., Ber street gates
-Sadd, William, Theatre street
-Sharp, Daniel, Surrey street
-Sharpe, Benj. T., Chapel Field road
-Simpson, George Elward, Tombland
-Skipper and Son, Bank street
-Stevens, William, The Close
-Steward and Fisher, King street
-Taylor, Adam and C., Orford place
-Taylor, John Oddin, St. Giles’ street
-Tillett, J. H., St. Andrew’s Broad str.
-Tuck, Charles E., St. Giles’ street
-Turner, Wm. N. H., Lower close
-Watson, F. E., Rampant Horse street
-Whaites, C., Samson’s crt, Tombland
-Wilkinson, Joseph, Prince’s street
-Willins, William, Castle meadow
-Wilson, William, 7, Victoria street
-Winter, James and Son, St. Giles’
-Woodcock, Thomas, Surrey road
-
-
-_Spirit Merchants_ (_see Wine and Spirit Merchants_, _and Brewers_)—
-_Starch Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Colman, J. and J., Carrow and Stoke Holy Cross
-
-
-_Stationers_—_Wholesale_ (_see also Booksellers and Stationers_)—
-
-
-Candler, John, Rampant Horse street
-Fletcher, Josiah, The Walk
-Jarrold and Sons, London street
-Page, S. D. and Son, 23, Old Haymarket
-
-
-_Stay and Corset Makers_—
-
-
-Aldis, Mrs. Jane, Prince’s street
-Baker, Mrs. S., Willow lane, St. Giles’
-Cann, Mrs. Mary, Fisher’s lane
-Farrow, Maria, Grapes’ hill
-Fenn, Mrs., Julian street
-Hubbard, Mrs. H., Westlegate street
-Leech, Jane, St. George’s plain
-Main and Norton, Mesds., Briggs’ st.
-Margerson, Mrs. H., St. Andrew’s hall plain
-Taylor, Elizabeth, (and elastic bandages) Upper St. Giles’
-
-
-_Steelyard Makers_—
-
-
-Drew, William and John, Ber street
-Stanley, George, Elm hill
-
-
-_Stock and Share Brokers_—
-
-
-Gilman, Charles S., St. Giles’ street
-Morgan, Edward C., 82, St. Giles’ st.
-
-
-_Stone and Marble Masons_—
-
-
-Allen, Wm., St. Stephen’s Back street
-Clarke, M., Distillery street, Heigham
-De Carle, Henry, Chapel Field road
-Hall, Samuel, Chapel Field road
-Hibberd, Amies, Chapel Field road
-Lloyd, Thomas, Rose lane
-Stanley, Joseph, St. Stephen’s street
-Stanley, Wm., St. Catherine’s plain
-Want, Frederick, Dereham road
-Watson, Ann and Sons, St. Faith’s lane and Castle meadow
-Whitehead, George, Grapes hill
-
-
-_Straw Bonnet Makers_—
-
-
-Barnes, Maria, Chapel street, Crook’s place
-Clare, Caroline, Magdalen street
-Clarke, Miss Maria, St. Gregory’s Church alley
-Cunningham, Emily, St. Miles’ Church alley
-Dobson, Sarah, St. Benedict’s street
-Felstead, Miss C., 20, Castle meadow
-Ford, Miss Ann, Wellington lane, St. Giles’
-Gent, Eliza, Muspole street
-Gooding, Mrs. Harriet, Red Lion st.
-Green, Miss Ann, Post Office street
-Hudson, E., West Pottergate street
-Leggett, Miss Sarah, 5, Crescent place
-Miles, Francis, Magdalen street
-Parsons, Miss J., Brazen Doors road
-Robbins, Mrs., West Pottergate street
-Scofield, Susan, Upper St. Giles’
-Stangroom, Caroline, Ber street
-Stannard, Harriet, Infirmary road
-Tye, Jemima, Ber street
-Walker, Mrs. Ann, Peacock street
-Wilson, Miss Jane, St. Paul’s
-
-
-_Straw Hat Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Laws, Robert, Westlegate street
-Riches, Miss S., Queen street
-
-
-_Surgeons_—
-
-
-Bell, John Crawford, Prince’s street
-Cadge, William, All Saints’ green
-Cooper, Emanuel, Tombland
-Cremer, Robert, Guardians’ dispensary, Elm hill
-Crickmay, Edward, Magdalen street
-Crook, John, Tombland
-Crosse, Thomas W., 22, St. Giles’ st.
-Dalrymple and Cadge, Surrey street
-Dashwood, L., St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Davis, John and Co., Pottergate st.
-Day, William H., All Saints’ green
-Dowson, Arthur H., Norwich dispensary, St. John’s Maddermarket
-Drake, Charles, All Saints’ green
-Firth, George W. W., 66, St. Giles’ st.
-Fox, John, Upper St. Giles’ street
-Francis W. Bransby, Colegate street
-Garthon, James S., Upper St. Giles’ st.
-Gibson and Bateman, 19, St. Giles’ st.
-Goodwin, Charles, Willow lane
-Holland, Edward C., St. Stephen’s rd.
-Hutchison, G. S., Surrey street
-Johnson, John Godwin, 64, St. Giles’
-Master, Alfred, Bethel street
-Morgan, Arthur Foster, St. Giles’ st.
-Muriel, Charles E., 64, St. Giles’ st.
-Nichols, William Peter, Surrey street
-Orris, Frederick, Magdalen street
-Payne, Sturley, Duke street
-Penrice, David, Tombland
-Pitt, John Ballard, St. Stephen’s st.
-Rand, William Fell, Tombland
-Spencer, C., jun., Lower King street
-Taylor, William Henry, Prince’s st.
-Thompson, Robert, Theatre street
-Thurgar, C. W., St. Catherine’s plain
-Watson, John F., Heigham
-Woodhouse, William, surgeon to Norwich Dispensary
-Woolterton, Robert, Tombland
-
-
-_Surgical Instrument Makers_—
-
-
-Allison, Mrs. S., Market place
-Branch, George, Golden Ball street
-Hewitt, William, Somerleyton street
-Lister, John, 10½, Old Haymarket
-Sawyer and Co., 42, London street
-
-
-_Surveyors_ (_see also Architects_)—
-
-
-Baldry, William, Priest’s buildings, St. Stephen’s road
-Benest, E. E., (City Surveyor) Board of Health Offices, Castle meadow
-Benest and Newson, Bank chambers
-Brown, John, (County Surveyor) King street
-Browne, William and Co., St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Bunn, John, 20, Pottergate street
-Butcher, Wm. and Sons, Theatre str.
-Ellis, John, Bank plain
-Espenett, W. H., Distillery street
-Hewitt, John, Theatre street
-Hinsbey, T. W., 18, Castle meadow
-Kitton, Robt., Tuck’s court, St. Giles’
-Loades, Benjamin, 55, Pottergate str.
-Millard and Son, Prince’s street
-Newton, Edward John, Bethel street
-Pontifex, S., 5, Dereham road terrace
-Pratt, Hornor, and Morgan, Queen st.
-Wright, J. and Son, Bank chambers
-Wright and Woodrow, Queen street
-
-
-_Tailors_—
-
-
-Allen and Co., Bank plain
-Allured, James, Timberhill street
-Balls, James, Little London street
-Barber, Benjamin, Lower King street
-Barber, George, St. John’s terrace, Ber street
-Barker, James, Muspole street
-Bennett, Henry, St. Augustine’s
-Bingham, Thomas, (and woollen draper) Post Office street
-Boddy, John C., William street
-Bond, Joseph D., Upper Goat lane
-Bond, William, (and woollen draper) London street
-Borking, Thomas, Willow lane
-Bray, Richard, 30, Pottergate street
-Briggs, Sampson, Golden Ball street
-Brown, George, Upper King street
-Bullard, William, 14, Exchange st.
-Burrage and Jeffries, (and outfitters) 2, Davey place
-Butler, Henry, Russell street
-Caley, John T., St. Benedict’s street
-Cannell, Albert F., Lower Goat lane
-Castleton, William S., Howard st., Lakenham
-Clifford, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Climpson, E., Hall road, Lakenham
-Cocks, Dennis, Magdalen street
-Cogman, Frederick, Prince’s street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 20)
-Colman, John, Bartholomew street
-Cole, John B., Post Office street
-Corbyn, Hartwell, Duke street
-Cory, Christmas, Calvert street
-Crisp, John W., Castle meadow
-Cullington, William, Lady’s lane
-Dawson, Edward, Scoles’ green
-Dawson, John, Ber street
-Denmark, John, New Catton
-Downes, Henry, Cowgate street
-Dowson, John, Ber street
-Drake, Thomas, Rose lane
-Duffield, Henry, 12, Exchange street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 13)
-Dye, George, Prince’s street
-English, Joseph, 45, London street
-Everett, William W., Red Lion street
-Fox, Henry, Dereham road
-French, Robert, Tabernacle street
-Fuller, Edward, Red Lion street
-George, John, Muspole street
-Gifford, Thomas, Magdalen street
-Grand, E., 13, Upper King street
-Grand, George, Castle meadow
-Gray, Richard, Grapes’ hill
-Grimwood, Thomas H., 4, Lower Goat lane (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 27)
-Hagon, George, Southwell street
-Harrison, William, Botolph street
-Hill, Michael, Colegate street
-Hipper, James, Rampant Horse street
-Hodds, Richard, Elm hill
-Hook, Samuel B., St. George’s plain
-Howlett, R., Bridge st., St. George’s
-King, William H., Trafalgar street
-Larkman, William, Gildengate street
-Ling, William S., 19, Castle meadow
-Livock, William T., London street
-Long, Walter, Coslany street
-Mackley, John E., Westlegate street
-Mallett, F. and C., London street
-Mann, Charles, Mount Pleasant
-Marshall, Joseph, Rampant Horse st.
-Meens, William, Bartholomew street
-Miller, William, Grapes’ hill
-Minns, S. W., St. Benedict’s street
-Mower, Henry, West Pottergate st.
-Murray, James, Russell street
-Murrell, Owen, St. Augustine’s
-Nickalls, William, St. Augustine’s
-Nockall, John, Elm hill
-Norton, Francis J., Back of the Inns
-Osborn, John, Little London street
-Page, Joseph, 13, Briggs’ street
-Parker, F., Southwell st., Lakenham
-Parker, Oliver, Thorpe hamlet
-Perowne, Joseph J., Heigham place
-Pickers, A. H., 34, Bartholomew st.
-Ramm, W., John street, Rose lane
-Ratcliffe, William, Distillery street
-Richardson, William, Bartholomew st.
-Riches, Henry C., Castle meadow
-Riches and Skoyles, (and outfitters) Davey place
-Riches, Thomas, Victoria street
-Riches, Thomas, Grapes’ hill
-Rider, S., St. Margaret’s Church alley
-Roberts, W. P., Chapel loke, Surrey road
-Roe, Samuel, Distillery street
-Rogers, Charles, Bethel street
-Rudd, Francis R., 4, St. Julian’s st.
-Rudd, George John, Surrey street
-Rust, James, Bethel street
-Royall, Daniel, Upper King street
-Salmon, John, West Pottergate street
-Salmon, Thomas, Rupert street
-Scott, Francis, Magdalen street
-Sharpe, Henry, Somerleyton street
-Skelton, John S., St. Giles’ street
-Slater, Joseph, Tombland
-Stallard, Joseph W., Orford hill
-Stamp, William, Colegate street
-Steward, Henry, Bull close
-Steward, James, Tombland
-Sutton, M. D., St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Talbot, G., Bridge st., St. Andrew’s
-Taylor, W. A., Jay’s terrace, Rose ln.
-Taylor, William S., Prince’s street
-Thirkettle, Robert, Wheelhouse’s crt., St. Giles’ road
-Todd, John and Son, Queen street
-Todd, William A., 16, London street
-Tooke, Michael, Vauxhall street
-Traxton, Edward, Lower close
-Trowse, Christopher, Ten Bell lane
-Tuddenham, Edward, Duke street
-Tuddenham, Henry, St. Augustine’s
-Turner, W., St. Stephen’s Church lane
-Watson, James H., 2, Charing cross
-Watts, H., Devonshire place, Heigham
-Whiting, George Jones, Heigham st.
-Wicks, Robert, Ber street
-Womack, George, White Lion street and Davey place
-Woods, John, West Pottergate street
-Woods, John, Tinkler’s lane
-Woods, Robert, John st., Rose lane
-Wyatt, Taylor, Paragon street
-
-
-_Tallow Chandlers_—
-
-
-Durrant and Brock, St. Miles’
-Durrant R., Church street, St. Miles’
-Freeman and Nash, Upper market
-Frost, Thomas, Fishgate street
-Large, John, Whitefriars’ street
-Large, John, Julian street, Julian place
-Neeve, Frederick, St. Stephen’s
-Pratt, William, Wensum street
-Pulham, William, St. Mary’s plain
-Shields, W., St. Stephen’s Church alley
-
-
-_Tanners_ (_see Felmongers_)—
-_Taverns_ (_see Publicans_)—
-_Ticket Writers_—
-
-
-Bullen, George, Catton road
-Love, Mrs. M. A., 2, Alma square, Julian place
-White, Robert, St. Benedict’s street
-
-
-_Timber Merchants and Dealers_ (_see also Merchants_)—
-
-
-Applegate, James, Pottergate street
-Batley, Chas., (agent) Thorpe hamlet
-Blyth, John, Quay side
-Blyth, William, St. Faith’s lane
-Blyth, William, St. Julian’s street
-Cushion, William, Lothian street
-Gaze, George, Grapes’ hill, St. Giles’
-Green, Robert and Son, Garden street, Thorn lane
-Hardy, William, Pitt street
-Hart, John, St. Giles’ street
-Jecks, W. and C., St. Faith’s lane
-Johnson, Charles, Trowse
-Johnson, Daniel, Trowse
-Mauser, William, Thorn lane
-Orfeur, John, Fishgate street
-Pigg, F., St. George’s Bridge wharf
-Saul, William Staff, Pottergate street
-Scales, Jeremiah, Chapel Field road and Oxford street
-Steward, Robert and Co., King street
-Wollistone, S., Cherry st., Lakenham
-
-
-_Tinmen_ (_see also Braziers_)—
-_Tobacconists_—
-
-
-Adcock, D., West lane, Aylsham road
-Brook, Thomas V., Bethel street
-Buxton, John, St. Stephen’s street
-Dyer, John J., Ber street
-Foulsham, William, Orford hill
-Fuller, William, Red Lion street
-Gibson, John, Pitt street
-Greene, Charles Jeremiah, Rose lane
-Griffenberg, Joseph, Coburg street
-Juba, E., St. George’s Bridge street
-Kitton, Frederick, Old Haymarket
-Levine, Joseph, Upper Westwick st.
-Levine, M., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Miller, Mrs. Amelia, London street
-Newbegin, James and Edward J., Bridewell alley and Market place
-Norton, Robert, Fye bridge
-Nowack, Edward, Lower Goat lane
-Pollard, W., Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Riches, Robert, Timberhill street
-Sanderson, Ann, Magdalen street
-Smith, John and S., 7, The Walk
-Spence, G., Bridge st., St. George’s
-Stevens, John, Back of the Inns
-Stowers, James, Red Lion street
-Sweatman, Mrs. E., Back of the Inns
-Taylor, W. B., St. Stephen’s gates
-Willsea, Mrs. H., Orford hill
-
-
-_Tobacco Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Kitton, Frederick, (and snuff) 10, Old Haymarket
-Middleton, John, Dereham road
-Newbegin, James and Edward J., (and snuff and cigar) Bridewell alley
-Stevens, John, (cigars only) Back of the Inns
-
-
-_Tobacco Pipe Makers_—
-
-
-Browne, Joseph, St. Stephen’s st.
-Fitt, N., Cherry street, Lakenham
-Lincoln, John, Pump street
-Metcalf, John, Coslany street
-
-
-_Tool Makers_ (_see also Plane Makers_, _Saw Makers_, _Wood Turners_,
-_&c._)—
-
-
-Cawdron, J., Duke street
-Griffiths, Mrs. H., Lower Goat lane and Pottergate street
-Hines, Charles, Muspole street
-Manning, George, Westlegate street
-
-
-_Tripe Dressers_—
-
-
-Howard, James, Thorn lane
-Juba, E., Bridge street, St. George’s
-
-
-_Toy Dealers_—
-
-
-Bush, G., Bridge st., St. Andrew’s
-Caprani, Lewis, and Co., White Lion street
-Ellison, Mrs. Frances, Dove street
-Golder, Mrs. H., Upper Westwick st.
-Lovett, Henry, St. Stephen’s street
-Rose, Mrs. Sarah, Castle street
-Slipper, Charles, (maker) Pig lane
-Smith, William, Lower Goat lane
-Steel and Rix, Queen street
-Swinden, John, Magdalen street
-Walker, R., St. George’s Bridge street
-
-
-_Trunk_, _Portmanteau_, _and Carpet Bag Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Frost, Mrs. Mary, 15, Davey place
-Tuxford, William, Back of the Inns
-
-
-_Truss Makers_—
-
-
-Allison, Mrs. S., St. Peter’s
-Goreham, W., Holl’s lane
-Taylor, George, Upper St. Giles’
-
-
-_Umbrella and Parasol Makers_—
-
-
-Balls, William, Bull close
-Forster, Edward, Chapel Field road
-Forster, John, 28, London street
-King, Tyrrell, St. Saviour’s lane
-Martin, Thomas L., 36, London st.
-Smith, Thomas, St. Benedict’s street
-
-
-_Upholsterers_, _Paper Hangers_, _&c._—
-
-
-Abel D., Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Clarke and Hunter, Dove street
-Corrick, William, St. Giles’ street
-Craske, James, Lower Goat lane
-Crowe, J. and Son, St. Stephen’s st.
-Fairhead, Maria, West Pottergate st.
-Freeman and Wells, 39, London st.
-Furse, James, Prince’s street
-Harmer, Robert, Carrow hill
-Howard, George, John st., Rose lane
-Huggins, Miss Maria, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Kirkham, Dennis, Redwell street
-Lawrence, William, 49, Pottergate st.
-Ostler, John, 20, Suffolk st. Heigham
-Page, James, Pottergate street
-Pigg and Greenwood, 14, London st.
-Priest, George, Coach and Horses rd., Union place
-Robertson, H., Grove rd., Lakenham
-Scott, Charles T., Gildengate street
-Scott, R., Charing crs. and St. John’s st.
-Sparks, William, Fye bridge
-Spooner, E. F., St. Margaret’s plain
-Tilley, Alfred, Lothian street
-Trevor, Henry, Post Office street
-Websdale, William, Surrey street
-
-
-_Venetian Blind Makers_—
-
-
-Furse, James Thomas, Prince’s street
-Howard, E. S., Rose lane
-Thurst, James, Castle meadow
-
-
-_Veterinary Surgeons_—
-
-
-Pratt, Richard, Northumberland st.
-Sayer, Daniel, Pottergate street
-Smith, William, Pottergate street
-Wells, Thomas, Castle meadow
-
-
-_Vinegar Makers and Distillers_—
-
-
-Hills and Underwood, St. Faith’s lane
-
-
-_Warehousemen_—
-
-
-Barker, Benjamin, Orford hill
-Chamberlin, Sons, and Co., Market place
-Coleman, George L., Market place
-Diggens and Co., Swan lane, and Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Frazer, W., Exchange street
-Pigg, Samuel and Sons, Haymarket
-Rivett and Harmer, Old Post Office yard, Market place
-Snowdon, Henry, Bridge street, St. George’s
-Snowdon, J. C. and Co., 9, The Walk
-Wade, Mrs. Frances, Redwell street
-Woodgate, Philip, Castle street
-
-
-_Watch and Clock Makers_—
-
-
-Abraham, B. and S. S., 1, Bethel st.
-Allen, John B., 40, London street
-Beha, Lickart, and Co., St. Stephen’s plain
-Bell, Robert, Davey place
-Bowles, Caleb, Bedford street, Unthank’s road
-Buckenham, John C., Tombland
-Bunn, Robert, Timberhill street
-Bush, Edward, St. Mary’s plain
-Daynes, John, Pitt street
-Dixon, Thomas, 6, Bridewell alley (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 8)
-Eagleton, G., 9, City road, Lakenham
-Etheridge, George and William Ellis, 10, The Walk
-Frary, V. W., Back of the Inns
-Fulcher, Christmas, Mousehold
-Gidney, Robert, Orford hill
-Gunton, Henry, Briggs’ street
-Hart, W. G., 46, London street
-Kehle, Joseph, Stump cross
-Kerrison, James, Magdalen street
-Linford, Robert, Red Lion street
-Moore, C., Coslany street, St. Mary’s
-Phillips, Samuel, Chatham place, Chapel Field road
-Piggin and Dyball, Post Office street
-Pratt, William, St. Benedict’s street
-Priest, George, 3, Briggs’ street
-Ransome, J., St. Andrew’s Bridge st.
-Rossi, George, Market place
-Russell, Benjamin, Magdalen street
-Shildrake, William, London street
-Woodrow, Robert, St. Catherine’s pl.
-Zipfel, Charles, Magdalen street
-Zipfel, John, King street
-Zipfel, Matthew, Bridge street, St. George’s
-
-
-_Well Sinker_—
-
-
-Howell, Henry, Baker’s road
-
-
-_Wharfingers_—
-
-
-Clarke and Reeve, Duke’s Palace wharf
-Rope, Robert W., St. Benedict’s st.
-
-
-_Wheelwrights_—
-
-
-Addison, Benjamin, Magdalen street
-Baldwin, William, Thorpe hamlet
-Betts, James, Julian place
-Blythe, Thomas, St. Augustine’s
-Franklin, C., Cardigan st., Heigham
-Huggins, John, Chapel Field road
-Le Grys, William, Trowse
-Page, James C., Bartholomew street
-Richardson, James, Timberhill street
-Riches, William, Barn road
-Scott, Levi, Brunswick road
-Tillett, James, St. Augustine’s gates
-Welton, Edward, Brazen Doors road
-
-
-_Whip Makers_ (_see also Saddlers and Harness Makers_)—
-
-
-Ashton, James, Ber street
-Hardy, Charles, Timberhill street
-Philo, Joseph, 44, London street
-
-
-_Whitesmiths_, _Locksmiths_, _Bell-hangers_, _&c._—
-
-
-Blazeby, William, Scole’s green
-Boswell and Bishop, Luckett’s court, St. Andrew’s Broad street
-Brooks, John, Golden Ball street
-Cullyer, C. and G., Cow hill
-Delf, John, Golden Ball street
-Dennis, Charles, St. Stephen’s gates
-Drew, W., Twiddy’s court, Ber street
-Finch, Walter, Elm hill
-Green, Edward, Duke street
-Key, Joseph, Calvert street
-Knevett, J., Upper Westwick street
-Palmer, Robert, St. Saviour’s lane
-Pank, Abraham, Bedford street, St. Andrew’s
-Reeve, Edward, Gildengate street
-Reeve, Edward, Duke street
-Rope, Charles, Surrey street
-Self, Thomas, Pottergate street
-Stammers, Robert, Castle hill
-Thirkettle, William, Timberhill street
-Thirtle, James, Thorn lane
-Tripp, John, Golden Ball street
-Waite, George, Redwell street
-Whall, W., St. Stephen’s Back street
-Wood, John, Magdalen street
-
-
-_Whiting Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Harvey, W. S., Wellington street
-Pearce, Philip, The Compasses, Upper King street
-
-
-_Window Glass Merchants_ (_see also Plumbers_, _Glaziers_, _&c._)—
-
-
-Jay, John, St. Andrew’s hill
-King, James and John, Prince’s st.
-Scott, W., Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-
-
-_Wine and Spirit Merchants_—
-
-
-Anthony, W., 12, Upper Market
-Arnold, George and Alfred Robert, St. Margaret’s plain
-Athow, Edward John, Castle street
-Back and Co., 3 and 4, Haymarket
-Barwell and Sons, St. Stephen’s st., London st., and St. Andrew’s hill
-Bolingbroke, Woodrow, and Co., Upper St. Giles’ st.
-Boswell, James F., St. Augustine’s
-Bullard, Richard, (brewer and spirit merchant) Bridge street, St. Miles’
-Cannell, H., (spirit) Unthank’s road
-Caston, John, St. Benedict’s gates
-Clabburn and Sparks, Magdalen st.
-Clarke, Charles, (brewer and spirit merchant) Coslany street
-Cubitt, William J., Magdalen street
-Dady, Mrs., Old Post Office court
-Geldart and Son, Wensum street
-Harman, Leonard and Sons, St. Andrew’s hill
-Hills and Underwood, St. Faith’s lane
-Hubbard, James, Magdalen street
-Morgan, J. B. and H., (brewers and spirit merchants) King street
-Morrison and Co., Market place
-Norgate and Co., St. Stephen’s street
-Read, William Dring, Orford hill
-Seaman, Grimmer, and Co., St. John’s Maddermarket
-Sparkes, Francis W., St. Giles’ street
-Steward, Patteson, Finch, and Co., Pockthorpe
-Wiseman, Isaac, Post Office street
-Youngs, Crawshay, and Youngs, (brewers and spirit merchants) King street
-
-
-_Wire Workers_—
-
-
-Andrews, Richard, Coslany street
-Lamb, Sarah, Golden Ball street (_see Advertisement_, _p._ 10)
-Wicks, Thomas, Tombland
-
-
-_Wood Turners_—
-
-
-Cawdron, Jonathan, Duke street
-Cunningham and Co., Cow hill, St. Giles’
-Cushing, Charles, St. Lawrence lane
-Debbage, Miles, Charing cross
-Ellison, Robert, Upper Goat lane
-Ellison, Mrs., Dove street
-Hayes, John, Magdalen street
-Hines, C., (and metal) Muspole street
-Mann, Joseph, St. Benedict’s road
-Plummer, N., Lower Westwick street
-Prentice, J. S., St. Augustine’s street
-Rudd, John, Thorn lane
-Rudd, James, Ber street
-Rust, Joseph, Charing cross
-Rust, Samuel, Beehive yard, St. Benedict’s street
-Simpson, Charles, St. Lawrence lane
-Simpson, Matthias, Fisher’s lane
-Wade, Thomas, Pitt street
-Watling, Francis, Oak street
-Wiggett, Henry, Oak street
-
-
-_Wood Carvers_—
-
-
-Bower, James, Holl’s lane
-Brown, Henry, Upper Westwick st.
-Bushnell, Joseph, Suffolk street
-Palmer, William, St. Lawrence lane
-Spaul, Fidelis J., Prince’s street
-Spaul, William B., (and stone) Lower close
-Webster, James, Ber street
-
-
-_Wool Dealers and Staplers_ (_see also Merchants_)—
-
-
-Champlin, G., St. Mary’s Church alley
-Chaplin, George, Muspole street
-Everett, John, Thorpe hamlet
-Everett, Joseph, Bishopgate street
-Hawkes, Robert W., Willow lane
-Seed, Henry, Muspole street, St. Mary’s
-
-
-_Woollen Drapers_ (_see Drapers and also Tailors_)—
-_Worstead Spinner_—
-
-
-Greenhough, J., St. Saviour’s lane
-
-
-_Writers and Grainers_ (_see Grainers and Decorative Painters_)—
-_Yeast Manufacturers_—
-
-
-Mills, James, Oak street
-Smith, John, St. Augustine’s street
-
-
-
-
-PUBLIC INFORMATION.
-
-
-POST OFFICE.
-
-
- _Postmaster_—SAMUEL BASE.
-
-Box closes at 10.15 a.m. for London; letters are received, with an extra
-stamp affixed, till 10.30 a m. For evening mail for London, box closes
-at 9 p.m.; letters received with an extra stamp till 9.30 p.m. There are
-three deliveries each day—morning at 7, afternoon at 2.15 p.m., and a
-local delivery at 7.5 p.m.
-
-Money orders are granted and paid here.
-
- _Arrivals_. _Mails_. _Departures_.
- 2.28 a.m. London. 10.35 a.m.
- 1.45 p.m. London. 9.40 p.m.
- 6.25 a.m. Ipswich. 5.35 a.m.
- 1.45 p.m. 7.20 p.m.
- 10.45 a.m. Yarmouth. 6.45 a.m.
- 6.20 p.m. 1.10 p.m.
- 10.0 p.m. 9.40 p.m.
- 6.45 p.m. Aylsham. 6.10 a.m.
- 6.45 p.m. Cromer.
- 6.20 p.m. Loddon. 6.45 a.m.
- 6.20 p.m. Reepham.
- 6.20 p.m. North Walsham.
- 6.20 p.m. Stalham.
-
- RECEIVING HOUSES—
-
-Charles George Brighten, St. Stephen’s gates.
-James Manthorpe, Lower King street.
-John Cox, Magdalen street.
-Mrs. Catherine Hill, Thorpe Hamlet.
-Reuben Girdlestone, 8, Upper St. Giles’ street.
-George Hunt, Dereham road.
-H. Fickling, New Lakenham.
-
-
-
-MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT.
-
-
-NORWICH—Writ suspended.
-FOR EAST NORFOLK—Major Wenman C. Coke / Edward Howes, Esq.
-FOR WEST NORFOLK—G. Bentinck, Esq. / Brampton Gurdon, Esq.
-
-
-
-CORPORATION.
-
-
-_Mayor_—George Middleton, Esq.
-_Deputy Mayor_—Edward Field, Esq.
-_Sheriff_—H. S. Patteson, Esq.
-_Town Clerk_—W. L. Mendham, Esq.
-
-
-
-JUSTICES OF THE PEACE.
-
-
- The Mayor for the time being (_ex offieio_).
-
-P. T. O’Malley, Esq., Q. C. (Recorder)
-Sir Samuel Bignold, Knt.
-Sir Robert John Harvey, Knt.
-John Hilling Barnard, Esq.
-Samuel Shalders Beare, Esq.
-John Betts, Esq.
-Robert Wiffen Blake, Esq.
-Horatio Bolingbroke, Esq
-Henry Browne, Esq.
-Robert Chamberlin, Esq.
-William Collyer, Esq.
-Edward Copeman, Esq., M.D.
-Charles Evans, Esq.
-William Freeman, Esq.
-John Henry Gurney, Esq.
-Robert John Harvey Harvey, Esq.
-John Godwin Johnson, Esq.
-John Marshall, Esq.
-Philip John Money, Esq.
-Nathaniel Palmer, Esq.
-Osborn Springfield, Esq.
-John Sultzer, Esq.
-Abel Towler, Esq.
-Charles Turner, Esq.
-Edward Willett, Esq.
-Charles Winter, Esq.
-Henry Woodcock, Esq.
-John Wright, Esq.
-William John Utten Browne, Esq.,
-Frederick Browne, Esq.
-Robert Fitch, Esq.
-Addison John Cresswell, Esq.
-Robert Seaman, Esq.
-Henry Willett, Esq.
-Charles Edward Bignold, Esq.
-
-
-
-CORPORATION OF GUARDIANS.
-
-
-_Governor_—J. G. Johnson, Esq.
-_Deputy Governor_—William Wilde, Esq.
-_Treasurer_—R. J. H. Harvey, Esq.
-_Clerk_—E. C. Bailey, Esq.
-
-
-
-DIGNITARIES OF THE DIOCESE.
-
-
-_Bishop_—The Hon. and Right Rev. John Thomas Pelham, D.D.
-_Dean_—The Hon. and Very Rev. George Pellew, D.D.
-_Archdeacon_—The Venerable R. E. Hankinson.
-_Canons_—Revds. C. N. Wodehouse, A.M.; A. Sedgwick, M.A.; G. Archdall,
-D.D.; H. Philpott, D.D.
-_Minor Canons_—Revds. George Carter, M.A.; George Day, M.A.; J. C.
-Matchett, M.A.; H. Symonds, M.A.
-_Chancellor_—C. Evans, Esq., M.A.
-_Bishop’s Chaplains_—Revds. C. N. Wodehouse and J. J. S. Perowne, M.A.
-_Bishop’s Secretary_—John Kitson, Esq.
-_Proctor for the Chapter_—Henry Philpott, D.D.; _for Archdeaconry of
-Norfolk_, A. M. Hopper, M.A.
-
-
-
-BANKERS.
-
- _Style of Firm_. _Partners_. _Draw on in _Limit of Note
- London_. Circulation_.
-Gurneys and Daniel Gurney, Barclay, Bevan £105,519
-Birkbeck, Bank John Henry and Co.
-plain Gurney, Henry
- Birkbeck, Francis
- Hay Gurney,
- William Birkbeck,
- and Charles Henry
- Gurney
-Harveys and Sir Robert John Hankey & Co. £49,071
-Hudsons, (Crown Harvey, Knt., and
-Bank) King street Robert John
- Harvey Harvey
-East of England William Stitt London & £25,025
-Bank, Haymarket Wilson, manager Westminster Bank
-Savings Bank, Haymarket, Edward Hare, actuary
-
-PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS.
-
-
-ASSEMBLY ROOMS, Theatre street. James Woods, conductor.
-AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION, Little Orford street. E. S. Bailey, secretary.
-CHAMBER OF COMMERCE OFFICES, St. Giles’ street. Charles S. Gilman,
-secretary.
-CITY JAIL, St. Giles’ gates. Robert Campling, governor.
-CLERICAL READING ROOMS, Upper Close. Rev. J. L. Browne, and Revd. W. F.
-Patteson, secretaries.
-COUNTY COURT OFFICE, Redwell street. T. J. Birch, Esq., judge; T. H.
-Palmer, registrar; W. Wilde, junr., high bailiff.
-CORN EXCHANGE, Exchange street. Didwell, bailiff.
-COUNTY JAIL, Castle hill. Robert Pinson, governor.
-ELECTRIC AND INTERNATIONAL TELEGRAPH OFFICE, The Walk. Henry Draper,
-superintendent.
-FREE LIBRARY, St. Andrew’s (corner of Duke street), John Harper,
-librarian.
-HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY. E. S. Bignold, Esq., honorary secretary.
-INLAND REVENUE OFFICE. J. Wild, receiver; John Quin, supervisor.
-LOCAL BOARD OF HEALTH. H. B. Miller, clerk; E. E. Benest, surveyor;
-Samuel Clarke, inspector.
-NORFOLK AND NORWICH LITERARY INSTITUTION, St. Andrew’s. John Quinton,
-librarian.
-NORFOLK AND NORWICH MUSEUM, St. Andrew’s. Henry Stevenson, Esq., hon.
-sec.
-PUBLIC LIBRARY, Market place. Edward Langton, librarian.
-SAINT ANDREW’S HALL, St. Andrew’s plain. William Dunn, keeper
-SCHOOL OF ART, St. Andrew’s. C. L. Nursey, bead master; F. T. Keith,
-Esq., honorary secretary.
-STAMP OFFICE, Bank street. F. Foster, distributor.
-SUBSCRIPTION READING ROOMS AND BILLIARD ROOMS, Market place. Henry Kemp,
-proprietor.
-TAX OFFICE, Orford hill. Michael Kelly, and Charles Stringer, surveyors.
-THEATRE ROYAL, Theatre street. William Sidney, lessee.
-YOUNG MEN’S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION, St. Giles’ street. S. True,
-secretary.
-
-
-
-CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS.
-
-
- _These are very numerous_; _the following are the principal_:
-
-_Norfolk and Norwich Hospital_, St. Stephen’s gates. E. Houghton, house
-steward and secretary.
-_Bethel_, Bethel street. James Dodd, master.
-_Great Hospital_, Bishopgate street. George Simpson, governor.
-_Doughty’s Hospital_, Calvert street. Robert Minns, master.
-_Eye Infirmary_, Pottergate street. Mrs. Bennett, matron.
-_District Visiting Society_, Pottergate street. E. Watson, J. C.
-Barnham, and J. N. Waite, Esqs., hon. secs.
-_Norwich Dispensary_, St. John’s Maddermarket. Mr. W. Wodehouse,
-resident surgeon.
-_Homœopathic Hospital_, Orford hill. Mrs. H. Gray, matron.
-_Indigent Blind Institution_. E. W. Yarington, secretary; Mrs. De Carle,
-matron.
-_Jenny Lind Infirmary for Sick Children_, Pottergate street. Mrs.
-Stannard, matron.
-_Norwich Lying-in Charity_, Pottergate street. Mrs. Stannard, matron.
-_Orphan’s Home_, Pottergate street. Mrs. Carr, matron.
-_Workhouse_, Dereham road. William Tallack, master. (In connection with
-the Workhouse are Boys’ and Girls’ Homes, Dispensary, Asylum, &c.)
-
-
-
-PUBLIC OFFICERS.
-
-
-_Recorder_—P. F. O’Malley, Esq., Q.C.
-_Judge of Borough Court of Record_—N. Palmer, Esq.
-_Registrar of Borough Court_—Henry Miller.
-_Town Clerk_—W. L. Mendham.
-_Clerk of the Peace_—A. Dalrymple.
-_City Treasurer_—F. Simpson.
-_Coroner_—William Wilde, St. Stephen’s.
-_Coroner for the County of Norfolk_—Edward Press, All Saints’ green.
-_Coroner for the liberty of the Dean and Chapter_—Charles Evans, Esq.
-_Governor of Castle_—George Pinson.
-_Governor of City Jail_—Robert Campling.
-_Clerk to Income Tax Commissioners_—J. H. Tillett, St. Andrew’s.
-_Clerk to City Magistrates_—William Day.
-
-
-
-PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
-
-
-_Norwich Grammar School_, The Close. Rev. A. Jessopp, head master; Rev.
-H. M. Crowther, M.A., sub-master.
-_Model_, for Boys, Prince’s street. William Bellamy, master.
-_Model_, for Girls, St. Andrew’s. Miss M. A. Barnacle, mistress.
-_Model_, for Infants, Post Office street. Mrs. Hannant, mistress.
-_Normal_, Cowgate street. William Alden, master.
-_Diocesan Training Institution for School Mistresses_, St. George’s
-plain. Rev. W. C. Davey, M.A., principal; Miss H. A. Le Mesuriér,
-matron.
-_Presbyterian_, King street. H. Booty, master.
-_Hospital_, Fishgate street. F. J. Gidney, master; Mrs. M. Gidney,
-mistress.
-_Blind_. Magdalen street. Mrs. M. A. Elmer, matron; Miss A. Harrill,
-school-mistress.
-_Stanley Home and Training School for Servants_. Mrs. E. Churchman,
-governess; Miss H. Critton, school-mistress; Mrs. Brown, infant nursery.
-_Infant_, Lakenham. Mrs. Lincolne, mistress.
-_St. Mark’s_, Hall lane, Lakenham. Mr. Earl, master.
-_Government School of Art_. F. T. Keith, Esq., Hon. Secretary; C. L.
-Nursey, head master.
-_Industrial School_ (under government inspection). Miss L. Talmedge,
-mistress.
-_Free_, (Episcopal) Union place. Miss Taylor, mistress.
-_Catholic_, Maddermarket. P. White, master; Miss M. A. Cannell,
-mistress.
-_Lancasterian_ (_British_), College court, St. Martin’s at Palace. S.
-North, master.
-_Congregational_, Colegate street. B. Farmer, master; Miss E.
-Hicklenton, mistress; Miss B. Cooke, infants’ mistress.
-_National_, St. Paul’s. William Whiting, master; Miss E. Chettle,
-mistress.
-_National_, St. James’, Pockthorpe. William Nunn, master.
-_National_, Heigham. William Alden, master; Mrs. M. A. Honey, and Miss
-A. Platten, mistresses.
-_National_, Mixed, Bishopgate. Miss E. Johnson, mistress; Miss M.
-Steward, assistant.
-_National_, Trowse. Miss Stageman, mistress; Miss A. Dent, infants’
-mistress.
-_National_, St. Peter’s Mancroft. F. Phillips, master.
-_National_, St. Martin’s at Oak. James Garwood, master; Miss E. Elmore,
-mistress.
-_National_, Thorpe hamlet. G. R. Braid, master; Miss A. Stacey,
-mistress, Miss A. Weeds, infants’ mistress.
-_District_, Gurneys, Surrey mews. Mrs. E. Greenwood, mistress.
-_District_, Geary’s, St. Augustine’s. E. Starling, master; Miss S.
-Davis, mistress.
-_District_, For St. Stephen’s, All Saints’ Timberhill, and Thorn. F.
-Hardy, master; Miss S. Burrage and Miss E. Fodder, mistresses.
-_District_, For St. Peter’s Mancroft, Maddermarket, Gregory, Lawrence,
-Giles, and Margaret. James Bilby, master; Mrs. M. A. Starkey, mistress.
-_British_, Heigham Causeway. Mr. Rutherford, master; Miss Maria Newton,
-mistress of infants’ school.
-_British_, Independent, Coslany street. Miss Lydia Anthony, mistress.
-_British_, Unitarian, Calvert street. Miss Mary Ann Starling, mistress;
-Miss Rachel Howe, infants’ mistress.
-_British_, New City Infantile, Union place. Miss Mary Wilson, mistress.
-_British_, Pockthorpe, Silver road. Edwin Steel, master; Mrs. Steel,
-mistress.
-_British_, Trowse. Miss E. J. Tomkins, mistress.
-_British_, New Lakenham. Mr. Hopper, master; Miss Warne, mistress.
-
-
-
-COUNTY POLICE.
-
-
-_Head Quarters_—Castle Meadow.
-_Chief Constable_—Captain George Black.
-_Deputy Chief Constable_—Henry Atthill.
-_Chief Superintendent_—Bernard Andrews.
-_Sergeants_—(who take rank as detective officers) James Carter and Edward
-Robert Garrod.
-
-
-
-CITY POLICE.
-
-
-_Chief Constable_—Robert Hitchman.
-_Superintendents_—E. Peck, S. Amis.
-_Inspectors_—Barnard, Steward (detective), and Curtis.
-_Sergeants_—Ireland, Minns, Fransham, Osborne, Hayhow, Smith, Nary, and
-Bedford
-_Summoning Officer_—John Morter.
-
-
-
-REGISTRARS.
-
-
-_Superintendent Registrar_—Francis John Blake, King street.
-_Registrar of Births_, _Deaths_, _&c._, _for the Conisford
-District_—Charles Drake, All Saints’ green.
-„ „ _East Wymer District_—J. Brownfield, Magdalen street.
-„ „ _West Wymer District_—L. Dashwood, St. Andrew’s.
-„ „ _Mancroft District_—T. W. Crosse, St. Giles’.
-„ „ _Coslany District_—W. B. Francis, Colegate street.
-_Registrars of Marriages_—I. O. Taylor, St. Giles’; J. Restieaux, Lady’s
-lane.
-
-
-
-NEWSPAPERS.
-
-
-_Norfolk Chronicle_ (conservative)—Matchett and Stevenson, proprietors,
-Market place.
-_Norfolk News_ (liberal)—Proprietary; Thomas William Bond, publisher,
-Exchange street.
-_Norwich Mercury_ (whig)—Richard Noverre Bacon, proprietor, London
-street.
-
-
-
-RAILWAY STATIONS.
-
-
-_Thorpe_—H. B. Sproul, station-master.
-_Victoria_—William Seeley, station-master.
-_Trowse_—William George Gay ford, station-master.
-
-
-
-
-A GUIDE TO STREETS, LANES, YARDS, &c.
-
-
-_Right and left are given in the direction from the Market place_,
-_except where otherwise expressed_. _The following abbreviations are
-used_:—bef. _before_, ch. _church_, ct. _court_, fr. _from_, l _left_,
-la. _lane_, nr. _near_, op. _opposite_, pl. _place_, r _right_, rd.
-_road_, s _side_, st. _street_, yd. _yard_, &c.
-
-Adelaide buildings—r s Dereham rd., adjoining Adelaide st.
-Adelaide street—r s Dereham rd., first turn past Holl’s lane and Dial inn
-Albemarle street—fifth turn on l fr. Union st.
-Albert place—St. Stephen’s sq.
-Aleck’s yard—l s Lower King street, nearly op. the Three Tuns
-Alefounders’ yard—r s Lower Westwick, op. The Drum
-Alden’s court—r s Ber st., op. St. Michael’s at Thorn church
-Alderson’s buildings—l s St. Catherine’s plain, op. Gloucester place
-All Saints’ green—extending from the top of Westlegate st. to Upper
-Surrey st.
-All Saints’ street—First turn to r at top of Timberhill st., leading to
-All Saints’ green
-All Saints’ Tavern yard—r s All Saints’ green, nr. All Saints’ tavern
-Alma square—first turn to r in Vauxhall st.
-Alma street—r s Dereham rd., just before reaching Distillery inn
-Alma terrace—l s Bishopgate st., nr. Rose and Crown
-Alms lane—l s Gildengate st., leading into Muspole st.
-Anchor yard—l s Surrey st., nr. Anchor inn
-Andrews’ yard—l s St. Stephen’s st.
-Angel street or Royal Hotel street—back of Royal Hotel yd., leading to
-Castle meadow
-Angel yard—r s Oak st., op. Suffolk arms
-Apollo buildings—Norfolk st., Union pl.
-Arabian Horse yard—r s Oak st., just beyond St. Martin’s eh.
-Arnold’s court—l s Gildengate st., nearly op. Crown and Anchor
-Arundel place—row of white houses, r s Dereham rd., nearly op. Swiss
-Cottage tavern
-Assembly rooms—Theatre st., op. Lady’s la.
-Asylum road (see Private rd.)
-Austin court—first court l s Bethel st.
-Back of the Walls—leading fr. St. Augustine’s gates to Magdalen gates
-Badding’s lane—l s Palace plain, leading to Quay side
-Baddy’s yard—op. Barrack loke, Barrack st.
-Bailey’s buildings—l s West Pottergate st., nearly op. Lawrence st.
-Bailey’s yard—l s Magdalen st., nr. the Jolly Brewers
-Bakers’ Arms yard—r s Ber st., nr. Bakers’ Arms
-Baker’s road—leading fr. St. Martin’s gates to St. Augustine’s
-Baker’s row—l s World’s End lane
-Baker’s yard—l s Barrack st., nr. Kossuth tavern
-Baldwin’s buildings—l s Dereham rd.
-Baldwin’s yard—r s Oak st., second yd. past Fellmonger’s Arms
-Bank Chambers (in Bank place)
-Bank place—leading fr. Gurney’s bank to Castle meadow
-Bank plain—op. Gurney’s bk., top of London st.
-Bank street—over Bank plain, to the r leading to King st., op. Harvey and
-Hudson’s bank
-Barnes’ yard—r s Magdalen st., op. White Horse
-Barnes’ yard—r s St. Augustine’s, nearly op. St. Augustine’s ch.
-Barn road—St. Benedict’s gates, r s opposite Paul Pry hill
-Barracks—l s Barrack st., at foot of Mousehold
-Barrack loke—l s Barrack st., nearly op. the Light Horseman
-Barrack street—continuation of St. James’ st., leading to Mousehold
-Barrack yard—r s Coslany st., op. Waggon and Horses
-Bartholomew street—first st. r s Thorn lane, fr. Ber st.
-Bath House yard—Oak st., next Bath House inn
-Baxter’s gardens—r s Lower King st., nr. the Steam Packet
-Baxter’s yard—King st. (see Page’s yd.)
-Bayfield’s yard—r s Stump Cross, Magdalen st.
-Bazaar court—St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Bear and Staff yard—Fisher’s lane
-Bear yard—on the Gentleman’s walk
-Beckham’s yard—r s Cowgate st., fr. Palace plain, op. Queen’s head
-Beckham’s yard—l s Magdalen st., op. Cowgate st.
-Bedford street (St. Andrew’s)—leading fr. juncture of Exchange and
-Post-office sts. to St. Andrew’s hill and London st.
-Bedford street—first st. l s Unthank’s rd.
-Bee Hive yard—r s St. Benedict’s st., next Beehive inn
-Bell yard—l s Bethel st., op. Gold-beaters’ Arms
-Bennett’s court—Upper market
-Ber street—from junction of Golden Ball and Timberhill sts. to Richmond
-hill
-Bethel street—entrance from Upper Market near St. Peter’s ch.
-Bethel street opening—second turn l s Bethel st., leading into Chapel
-Field
-Betts’ buildings—l s West Pottergate st., nr. Eagle Tavern
-Bishopgate street—over Tombland, thro’ Palace plain and Tabernacle
-st.—leads to Mousehold
-Black Boy yard—r s Barrack st. nr. Black Boy inn
-Black Boy yard—round Colegate st. nearly op. entrance to Calvert st.
-Black Horse yard—r s Lower Westwick st., just past Bridge st.
-Blake’s yard—r s Heigham st., just bef. reaching Orchard tavern
-Blackfriars’ bridge—between St. Andrew’s and St. George’s
-Blaze yard—l s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, by General Windham’s Arms
-Blazeby’s buildings—in Prospect sq., r s Scoles’ green
-Blazeby’s court—second ct. r s Bethel st.
-Bloomsbury place—third turn r s Rose lane
-Bloomsbury place—l s Dereham rd., just past City rd.
-Boarded entry—l s Ber st., just before reaching Royal Oak
-Boarded House lane—nr. Boarded House inn, Cattle market
-Botolph street—from Stump cross to St. Augustine’s st.
-Bracondale—fr. Richmond hill (Ber st. gates) to Trowse
-Brazen Door road (or Lame Dog road)—l s St. Stephen’s gates, leading into
-Upper Surrey st.
-Brewhouse yard—Coslany st.
-Bridewell alley—first thoroughfare on the l in Bedford st., St. Andrew’s
-Bridge street, St. Andrew’s—fr. St. Andrew’s pl. to Blackfriars’ bridge
-Bridge street, St. George’s—over Blackfriars’ bridge
-Bridge street, St. Lawrence—fr. Lower Westwick st. on the r op. St.
-Lawrence ch.
-Bridge street, St. George’s—past the end of St. Andrew’s hall, leading to
-Colegate st.
-Bridge street, St. Miles’—first turn on r s Lower Westwick st., leading
-to Coslany st.
-Briggs’ lane—l s Lower King st., (nearly op. St. Julian’s ch.) leading
-down to the river
-Briggs’ street—short st. leading fr. Haymarket, on a line with the
-Gentlemen’s walk
-Briggs’ yard—l s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, nearly op. Black Chequers
-Broad st., St. Andrew’s—r and l at bottom of Post Office st.
-Brownfield’s court—r s Magdalen st. bef. reaching St. Saviour’s ch.
-Browne’s court—St. Stephen’s st.
-Brown’s buildings—St. Faith’s la.
-Brown’s yard (see Cockey yd.)
-Brundell’s court—l s Redwell st.
-Brunswick road (or Waterloo st.)—first turn to r on Newmarket rd.,
-leading to Union pl.
-Buck’s yard—l s Coslany st.
-Buff Coat lane—l s Golden Ball st., leading to Pump st.
-Bull close—r s Cowgate st. fr. Palace pl., just bef. reaching Magdalen
-st.
-Bull lane—l s St. Stephen’s st., op. Coburg st.
-Bull’s Head yard—r s Ber st., nr. the Forrester’s Arms
-Bunn’s yard—St. Benedict’s Church alley
-Burrell’s yard—r s Magdalen st., op. King’s Head
-Burfield place—Heigham rd., r s from Dereham rd.
-Butter hills—run fr. top of Bracondale to Carrow bridge
-Cadogan place—Bedford st., Unthank’s rd.
-Caledonian terrace—r s Dereham rd., op. Charles st.
-Calvert street—thro’ Bridge st. to the r and then to the l, leads fr.
-Colegate st. to Botolph st.
-Cambrian place—r s Heigham rd. fr. St. Giles’ rd.
-Cannell’s court—St. Giles’, op. Unity offices
-Cannell’s court—l s Ber st., just past King Arms
-Carlisle terrace—l s Rupert st., just bef. reaching Essex st.
-Carrow hill—l s Richmond hill, leading down to Carrow bridge
-Castle court—l s Oak st., next Key and Castle inn
-Castle meadow and Castle hill—open space round the Castle
-Castle street—first turn r s London st., leading to Davey pl.
-Chapel field—open space at end of Theatre st., and back of Bethel and
-Upper St. Giles’ sts.
-Chapel Field grove—in Chapel field, nr. the new Congregational chapel
-Chapel Field road—fr. St. Stephen’s gates to St. Giles’ gates
-Chapel loke—narrow thoroughfare l s Surrey rd. leading into Ber st.
-Chapel st. (Union place)—fourth turn l s Vauxhall st.
-Chapel street, Lakenham—first turn to r in Ch. pathway, fr. Southwell rd.
-Chapel street, Crook’s pl.—first turn to r fr. Crook’s pl. entrance
-Chapel yard—r s Botolph st., nr. Old Globe inn
-Chapel yard—l s Oak st., joining Suffolk Arms
-Chapman’s court—St. Giles’, op. Ch. door
-Chantry—Theatre st., nr. Assembly room pl.
-Chantry yard—St. Miles’ ch. alley
-Charing cross—fr. corner of Duke’s palace st. (by Free Library) to the
-junction of Upper and Lower Westwick sts.
-Charles street—fourth turn on l s, past St. Benedict’s gates
-Chatham place—Chapel Field road, on the r fr. St. Stephen’s gates
-Chequers’ passage—St. George’s Middle st.
-Cherry lane—r s Pitt st., leading into Gildengate st.
-Cherry street—r s Hall rd., op. National school
-Cherry street (short)—back of Cherry st.
-Cherry Tree yard—l s Gildengate st., nr. Cherry Tree inn
-Church pathway—r s Hall rd., leading to Southwell rd.
-Church street, New Catton—r s New Catton rd., just before reaching
-Christ-ch.
-Church street, St. Miles’—bottom of Duke st. to the l
-Church street, St. Julian’s—leading fr. St. Julian’s Ch. alley to Garden
-st., Thorn la.
-Church walk, St. Michael’s at Plea—by the side of the ch., Redwell st.
-Cinder Ovens yard—l s King st. gates, between the Cinder Ovens and Ship
-Inns
-City road, Heigham fields—Dereham rd. l s, next turn to Distillery st.
-City road, Lakenham—leading off Richmond hill to the r
-Clabburn’s yard—last yard l s Magdalen st.
-Clement court—l s Redwell st., fr. plain, op. Queen st.
-Clifton cottages—Suffolk st., Union pl.
-Close (upper and lower)—precincts of cathedral, reached fr. Market pl.,
-through London st. and Queen st., and across Tombland
-Coach and Horses road—first turn to r in Union st., Union pl.
-Coach and Horses’ yard—l s Bethel st. next C. and H. inn
-Coburg street—r s St. Stephen’s gates, running at the Back Chapel Field
-rd.
-Cock yard—l s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, just past Queen’s Head
-Cock yard—l s Upper St. Giles’, just past Cock inn
-Cockey lane—l s Lower King st., op. the Waterman
-Cockey yard (or Brown’s yard)—r s Lower Westwick st. nr. Drum inn
-Coe’s yard—r s St. Benedict’s st., op. Lord Howe inn
-Cogman’s yard—r s Ber st. op. Thorn lane
-Coldstream terrace—r s Bedford st. from Unthank’s rd.
-Coleby place—Lower Westwick st.
-Colegate street—bottom of Bridge st., St. George’s, r and l
-College court (or Lancasterian school yard)—l s Palace st., nr. Rose
-tavern
-Compass street—l s Mariners’ lane, fr. King st., nr. Mariners’ tavern
-Cook’s lane—l s Upper King st., between Crown Bank and Rose la. corner
-Corain plain—r s Church st., New Catton
-Coslany street—down Lower Westwick st., and over St. Miles’ bridge
-Cow hill—St. Giles’, first turn on the r past the ch.
-Cossey’s yard—r s Botolph st.
-Cove terrace—r s Rupert st.
-Cowgate street—first st. on the r in Magdalen st. after passing Stump
-Cross
-Creak’s yard—r s Fishgate st., op. Pigeon inn
-Cremorne buildings—r s Vauxhall st., op. Globe st.
-Cremorne place—back of Cremorne buildings, Vauxhall st.
-Crescent The—on the Chapel Field road l s fr. St. Stephen’s
-Crick’s buildings—Fishgate st.
-Crocodile yard—r s Heigham st., op. Crocodile inn
-Crook’s place entrance—first turn to left on Chapel Field rd. fr. St.
-Stephen’s
-Crook’s yard—St. George’s pl.
-Cross lane—r s Gildengate st. leading into Calvert st.
-Cross street—Unthank’s rd., connects Bedford and Trory sts.
-Crown and Anchor yard—r s Gildengate st., leading into Calvert st.
-Curriers’ Arms yard—adjoining Curriers’ Arms, l s St. Giles’ st.
-Curtis’ buildings—l s West Pottergate st.
-Dabson’s court—Stump cross
-Daplyn’s buildings—r s West Pottergate st., op. Paragon st.
-Davey place—leading fr. Gentlemen’s Walk (op. Duke of Wellington statue)
-Dawson’s yard—r s Coslany st., up a passage just before reaching Sun inn
-Dayle’s lane—first la. r s Charing Cross
-Day’s court—first ct. r s Bethel st., principal entrance from Upper
-Market
-Denmark place—Kimberley st., Unthank’s rd.
-Dereham road—straight out St. Benedict’s gates
-Dereham road terrace—row of 8 red-br. houses r s Dereham rd. just past
-entrance to Adelaide st.
-Devonshire place—r s Holl’s la.
-Dial yard—r s Barrack st., just past the Cellar House
-Dial yard—l s Coslany st., op. St. Michael’s of Coslany ch.
-Distillery street—second st. past jail, r s St. Giles’ rd., leading thro’
-into Dereham rd.
-Distillery yard—l s Coslany st., op. Greenland Fishery
-District Visiting Society, 104, Pottergate st.
-Dix’s buildings—Coslany st.
-Dixon’s court—r s Bethel st., op. Coach and Horses
-Dog yard—r s Oak st., op. Jolly Skinners
-Dolphin yard—first yd. r s. of Oak st. next Dolphin inn
-Doughty’s or Old Man’s hospital—Calvert st.
-Douro terrace—in Heigham grove
-Dove street—adjoining Messrs. Chamberlin’s shop, leads fr. north side
-Market-place into Pottergate st.
-Drake’s court—3rd ct. l s Gildengate st.
-Duck lane—last la. r s Pottergate st., just before reaching Grapes’ hill
-Duke’s palace—commencement of Duke st.
-Duke st.—leading fr. corner of St. Andrew’s Broad st. and Charing Cross,
-to Pitt st.
-Duke terrace—Kimberley st., Unthank’s rd.
-Eagle lane—r s Newmarket rd., just before reaching Eagle tavern
-Eagle terrace—r s Newmarket rd., just past Eagle tavern
-Eagle yard—first yd. r s Heigham st.
-Earlham road—continuation of St. Giles’ rd.
-Earlham road terrace, row white houses r s just past entrance to Heigham
-rd. or Hangman’s la.
-Eldon row—r s Chapel Field rd. (fr. St. Giles’), just before reaching
-Julian st.
-Elephant yard—l s Magdalen st., near Stump Cross
-Elm hill—runs out of l s of Prince’s st. into Wensum st.
-Elm terrace—r s New Catton rd., op. Elm tavern
-Emms’ court—l s Ber st., op. All Saints’ st.
-Essex street—third turn to l fr. Rupert st., Union pl.
-Eva cottages—l s New Catton rd., just past entrance to Sprowston rd.
-Exchange street—lower corner of Market pl., on a line with The Walk
-Eye Infirmary—r s Pottergate st.
-Factory yard—r s Barrack st., op. Bird in Hand
-Fair Flora yard—second yard r s Lower Westwick st.
-Farnell’s court—in St. John’s Maddermarket Ch. alley
-Fellmongers’ Arms yard—r s Oak st., op. the Old Crown
-Ferry yard—l s Lower King st., just past Half Moon inn
-Finket street—last turn r s Ber street, before reaching St. John’s
-Sepulchre ch.
-Fisher’s lane—third turn r s St. Giles’, leading into Pottergate street
-Fisher’s yard—Fishgate st.
-Fishgate street—first st. to the r in Magdalen st., just over Fye bridge
-Fleckered Bull yard—l s Ber st., nr. Fleckered Bull inn
-Florence’s court—r s Ber st., op. Greyhound
-Flower-in-Hand yard—l s Heigham st.
-Foundry Bridge—bottom of Rose la., nr. Thorpe railway station
-Foundry yard—r s Thorn la., nr. Sparke’s foundry
-Fountain yard—r s St. Benedict’s st., adjoining Fountain inn
-Fox and Hounds yard—r s Ber st., nr. Fox and Hounds inn
-Fox’s yard—l s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, op. St. James’ ch.
-Fountain square, Union place—r s Union st., by Coach and Horses
-Free Library—corner of St. Andrew’s and Duke sts., adjoins the Museum
-Friars’ lane—l s Upper King st., just past Crown Bank (Harveys and
-Hudson’s)
-Front row—row of red-br. cottages, l s Hall’s rd., next Southwell Arms
-Fuller’s hole—St. Martin’s gates, leads to the river
-Fye bridge—bridge dividing Wensum st. fr. Magdalen st.
-Fye Bridge street—(see Wensum st.)
-Garden street—second st. r s Thorn la., fr. Ber st.
-Gas-house Hill—leading fr. Bishop bridge to Mousehold heath
-Gedge’s yard—l s Coslany st., next Waggon and Horses inn
-Gentleman’s walk—the east side of the market-place
-George yard—l s Barrack st., just past Griffin inn
-Gildencroft—l s St. Augustine’s st., leading past St. Augustine’s ch.
-Gildengate street—leading from bottom of St. George’s Bridge st. into
-Botolph st.
-Gilling’s yard—Magdalen st.
-Globe lane—l s Rising Sun la., fr. Golden Ball st.
-Globe street—5th turn l s Vauxhall st.
-Globe street—r s Heigham st., op. Crocodile inn
-Globe yard—r s Botolph st., nr. Old Globe inn
-Gloucester place—r s St. Catherine’s plain, nr. entrance to Hall rd.
-Goat lane (lower)—first turn on the r in St. Giles’, leading into
-Pottergate st.
-Goat lane (upper)—second turn on the r in St. Giles’, leading into
-Pottergate st.
-Goat yard—r s Oak st., nearly op. the Jolly Skinners
-Golden Ball street—leading fr. Castle ditches to Ber st.; Golden Ball inn
-at the entrance
-Golden Dog lane—first turn r s Calvert st., leading into Magdalen st.
-Golden Fleece yard—l s Fishgate st., nr. the Golden Fleece
-Golding street—l s Dereham rd., second turn past St. Benedict’s gates
-Gooch’s yard—r s Charing cross, joining Malt and Hop tavern
-Goodwin’s yard—l s Tabernacle st.
-Goreham’s yard—first yd. l s Heigham st. fr. Barn rd.
-Gowing’s passage—St. Stephen’s st.
-Graham’s court-—Upper Market, second ct. fr. St. Giles’ corner
-Grapes’ hill or St. Giles’ hill—3rd turn on the r past St. Giles’ eh.
-Green Dragon yd.—l s Bishopgate st. nr. Red Lion
-Great hospital—Bishopgate st.
-Great Orford street—l s Orford hill, leading to Castle hill
-Great yard—World’s-end la.
-Greenhills—St. Augustine’s gates
-Greenland Fishery yard—r s Coslany st., next G. F. inn
-Green’s lane—r s Gildengate st. leading into Calvert st.
-Green yard—l s Barrack st., just before reaching The Robin Hood
-Greyfriars’ priory—Upper King st., nr. Harvey and Hudson’s bank
-Griffin yard—l s Barrack st., joining Griffin inn
-Grimes’ yard—l s Botolph st.
-Grout’s thoroughfare—narrow passage l s Timberhill st., leading to Golden
-Ball st.
-Grove place—row of houses r s St. Giles’ rd., just past Distillery st.
-Grove place—r s of Grove rd., top of Victoria st. to the r
-Grove road—rd. crossing the top of Victoria st., leading on the r round
-to St. Stephen’s rd.
-Grove terrace—r s Unthank’s rd., nearly op. Oxford st.
-Guildhall—north-west corner of Market-place
-Gun lane—connects top of Haymarket with Theatre st., directly opposite
-St. Stephen’s ch.
-Gunhouse yard—Jail hill
-Gunton’s yard—l s Oak st., next White Lion
-Hales’ court—St. Giles’, op. ch. door
-Half Moon yard—l s Lower King st., op. Half Moon inn
-Hall road—fr. r s St. Catherine’s plain, leading to Lakenham
-Hampden place—r s Dereham rd., just past Dial inn
-Hamlet place—l s Grapes’ hill, fr. St. Giles’
-Hampshire Hog yard—l s Lower Westwick st., just past St. Swithin’s alley
-Hangman’s lane (see Heigham rd.)
-Hanover place—l s Earlham rd., just past Black Horse, and op. Earlham rd.
-terrace
-Harman’s court—r s St. Stephen’s st., op. Crown and Angel
-Harmer’s court—last ct. l s St. Giles’, before reaching Jail
-Harrison’s court—r s Upper St. Giles’, op. Queen’s Head
-Harrison’s yard—leads out of Pump st. to Castle meadow
-Hart’s yard—r s Botolph st.
-Haw’s place—Hall rd., Lakenham
-Hawthorn row—r s West End st., op. Waddington st.
-Haymarket—Opposite the top part of Gentlemen’s walk
-Hayward’s yard—r s Ber st., just past St. John’s Sepulchre ch.
-Heigham causeway—continuation of Heigham st., leading to Heigham ch.
-Heigham grove—second turn l s St. Giles’ rd., past jail
-Heigham Lower—Heigham causeway, Heigham st., &c.
-Heigham place—last turn to r on Dereham rd., before reaching Holl’s lane;
-leads to West End Retreat gardens
-Heigham road (or Hangman’s lane)—r s St. Giles’ rd., next turn past
-Distillery st., leading to Dereham rd.
-Heigham st.—continuation of Lower Westwick st., at juncture of Barn rd.
-Heigham terrace—row of white houses on r s Dereham rd., nearly op.
-Hangman’s lane
-Heigham, Upper—beyond Heigham causeway, nr. the ch.
-Herring’s row—r s West Pottergate st., op. Eagle tavern
-Heywood’s yard—r s Magdalen st., nr. White Lion inn
-High street—turn to the r at top of Union st., op. Brunswick rd.
-Hind’s yard—r s St. Augustine’s st., op. St. Augustine’s ch.
-Hill’s yard—l s Coslany st., op. Red Lion
-Hinde’s yard—last yard l s Botolph st.
-Hole-in-the-wall lane—first turn l s Bedford st., St. Andrew’s, leading
-round into Post Office st.
-Holkham lane—nr. Shirehall tavern, Castle ditches
-Holl’s brewery—r s Hall rd., adjoining King’s Arms
-Holl’s lane—r s Dereham rd., nearly op. Hangman’s lane
-Holly terrace—l s Unthank’s rd., just bef. reaching Somerleyton st.
-Horn’s lane—second turn l s Ber st., leads to King st.
-Houghton’s yard—r s Ber st., op. Fleckered Bull
-Howard street—round top of Victoria st. to the r and then second st. to
-the r
-Huggin’s row—St. Benedict’s gates
-Hungarian yards—r s St. Benedict’s st., just past St. Margaret’s ch.
-Hutchinson’s court—first ct. l s Surrey st.
-Infirmary road—just beyond St. Augustine’s gates to the r
-Inkerman terrace—l s Bishopgate st., near Marquis of Gransby inn
-Jay’s court—third ct. r s Bethel st.
-Jay’s square—first turn to r in Rose lane
-Jay’s terrace—row of white houses r s Rose lane, near Free-trade tavern
-Jenny Lind Infirmary—l s Pottergate st., just before reaching Ten Bell
-lane
-Jilling’s yard—r s Magdalen st., just before reaching White Lion inn
-Jinkin lane—r s Oak st. near the gates, leading into Gildencroft
-John street—second turn to r in Rose lane
-John street (Dereham road)—third turn l s past St. Benedict’s gates
-John street, Union place—first turn to r in Norfolk st. fr. Somerleyton
-st.
-John Bull street—r s Union st., near John Bull inn
-Jolly Butchers’ yard—r s Ber st., nr. Jolly Butchers’ inn
-Jolly Farmers’ yard—r s Charing cross, nr. Jolly Farmers
-Jubilee place—l s Heigham rd. fr. St. Giles’ rd.
-Jubilee yard—r s Ber st., nr. Jubilee inn
-Jubilee street—second turn to r of Chapel Field rd. fr. St. Giles’, or
-second turn to l fr. Vauxhall st.
-Julian place—r s Chapel Field rd., fr. St. Giles’ gates
-Julian street—second turn to l in Vauxhall st., or second turn to r on
-Chapel Field rd. fr. St. Giles’ gates
-Keel and Wherry yard—r s Lower King st., op. Read’s granaries
-Kensington buildings—in a yd. at back of Kensington pl.
-Kensington place—r s St. Catherine’s pl., just past entrance to Hall rd.
-Kent place—r s Vauxhall st., just past turn to Julian st.
-Keppell’s court—Fisher’s lane
-Kerrison’s yard—l s Tombland fr. Queen st.
-Keyzor’s place—l s Holl’s lane
-Keyzor’s terrace—r s Unthank’s rd., just past entrance to Private or
-Asylum lane
-Kimberley street—running across top of Bedford, Oxford, and Trory sts.,
-and parallel to Unthank’s rd.
-King st. (Lower)—continuation of Upper King st.
-King street (Upper)—turn to the r at bottom of Queen st., leading fr.
-Tombland to Rose lane corner
-King street (Crook’s place)—second turn to r thro’ Crook’s pl. entrance
-King’s Head lane—r s Gildengate st., leading into Calvert st.
-King’s Head yard—l s Magdalen st., next King’s Head inn
-Lady lane—first turn l s Bethel st.
-Lakenham place—r s St. Catherine’s pl.
-Lakenham terrace—nr. St. Mark’s ch., Lakenham
-Lamb yard—on the Gentleman’s Walk, Haymarket
-Lame Dog road—(see Brazen doors rd.)
-Lancasterian school yard (see College ct.)
-Langham place—l s Dereham rd., just past City rd.
-Lawrence street—first st. leading r s West Pottergate st., leading into
-William st.
-Lawston’s yard—l s Gildengate st.
-Leicester place—r s Vauxhall st., nr. Chapel Field rd.
-Le Neve’s yard—r s Fishgate st., just past the Jolly Dyers
-Lewis’ yard—l s lower King st., just past The Hay Trusser
-Leyton’s row—nr. Lord Nelson, Trafalgar st. (Lakenham), l s fr. Hall rd.
-Life’s green—east end of Cathedral
-Lifford’s yard—l s Lower King st., adjoining Bird in Hand
-Light Horseman yard—r s Barrack st., nr. Light Horseman inn
-Limekiln hill—first turn l side St. Giles’ rd., just past jail
-Ling’s yard—r s Magdalen st., next Duncan Arms
-Lion and Castle yard—r s Timberhill st., by Lion and Castle inn
-Little Buck yard—l s Oak st., just past Sussex st.
-Little London street—first turn l s London st.
-Little Orford street—leads fr. the top of Gentleman’s Walk, round
-Savings’ Bank corner, to Orford hill
-Little Star and Crown yard—l s Timberhill st., op. Baptist chapel
-Little White Horse yard—r s Botolph st.
-Lobster lane—see Pottergate st.
-Lockett’s court—l s St. Andrew’s Broad st. fr. Charing cross, just past
-Post-office st.
-Lock and Key yard—r s Ber st., nr. Lock and Key inn
-London street—lower corner of market-place, nearly op. Guildhall
-London terrace—l s St. Stephen’s rd., just beyond Norfolk and Norwich
-Hospital
-Long lane—r s Charing cross, just before reaching Lower Westwick st.,
-leads down to river
-Long yard—l s Bishopgate st., nr. Bishop bridge
-Long yard—r s Fishgate st., op. The Pigeons
-Lord Campden’s yard—r s of Charing cross, next Lord C. inn
-Lothian street—l s Barn road fr. Dereham rd.
-Lowen’s yard—l s Cowgate st., op. the Black Chequers, nr. Whitefriars’
-bridge
-Lower square—Thorn lane, op. Garden st.
-Lying-in charity—l s Pottergate st., just before reaching Ten Bell la.
-Magpie road—r s St. Augustine’s gates, leading to Magdalen gates
-Malthouse lane—r s St. Stephen’s st., leading into St. Stephen’s Back st.
-Malthouse yard—last yd. l s World’s End lane
-Manchester buildings, Union pl., nr. Duke of Wellington
-Mansfield’s yard—St. Stephen’s, op. Duke of Wellington
-Market lane—leading fr. Scole’s green into Thorn lane
-Marquis of Gransby yard—op. the barracks, Barrack st.
-Mariners’ lane—third turn l s Ber st., leads to King st.
-Mason’s court—l s Ber st., nearly op. Bakers’ Arms
-Middle row—r s Chapel Field rd. fr. St. Giles’, second row past Rising
-Sun
-Militia barracks—Upper Surrey st.
-Mill street, Lakenham—first turn to the left in Church pathway,
-(Peafields) fr. Hall rd.
-Mill street, Union place—top of Union st. to the r leading into Essex st.
-Mill yard (or New Mills’ yard)—a thoroughfare leading fr. r s Lower
-Westwick st. (nearly the bottom) into St. Martin’s at Oak
-Mission place—l s Lower King st., op. Barge inn
-Mitchell’s court—north side Market pl., adjoining _Chronicle_ office
-Mount Pleasant—first turn to l past Somerleyton st., Unthank’s rd., leads
-to Newmarket rd., op. Town close
-Mousehold heath—thro’ Bishopgate st., on each side of Gas-house hill
-Murrell’s yard—l s Lower King st., op. the Nelson Monument public house
-Museum (Norfolk and Norwich)—St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Museum court—St. Andrew’s Broad st., nearly op. Post Office st., and
-adjoining Museum and _Norfolk News’_ printing offices
-Muspole street—r s Duke st., leading into Colegate street
-Nailor’s lane—r s Charing cross, just bef. reaching Jolly Farmers
-Napier buildings—l s Somerleyton st., Unthank’s road
-Neal’s square—entrance r s Pottergate st., just beyond St. Benedict’s
-plain, leads into St. Benedict’s Ch. alley
-Nelson street—second turn to r off Dereham rd., after passing Holl’s lane
-and Dial inn
-Nelson terrace—Grove rd. or Night Cap la.
-New Catton road—out of Magdalen gates
-New city—comprises Crook’s pl., Union pl., Julian pl., &c.
-Newman’s yard—r s Ber st., op. George IV.
-Newmarket street—l s Brunswick rd. fr. Newmarket rd.
-Newmarket terrace—r s Newmarket rd.
-New mills—bottom of Lower Westwick st., on the r
-New Mill yard—by New Mills, leads fr. Lower Westwick st. to St. Martin’s
-at Oak
-Nightcap lane (sometimes called Grove road)—l s St. Stephen’s rd., second
-turn past Victoria station
-Ninham’s court—last ct. l s Bethel st., leading into Chapel field
-Noah’s Ark yard—l s Heigham st., back of Flower-in-Hand inn
-Norfolk and Norwich Hospital—r s St. Stephen’s rd.
-Norfolk street—first turns r and l fr. Rupert st., Union place
-Norgate’s court—r s St. Stephen’s st., op. Surrey st.
-Northumberland street—third turn to r off Dereham rd., after passing
-Holl’s lane and Dial inn
-Norwich Public Dispensary—St. John’s Maddermarket
-Nowhere yard—second yd. past St. Lawrence ch., on l s Lower Westwick st.
-Oak street—continuation of Coslany st., commencing just past St. Mary’s
-pl.
-Oak yard—r s Oak st., next Royal Oak
-Obey’s yard—l s Lower King st., op. Swan inn
-Old Barge yard—l s Lower King st., next the Old Barge inn
-Old Barrack yard—l s Gildengate st., op. King’s Head
-Old Blacksmith’s yard—r s Ber st. gates, nearly op. King’s Arms
-Old Brew yard—r s Oak st., nearly op. Key and Castle
-Old Cat and Fiddle yard—l s Botolph st., near Old Cat and Fiddle inn
-Old Chequers yard—l s Coslany st., near the bridge
-Old Crown yard—l s Oak st., next Old Crown inn
-Old Fountain yard—r s Botolph st., op. end of Calvert st.
-Old Man’s Hospital—Calvert st.
-Old Post Office yard—l s Bedford st., St. Andrew’s, near Nelson tavern
-One-post passage—St. Stephen’s st.
-Opie street—second turn r s London st., leading to Castle meadow
-Orchard street—continuation of John st., Rose la., leading into St.
-Faith’s la.
-Orford hill—open space reached from the Market, through White Lion st.
-Orphan’s Home—54, Pottergate st.
-Osborne’s yard—r s Oak st., just past the Bess of Bedlam
-Oxford street—second st. l s Unthank’s rd.
-Page’s yard (or Baxter’s)—r s Lower King st., near The Rainbow
-Palace plain—bottom of Palace st.
-Palace street—leading fr. bottom of Tombland, on the right to Palace
-plain
-Paradise place—large square r s Market la. fr. Scole’s green
-Paradise place—a yard on r s Magdalen st., just past White Lion
-Paradise row—Hall rd., Lakenham
-Paragon buildings—Castle meadow
-Paragon street—first st. past jail, on r s St. Giles’ road
-Patteson’s yard—l s Magdalen st., near Queen’s Arms
-Paul Pry hill—at St. Benedict’s gates, l s leading up to Grapes’ hill
-Peacock street—l s Fishgate street, op. St. Edmund’s ch., leading into
-St. Paul’s Back la.
-Peafield—very large district between Southwell rd. and Lakenham Hall rd.
-Pegg’s court—r s Ber st., just past George the Fourth
-Peel’s yard—first yard l s Lower Westwick st., after passing St.
-Margaret’s st.
-Philadelphia—r s Aylsham rd., out St. Augustine’s gates
-Pigeons yard—l s Fishgate st., near the Pigeons inn
-Pigg lane—l s Palace st., leading to Quay side
-Plantation—l s St. Giles’ road, just past jail
-Playford’s court—r s Pottergate st., first passage past Eye Infirmary
-Plummers’ yard—l s Oak st., joining Key and Castle inn
-Pockthorpe—adjoining the Barracks
-Porter’s yard—r s World’s End la.
-Portland place—r s Vauxhall st., Union pl.
-Portland place and Portland square—l s Ch. path (Peafield) fr. Hall rd.,
-op. Duke of Norfolk
-Portland place—r s Holl’s lane, just before reaching West End Retreat
-Post-office street—continuation of Exchange st. and leading into St.
-Andrew’s Broad st.
-Pottergate street—bottom of Exchange st. to the left, the first hundred
-yds. frequently known as Lobster la.
-Pottergate street (West)—continuation of Pottergate st., at juncture of
-Grapes’ hill and Paul Pry hill
-Priest’s buildings—op. Norfolk and Norwich hospital
-Priest’s court—Rampant Horse st., nearly op. Briggs’ st.
-Prince’s street—from St. Andrew’s plain to Tombland
-Priory yard—r s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, nr. Rose inn
-Private road—turn through a gateway r s Unthank’s rd., just past pillar
-letter-box, leads into Earlham rd.
-Private Road villas—just into Private road, fr. Unthank’s rd.
-Prospect place—r s King st. gates, op. Ship inn
-Prospect place—l s Horn’s la. fr. Ber st.
-Prospect place—l s Hall rd., just past King’s Arms
-Prospect place—at junction of Heigham, and Heigham rd.
-Prospect square—r s Scole’s green
-Providence place—West End st., Holl’s la.
-Public library—op. north side Guildhall
-Pudding lane—connects the Upper walk with the Upper market
-Pump street—r s King st., op. entrance to Rose la.
-Pump yard—first yard r s Trafalgar st., Lakenham, fr. Hall rd.
-Pump yard—first yard past St. Lawrence’s ch. on l s Lower Westwick st.
-Purland’s yard—r s Cowgate st. fr. Palace pl., just past entrance to St.
-James’
-Pye’s yard—l s Palace pl., under an archway nr. the ch.
-Quakers’ lane—r s St. Martin’s la.
-Quay side—r s Fye bridge, along the river
-Queen Caroline yards—both sides of Queen Caroline inn, op. St. Martin’s
-ch.
-Queen’s Head yard—l s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, by Queen’s Head inn
-Queen street—leading fr. Bank plain and London st. to Tombland
-Queen street (Crook’s place)—fourth turn to l fr. Union st.
-Raglan street—r s Dereham rd., op. Golding st.
-Railway station (Thorpe or Eastern Counties)—through Rose la., and just
-over Foundry bridge
-Railway station (Victoria or Eastern Union)—l s at top of St. Stephen’s
-st.
-Rainbow yard—r s Lower King st., op. Rainbow inn
-Rampant Horse street—top of Briggs’ st., r and l
-Rampant Horse Back street—fr. top of Gentleman’s walk, round Savings’
-Bank corner, leading to Orford hill and Red Lion st.
-Rampant Horse yard—l s Fishgate st., next Rampant Horse inn
-Raven’s row—a yard on l s Trafalgar st. fr. Hall’s rd., Lakenham
-Red Lion street—fr. Orford hill to St. Stephen’s plain
-Red Lion yard—r s Magdalen st., just before reaching the gates, near Red
-Lion inn
-Redwell street—l s Bank plain, leading into Prince’s st.
-Reeve’s yard—l s Coslany st., next Bakers’ Arms
-Regent street—first turn to the l in Union st.
-Richmond place—r s Richmond hill
-Richmond hill—just outside Ber st. gates, leading to Bracondale
-Rifleman yard—l s All Saints’ green, nr. Rifleman inn
-Rigby’s court—l s St. Giles’, just before reaching the ch., leads into
-top of Bethel st.
-Rising Sun lane—l s Golden Ball st., leading to Scole’s green
-Rising Sun road (part of Chapel Field rd.)—entrance op. Grapes’ inn, St.
-Giles
-Rising Sun row—r s Chapel Field rd. fr. St. Giles’, first row past Rising
-Sun inn
-Roach’s court—Elm hill
-Robinson’s yard—l s Oak st., nearly op. Royal Oak
-Roche’s court—Fisher’s la.
-Rochester buildings—Norfolk st., Union pl.
-Roe’s yard—l s Ber st., nr. the Recruiting Sergeant
-Rose lane—first st. on l s King st., leading to Thorpe railway station,
-reached fr. the Market by passing through lower part of London st., Opie
-st., and across Castle meadow
-Rosemary lane—by St. Mary’s ch.
-Rose valley—Unthank’s rd., just past entrance to Asylum rd.
-Rose yard—r s St. Augustine’s, adjoining Rose la.
-Royal Hotel street—back of Royal Hotel yard, leading to Castle meadow
-Royal Oak yard—r s Heigham st., near Royal Oak inn
-Rupert street—continuation of Vauxhall st., Union pl.
-Russell street—back of St. John’s buildings, through the opening l s Ber
-st., op. St. John’s Sepulchre ch.
-Sadd’s yard—Coslany st.
-Sadler’s yard—l s Oak st., op. Jolly Toper’s inn
-Sampson and Hercules’ court—l s Tombland, op. Erpingham gate
-Sandling’s Ferry—bottom of Lower close
-Sardinian court—r s St. Stephen’s st., just before reaching Duke of
-Wellington
-Sawmill yard—r s Fishgate st., next Sawmill tavern
-Sawmills’ yard—l s Coslany st., adjoining Hotpressers’ Arms
-Saver’s buildings—in a lane leading out of Tinkler’s la. into Heigham
-causeway
-Scole’s green—at the end of Rising Sun la. fr. Golden Ball st.
-Scott’s yard—r s Ber st., near Butcher’s Arms
-Seaman’s yard—op. Museum, St. Andrew’s Broad st.
-Seven Stars yard—r s Barrack st., near Sportman inn
-Seymour place—St. Stephen’s sq.
-Sherbourne place—r s Mariners’ la. fr. King st.
-Ship yard—l s Lower King st., next Ship inn
-Ship yard—l s Thorn la. fr. Ber st., nr. Ship inn
-Shoulder of Mutton yard—r s St. Stephen’s, by Shoulder of Mutton inn
-Sickle yard—Heigham st.
-Silver road—l s St. James’ st., leading to Sprowston rd.
-Sixteen row—lot of cottages l s of Church path fr. Southwell rd.
-(Peafield), nr. Portland Arms
-Smith’s yard—l s Oak st., second yard past Suffolk Arms
-Somerleyton street—third st. on l s Unthank’s rd.
-Somerleyton terrace—l s Somerleyton st., Unthank’s rd.
-Somerset buildings—Union place
-Somerset place—l s Holl’s la., op. West-end Retreat
-Sotheron’s buildings—r s Lady’s la.
-Soup Office yard—Fishgate st.
-Southgate lane—Lower King st.
-Southgate street—l s Duke st., leading to St. Mary’s pl.
-Southwell street—the first part of Hall rd. (wh. see), r s St.
-Catherine’s pl.
-Spencer’s court—l s Lower King st., just past St. Etheldred’s ch.
-Spitalfields—just beyond the barracks
-Sportsman yard—r s Barrack st., nr. Sportsman inn
-St. Andrew’s Broad st.—leading fr. Charing cross to St. Andrew’s Hall
-pl., past the bottom of Post office st.
-St. Andrew’s hall—St. Andrew’s pl., at juncture of St. Andrew’s Broad
-st., St. George’s Bridge st., and Prince’s st.
-St. Andrew’s hill—narrow st. nearly op. St. Andrew’s hall, leading up to
-London st.
-Stanley Home—Peacock st., St. Saviour’s
-St. Ann’s staithe—l s Lower King st., op. Elephant and Castle
-St. Anne’s Staithe lane—l s King st., next turn past St. Faith’s la.
-Starling place—Coburg st., nr. William IV.
-St. Augustine’s church alley—narrow la. by St. Augustine’s ch.
-St. Augustine’s street—leading fr. the ends of Botolph and Pitt sts.
-St. Benedict’s church alley—leading through the ch. yd. fr. St.
-Benedict’s pl. to Upper Westwick st.
-St. Benedict’s gates—at juncture of Paul Pry hill and Barn rd., end of
-St. Benedict’s or Upper Westwick st.
-St. Benedict’s lane—r s St. Benedict’s st., nr. the gates
-St. Benedict’s plain—Pottergate st., just beyond Ten Bell la., foot of
-Cow hill
-St. Benedict’s road—see Dereham rd.
-St. Benedict’s street—see Upper Westwick st.
-St. Catherine’s plain—top of Surrey rd. and Brazen Doors rd.
-St. Catherine’s terrace—l s St. Catherine’s pl., op. Hall rd.
-St. Clement’s church alley—round the ch., at corners of Magdalen st. and
-Colegate st.
-St. Clement’s thoroughfare—r s Magdalen st., just past Bull inn, leads
-into Fishgate st.
-St. Edmund’s square—r s Fishgate st., nr. St. Edmund’s ch.
-St. Faith’s lane—fr. St. Etheldred’s gate, Tombland, to the bottom of
-Rose la., and thence to Lower King st.
-St. George’s church alley—l s Gildengate st., leading past St. George’s
-ch.
-St. George’s plain—r s Duke st., leading into Colegate st.
-St. Giles’ hill—see Grapes’ hill
-St. Giles’ road—out of St. Giles’ gates to the r of the jail
-St. Giles’ street—leads out of Market-place at the back of Guildhall
-St. Giles’ terrace—thro’ arched gateway r s Bethel st., nearly op. Coach
-and Horses
-St. Gregory’s Church alley—passage thro’ St. Gregory’s ch. yd.,
-Pottergate st.
-St. Helen’s square—Bishopgate st.
-St. James’ palace—lot of cottages r s St. James’ st., op. Dove inn
-St. James’ street—r s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, leading into Barrack
-st.
-St. John’s buildings—row of houses down the opening l s Ber st., op. St.
-John’s Sepulchre ch.
-St. John’s Head yard—second yd. r s Coslany st., nr. the Bridge
-St. John’s Maddermarket—in a line with Dove st., fr. the Market
-St. John’s Maddermarket Church alley—thro’ an archway under the tower of
-the ch., fr. Pottergate st.
-St. Julian’s alley—r s Lower King st., by St. Julian’s ch., leading into
-Ber st.
-St. Julian street—third turn r s Thorn lane, fr. Ber st.
-St. Julian’s terrace—r s Julian st., fr. Thorn ln.
-St. Lawrence lane—r s Pottergate st., nearly op. bottom of Fisher’s lane
-St. Lawrence steps (great and little)—r s St. Benedict’s st., at either
-end of St. Lawrence ch., leads into Lower Westwick st.
-St. Margaret’s alley—r s St. Benedict’s st., next St. Margaret’s ch.
-St. Margaret’s (or Three King) lane—l s Upper Westwick st., op. St.
-Margaret’s ch.
-St. Margaret’s plain—Upper Westwick st., by St. Margaret’s ch.
-St. Margaret’s street—r s St. Benedict’s st., past St. Margaret’s ch.
-St. Margaret’s wharf—r s Lower Westwick st., just past St. Margaret’s ch.
-St. Martin’s lane—r s of Oak st., leading past ch. into Pitt street
-St. Martin’s walls—la. leading fr. St. Martin’s gates on r s, to St.
-Augustine’s gates
-St. Mary’s alley—l s Pitt st., adjoining St. Mary’s ch. yd.
-St. Mary’s plain—r s Coslany st., by St. Mary’s ch.
-St. Paul’s Back lane—continuation of Peacock st., leading to Cowgate st.,
-St. Paul’s
-St. Paul’s Church alley—leading round the back of St. Paul’s ch.
-St. Paul’s plain-by St. Paul’s ch., St. Paul’s st.
-St. Paul’s street—l s of Cowgate st., fr. Palace plain, op. St. James’
-st.
-St. Paul’s thoroughfare—l s Cowgate st. fr. Palace plain, leading to St.
-Paul’s ch.
-St. Peter’s Southgate lane—r s Lower King st., leading past St. Peter’s
-Southgate ch.
-St. Saviour’s Church alley—r s Magdalen st., next St. Saviour’s ch.
-St. Saviour’s lane—r s Magdalen st., by St. Saviour’s ch.
-St. Simon’s Church street—l s Wensum st., leading to Elm hill
-St. Stephen’s street—from the Market, through Brigg’s st., to the l, and
-then to the r
-St. Stephen’s Back street—back of St. Stephen’s to the r; reached through
-the Church alley, Stockings’ court, or Coburg st.
-St. Stephen’s Church alley—leads out of Rampant Horse st., by the side of
-the ch., into Malthouse la.
-St. Stephen’s plain—open space, juncture of Rampant Horse, Red Lion,
-Westlegate, and St. Stephen’s streets; reached fr. the Market, through
-Briggs’ st., and turn to the l
-St. Stephen’s square—first turn to l on Chapel Field rd. fr. St.
-Stephen’s gates, leading round into St. Stephen’s rd.
-St. Swithin’s alley—by St. Swithin’s ch., r s of St. Benedict’s st., op.
-Ten Bell la.
-Staff of Life yard—l s Fishgate st., op. St. Edmund’s ch.
-Stafford terrace—l s Church st., New Catton
-Stamp Office yard—St. Andrew’s Broad st., nearly op. Bridewell alley
-Star and Crown yard—l s Timberhill st., just past Star and Crown inn
-Starling’s yard—l s Botolph st., through Old Cat and Fiddle yard
-Stepping lane—leads from Scoles’ green to King street
-Steward and Patteson’s Cut yard—op. Steward and Patteson’s brewery,
-Pockthorpe
-Stockings’ Court—r s St. Stephen’s st., just past entrance to Surrey st.
-Stone-entry yard—l s Oak st., op. Royal Oak
-Stonemason’s buildings, or square—second yard l s Gildengate st.
-Strike’s yard—r s Thorn la. fr. Ber st., nr. Sparkes’ foundry
-Stump cross—at juncture of Magdalen and Botolph streets
-Suffolk street—second turn to r and l fr. Rupert st., Union pl.
-Surrey court—first court on the l in Surrey st.
-Surrey grove—through first opening on l s Surrey rd.
-Surrey place—Brazen Doors rd.
-Surrey Mews—Upper Surrey st., adjoining Militia barracks
-Surrey road—on a line with Surrey st., leading to St. Catherine’s pl.
-Surrey street—first st. l s St. Stephen’s st.
-Sun yard—r s Coslany st., next Sun inn
-Surrey street—first turn l s St. Stephen’s st.
-Surrey street (Upper)—top of Surrey st., to r and l
-Surrey terrace—l s Grove road, op. Surrey inn
-Sussex street—leading fr. l s St. Augustine’s st., near the gates, into
-Oak st.
-Swan lane—second turn l s London st.
-Swan yard—r s Lower King st., adjoining Swan inn
-Tabernacle street—leading fr. Palace pl. on the right to Bishopgate st.
-Tallow-chandler’s yard—l s Timberhill st., op. Orford hill chapel
-Tamworth terrace—l s Unthank’s rd., just past entrance to Bedford st.
-Ten Bell lane—r s Pottergate st., leading fr. foot of Cow hill into St.
-Benedict’s st.
-Theatre street—leads fr. Rampant Horse st. to Chapel field
-Thirteen row—l s Trafalgar st., fr. Hall rd., just past Lord Nelson
-Thompson’s yard—l s Fishgate st., nr. Rampant Horse inn
-Thorold’s buildings—r s Rose la., just before reaching Foundry bridge
-Thorn lane—first turn l s Ber st., leads to King st.
-Thoroughfare yard—r s Fishgate st., next Duke of Marlborough
-Three King lane—(see St. Margaret’s la.)
-Three Tuns yard—first yard past Rose la. corner, r s King st.
-Thurso place—r s Dereham rd., just past Dial inn
-Tidd’s yard—l s Oak st.
-Till’s court—r s Ber st., just before reaching Lock and Key
-Timberhill street—leading fr. top of Orford hill to Ber st.
-Tinkler’s lane—last turn r s Dereham rd. before reaching Holl’s la.,
-leads into Heigham st.
-Toll’s court—entrance through a passage l s Briggs’ st.
-Tombland—open space at the end of Queen st.
-Town close—lying between Newmarket and Ipswich rd., entered on Newmarket
-rd. by first turn to l
-Trafalgar place—r s Dereham rd., joining further end of Dereham rd.
-terrace
-Trafalgar place—r s Hall rd., op. Southwell Arms
-Trafalgar street—first st. r s Hall rd., leading to Southwell rd.
-Trory street—round top of Victoria st. to the r, and then first st. to
-the r
-Trory street—second turn to r fr. Vauxhall st., Julian pl.
-Tuck’s court—l s St. Giles’, nearly op. Norfolk hotel
-Tuns yard—l s Coslany st., op. St. Miles’ ch. alley
-Twenty-one row—second turn to the r in Church path fr. Southwell rd.
-(Peafield)
-Two Brewers’ yard—r s Magdalen st. next Two Brewers’ inn
-Two-necked Swan yard—r s St. Stephen’s st., nr. Two-necked Swan inn
-Unicorn yard—r s St. Stephen’s st., nr. Unicorn inn
-Unicorn yard—l s Coslany st., next Unicorn inn
-Union place—reached by any of the openings on r s Chapel Field rd. fr.
-St. Giles’
-Union square—r s Union st., by Coach and Horses
-Union street (Union pl.)—third turn to the r off Chapel Field rd. fr. St.
-Giles’ gates
-Union terrace—l s Union st., Union pl.
-Upper Market—row of houses behind upper side of Market-place
-Upper walk—upper side of Market pl.
-Unthank’s road—out of St. Giles’ gates to the l of the jail
-Valentine street—l s Dereham rd., first st. past St. Benedict’s gates
-Vauxhall street—first turn r s Chapel Field rd. fr. top of St. Giles’
-Vauxhall terrace—r s Vauxhall st., op. Julian st.
-Victoria place—r s top of Union st., op. Brunswick rd.
-Victoria street—l s St. Stephen’s rd., just past Victoria station
-Vyall’s yard—St. Andrew’s Broad st., nearly op. model school
-Waddington street (Heigham)—second turn to r in West End st. fr. Holl’s
-la.
-Waddington terrace—l s Church st., St. Julian’s fr. Garden st., Thorn la.
-Wagon and Horses lane—Elm hill
-Waite’s court—in lower part of Upper Goat la.
-Wall’s yard—l s Ber st., op. St. John’s Sepulchre ch.
-Water lane—Colegate st., op. St. George’s ch.
-Water lane, St. Edmund’s—r s Fishgate st., leading past St. Edmund’s ch.
-Water lane, St. James’—r s St. James’ st., just past Dove inn
-Waterloo—l s New Catton rd., op. the ch.
-Waterloo street (see Brunswick rd.)
-Watson’s buildings—Distillery st., nearly op. West Wymer st.
-Watson’s court—r s King st., second yd. past Rose la. corner
-Watson’s yard—l s Lower King st., op. St. Peter’s per Mountergate ch.
-Watts’ court—last ct. but one l s Bethel st.
-Wayland terrace—in Prospect sq., r s Scoles’ green
-Weaver’s lane—narrow passage leading fr. Upper walk into Haymarket
-Webb’s yard—l s Magdalen st., op. Red Lion
-Wellington court—r s St. Stephen’s, nr. Duke of Wellington inn
-Wellington pl.—r s Wellington st. fr. St. Giles’
-Wellington street—r s Upper St. Giles’, second turn past ch., leads into
-Pottergate st.
-Wellington terrace—Grove rd.
-Wellington terrace—r s Vauxhall st.
-Wensum or Fye Bridge street—leading fr. Tombland, on the left, to
-Magdalen st.
-Westbourne terrace—l s Unthank’s rd., just past Somerleyton st.
-West End place—r s Grove rd., top of Victoria st.
-West End street—l s Holl’s la., fr. Dereham rd.
-West End terrace—r s Grapes’ hill, fr. St. Giles’ gates
-Western terrace—l s Earlham rd., just past entrance to West parade
-Westlegate street—fr. St. Stephen’s plain, past City of Norwich Arms, to
-All Saints’ green
-West Pottergate street—leading off Grapes’ hill to the r fr. St. Giles’,
-nearly op. Pottergate st.
-Weston’s court—Upper market, first ct. fr. St. Giles’ corner
-West parade—Earlham rd., nearly op. Earlham Rd. terrace
-West Wymer street—last turn l s Distillery st., fr. St. Giles’ rd.
-Westwick street (Lower)—leading fr. Charing cross on the r, to Heigham
-Westwick street (Upper)—leading fr. Charing cross on the l, to Dereham
-rd.
-Whale’s buildings—St. Augustine’s gates
-Wheat Sheaf yard—l s St. Stephen’s st., nr. Wheat Sheaf inn
-Wheelhouse’s court—r s St. Giles’ rd., just past Paragon st.
-Whitefriars’ bridge—over St. Martin’s palace pl. to the l
-Whitefriars’ street—l s Palace plain, op. St. Martin’s ch.
-White Hart yard—l s Ber st., between White Hart and King’s Arms
-White Horse yard—r s Barrack st., just past the Seven Stars
-White Horse yard—l s Magdalen st., by White Horse inn; leads into Botolph
-st.
-White Lion street—leading from top part of Gentlemen’s walk to Orford
-hill
-White Lion yard—r s Magdalen st., next White Lion inn
-Wickham’s yard—l s Lower King st., near Steam Packet inn
-Wigg’s buildings—row of cottages at back of r s of Distillery st. (fr.
-St. Giles’); entrance nearly op. West Wymer st.
-William street—first turn r s off Paul Pry hill, fr. St. Benedict’s gates
-William street—turn to the r bottom of John st., Rose la.
-Willow lane—last turn r s St. Giles’, before reaching the ch.
-Windsor place—Southwell st.
-Windsor terrace—Grove rd.
-Wiseman’s yard—Muspole st.
-Wooden entry—Pottergate st.
-Woolpack yard—second yard l s Botolph street
-Workhouse—on the Dereham rd., up the la. on the loft, leading past the
-Cemetery
-World’s End la—at bottom of Palace plain, l s
-Wounded Hart lane—Upper market, nr. the Wounded Hart
-Wrestlers’ yard—l s St. James’ st., nr. Wrestlers’ inn
-Yarington’s court—r s Wensum st., nr. Fye bridge
-York place—row red brick houses r s Chapel Field rd. fr. St. Stephen’s
-gates
-York Tavern passage—l s Orford hill, leading to Castle hill
-Youell’s buildings—l s Hall rd., nr. Freemasons’ Arms
-
-
-
-
-THE NEIGHBOURING VILLAGES.
-
-
-The following is a Directory of the Villages within a circuit of five
-miles.
-
-ARMINGHALL, a small parish in Henstead hundred, 2½ miles from Norwich,
-contained, in 1851, 56 inhabitants. It comprises 630 acres, which belong
-to the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, who are lords of the manor, patrons
-of the living, and impropriators of the tithes. The living is a
-perpetual curacy, held by the Rev. Thomas John Batcheler, B.D., who
-resides at Norwich.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Hammond, John, market gardener
-Parker, George William, farmer
-Saul, Robert, blacksmith
-Waters, Edward, farmer and poor rate collector, The Hall
-Spink, William, parish clerk
-
- * * * * *
-
-BAWBURGH, or BABUR, in Forehoe hundred, 5 miles from Norwich, contains
-1400 acres, and the population, in 1851, was 460. Lord Stafford is lord
-of the manor, and the chief landowners are J. S. Muskett, Esq., of Eaton,
-and Sir W. Parish, Knt. The living is a vicarage, in the gift of the
-Dean and Chapter of Norwich. The Rev. G. Carter, of Norwich, is the
-incumbent, and the Rev. J. H. Payne, of Colney, the curate.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Browne, Daniel, blacksmith
-Buxton, Samuel, King’s Head
-Candler, Edward, superintendent of paper mills
-Child, John William, baker
-Cole, Jas., wheelwright and blacksmith
-Cross, Thomas, farmer
-Davey, James, bricklayer
-Delane, Magnay and Co., paper mills (and at Taverham)
-Dunham, James, shoemaker
-Dunnell, William, shoemaker
-Forster, William, The Cock
-Hart, Thomas, farmer
-Harvey, George, butcher
-Matthews, Robert, parish clerk
-Reeve, Thomas, butcher
-Smith, Timothy, farmer
-Sturgess, Elizabeth, school-mistress
-Sturgess, William, school-master
-Tann, Samuel, wheelwright
-Tyler, John, shopkeeper
-
- * * * * *
-
-BEESTON ST. ANDREW, in Taverham hundred. 3 miles north of Norwich,
-contains three farms and a few cottages. The Old Hall was built in 1610,
-and is still standing. The chief part of the land belongs to the Rev. J.
-N. Micklethwait and O. Barnes, Esq. Sir Thomas Barrett Lennard, Bart.,
-is lord of the manor. There is no church, but a sinecure rectory, in the
-patronage of the Rev. Henry Banfather, who is also the incumbent. The
-population, in 1851, was 41.
-
-Barnes, Orlando, farmer
-Bowen, Thomas, farmer
-Howlett, Harcourt, farmer
-Gowen, Abraham, gardener
-
- * * * * *
-
-BIXLEY is a pretty village, in the hundred of Henstead, about 3 miles
-from Norwich. It consists of 634 acres of land, chiefly the property of
-the Earl of Rosebery, who is lord of the manor. The population, in 1851,
-was 128. The living is a rectory, with that of Earl Framingham annexed,
-in the gift of the Rev. Charles David Brereton, M.A., who is also the
-incumbent.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Base, Samuel, Esq., Lodge
-Martin, Mrs., Hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Clare, Charles and Son, millers and merchants
-Jarmay, Charles, farm bailiff
-Parker, Arthur, farmer
-Parker, Charles, farmer
-Parker, George, yeoman
-Seaman, William, farmer, and poor’s rate collector
-Sowter, James, yeoman
-Sowter, John, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-BRAMERTON, situate in the hundred of Henstead, 4½ miles from Norwich,
-contains 230 inhabitants and 728 acres of land. The living is a rectory
-in the gift of Robert Fellowes, Esq: the Rev. Edmund Blake is the
-incumbent. The parish school is attended by between 40 and 50 children.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Blake, Rev. Edmund, M.A., Rectory
-Blake, John Joseph, Esq.
-Blake, Mrs. Sophia
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Beaumont, Henry, sen., carpenter
-Beaumont, Robert, farmer and parish clerk
-Crisp, William, farm bailiff
-Forder, John, grocer and poor’s rate collector
-Frost, Samuel, market gardener
-Green, John, corn miller
-Miller, Mrs. Mary, farmer
-Moore, John, postmaster
-Nobbs, J., butcher and pig dealer
-Nobbs, John, shopkeeper
-Osborne, J., farmer and cattle dealer
-Rudd, Robert Gray, farmer
-Todd, David, blacksmith
-Turner, Miss Harriet, schoolmistress
-Turner, Samuel, Woods End Ferry, and plumber and painter
-
- * * * * *
-
-BOWTHORPE, 3 miles from Norwich, has but about 30 inhabitants, and 600
-acres of land, belonging to R. Frank, Esq., and all farmed by Mr.
-Howlett. The church is in ruins, and the curacy is consolidated with
-Earlham.
-
- * * * * *
-
-CAISTOR ST. EDMUND, a village in Henstead hundred, 3 miles from Norwich,
-contains 154 inhabitants, and 1045a. 1r. 10p. of land. The living is a
-rectory, consolidated with that of Markshall, in the gift of Mrs.
-Dashwood, of Caistor Hall, who is also lady of the manor; the incumbent
-is the Rev. John Arthy. Caistor is supposed to have been the capital of
-the Iceni, a Belgic tribe, and was by the Romans called Venta Icenorum,
-and for distinction, Castrum, the _camp_, whence the East Angles, on
-their conquest of the country, called it Caistor. Many Roman antiquities
-and coins, preserved at Norwich, have been found here of various
-emperors.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Arthy, Rev. John, M.A., rector
-Dashwood, Mrs. Harriet, the Hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Cogman, John, blacksmith and parish clerk
-Culling, Thomas Norman, farmer
-Davy, A., wheelwright and carpenter
-King, James, farmer
-Spurrell, John, farmer
-Williamson, Thomas, farmer, and poor rate collector
-
- * * * * *
-
-CARLETON ST. MARY, or EAST CARLETON, in Humbleyard hundred and Henstead
-union, is distant from Swainsthorpe station 2 miles, and Norwich 5. It
-contained 284 inhabitants in 1851, and 1213 acres of land. East Carleton
-anciently formed two parishes, and had two churches, which are now united
-for parochial, but separated for ecclesiastical purposes. The church of
-St. Peter went to ruins in 1550, but its discharged rectory still remains
-as a sinecure, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and incumbency of the
-Rev. Samuel Barker, of Lakenheath, in Suffolk. The living of the church
-of St. Mary is a rectory, in the gift of the Norwich Charity Trustees,
-who are lords of one of the manors, and the Rev. Robert John Francis, of
-Beccles, is the incumbent. The chief landowners are the Rev. John Henry
-Steward, M.A., who is also lord of the manor of Carleton, late
-Townshend’s, and Sir John Peter Boileau, Bart.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Denison, Stephen Charles, Esq., The Lodge
-Francis, Mrs. Letitia
-Steward, Rev. John H., M.A., Manor house
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Albrough, William, market gardener
-Bailey, Robert, butcher
-Baldwin, Richard, market gardener
-Bunting, John, wheelwright
-Cooper, John, parish clerk
-Edwards, John Green, farmer
-Fairman, James, market gardener
-Forster, William, blacksmith
-Heard, George, farmer
-Huggins, William, farmer and collector of taxes
-Land, Mrs. Sarah, shopkeeper
-Smith, Matthew, farmer and collector of rates
-Swann, John, land bailiff
-Thrower, Isaac, boot and shoe maker
-
- * * * * *
-
-CATTON (OLD) is a picturesque village, about 2½ miles from Norwich, with
-900 acres of land, and, in 1851, a population of 618. The living is a
-vicarage, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, who are also
-lords of the manor, and the vicar is the Rev. Richard Hart, B.A. The
-Hall is occupied by John Henry Gurney, Esq., M.P. NEW CATTON is a suburb
-of Norwich.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Barnes, Miss Jane, Old hall
-Blake, Robert Wiffen, Esq.
-Chamberlin, Robert, Esq.
-Cooke, Henry, Esq.
-Cubitt, William Jary, Esq.
-Gedge, George, Esq.
-Gurney, John Henry, Esq., M.P., Hall
-Hart, Rev. Richard, B.A., Vicarage
-Heath, Charles, Esq.
-Long, Edmund Slingsby, Esq.
-Massingham, Joseph, Esq.
-Millard, William Salter, Esq.
-Minty, Miss
-Morse, Mrs. George
-Rackham, Thomas Hanworth, Esq., The Cottage
-Rackham, Thomas John Carter, Esq., The Grove
-Springfield, Osborn, Esq.
-Waite, John Newman, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Attoe, John, lime burner
-Badcock, William, blacksmith
-Broad John, boot maker
-Dennington, Thomas, gardener
-Dixon, Owen, farmer
-Guymer, Joseph, wheelwright
-Guymer, Richard, parish clerk and carpenter
-Guymer, William, carpenter
-Hinde, Ephraim, farmer
-Hipper, Robert, Maid’s Head inn
-Howeld John, boot and shoe maker
-Jackson, Mrs. Harriet, mistress of the Free School
-Lambert, Edward, market gardener
-Minns, John, farmer
-Neale, William, blacksmith
-Newman, Mrs. Mary A., laundress
-Oakley, John, tailor
-Orsborn, Mark, woodman and bricklayer
-Paul, William, George and Dragon inn, and boot and shoe maker
-Plowman, Robert, Magpie inn, and saddler and harness maker
-Rackham, Elijah, farmer
-Rackham, Elisha, market gardener
-Rackham, Thomas H., solicitor
-Rippingale, Mrs. Sarah, shopkeeper
-Scott, Samuel, farmer
-Walker Thomas, baker and postmaster
-
- * * * * *
-
-COLNEY, 3 miles from Norwich, contains about 90 inhabitants and nearly
-1000 acres of land, belonging to Joseph Scott, Esq. The living is a
-rectory in the gift of Mr. Scott. The Rev. E. Postle, M.A., is the
-incumbent, and, the Rev. J. H. Payne, M.A., the curate.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Payne, Rev. John Hervey, M.A.
-Scott, Joseph, Esq., The Hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Bone, Mrs. Hannah, sub-postmistress
-Bone, Thomas, boot and shoe maker
-Gayford, Luke, blacksmith
-Meen, Samuel, farmer
-Utting, John, farmer
-Wilson, John, boot and shoe maker
-
- * * * * *
-
-COSTESSEY, or COSSEY, is a scattered but pleasant village, 4 miles from
-Norwich, in the Forehoe hundred and union, with a population of about
-1100. The Hall is the seat of Lord Stafford, who is lord of the manor,
-and the principal landowner. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the
-gift of the Great Hospital, at Norwich, and enjoyed by the Rev. James
-William Evans, M.A. There are a National school, a British school, a
-large Roman Catholic school, and Baptist and Roman Catholic chapels.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Evans, Rev. James W., Cottage
-Husenbeth, Right Rev. F. C., D.D., (Catholic)
-Ivory, Rev. John, Baptist minister
-Kidd, Mr. Thomas
-Martin, Mr. Edmund
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Banham, James, well sinker
-Banham, William, farmer and butcher
-Barker, Robert, farmer
-Bealey, Thomas, shopkeeper and wheelwright
-Blowers, John, land agent, Hall
-Cannell, Jacob, butcher
-Carr, John, farmer
-Coe, John, police constable
-Cole, William, gardener
-Culley, Henry Utting, corn miller
-Culley, John, farmer
-Cushion, William, shoemaker
-Fairman, Benjamin, basket maker
-Grant, Joseph, glass stainer
-Frost, Rose, National schoolmistress
-Gunton, Edward, Red Lion
-Gunton, George, brickmaker
-Hall, Horatio, druggist and grocer
-Harman, Henry, farmer
-Hastings Edward, carpenter
-Hastings, Elizabeth, farmer
-Hastings, William, carpenter
-Howard, Peter, farmer
-Hudson, James, The Falcon
-Jewell, Samuel, veterinary surgeon
-Kidd, Mrs., bricklayer
-Lavender, John, farmer, Park
-Laws, Mark, shoemaker
-Norman, John, bricklayer and lime burner
-Perry, John L., grocer and draper
-Rising, Robert C., farmer, Lodge
-Sadler, John, shoemaker
-Savage, George, saddler
-Sidney, Robert C., shopkeeper
-Sisson, Henry, Black Swan
-Smith, Charles, registrar of marriages
-Sparks, Mary, British school
-Spaul, John, tailor
-Spaul, Miss Betsey, shopkeeper
-Taylor, John, The Bush, and watchmaker
-Taylor, Mrs. William, farmer
-Watcham, Charles, butcher and farmer
-Wighton, John, gardener
-Wighton, Mrs., White Hart
-White, John, gamekeeper, Park
-White, Richard, gamekeeper and woodman
-
- * * * * *
-
-CRINGLEFORD, in Humbleyard hundred and Henstead union, is situated about
-2½ miles from Norwich, and 3 from the Hethersett railway station. The
-parish contains nearly 1000 acres of land and about 200 inhabitants. The
-Trustees of the Great Hospital, (St. Helen’s) Norwich, are impropriators
-of the tithes and patrons of the living, which is a perpetual curacy, now
-held by the Rev. Edward Priest, B.A., with a stipend of £100 per annum.
-A large school-room for this and the adjoining parishes, with a capital
-residence for the master, has been erected here by subscription.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Bateman, James, Esq.
-Davie, Rev. William Cufaude, M.A., curate of Intwood, Intwood rectory, in
-Cringleford
-Girdlestone, Mrs. Mary Ann
-Patteson, Mrs.
-Priest, Rev. Edward, B.A., incumbent, Parsonage
-Tyler, William, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Candler, Horatio, miller and farmer
-Cannell, Abraham, sen., farmer
-Cannell, Abraham, jun., farmer
-Cracknell, John, wheelwright and blacksmith
-Drane, William, farmer
-George, George, farmer
-Land, John, schoolmaster
-Reynolds, John, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-CROSTWICK, in the Taverham hundred, 4 miles from Norwich, contains a
-population of 140, and 700 acres of excellent land, the property of John
-Longe, Esq., of Spixworth, and Lieut. Col. Stracey. The living is a
-rectory in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and the Rev. E. J. Bell is
-the incumbent. There is a National school for between 40 and 50
-children.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENT.
-
-Bell, Rev. Edward John, M.A.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Benseley, John, farmer
-Crowe, Alfred, wheelwright
-Money, John, carpenter
-Towler, Frederick, farmer
-Woodcock, William, farmer
-Woodhouse, Betsey, White Horse, and shopkeeper
-
- * * * * *
-
-DRAYTON, in Taverham hundred and in the union of St. Faith’s, is situated
-about 4½ miles north-west of Norwich station. The principal object of
-interest is the ruin of old Drayton Lodge, situated on an acclivity half
-a mile south-west of the church, near the residence of Frederick Magnay,
-Esq. Its walls are composed of yellow brick. Here is also an
-entrenchment field of battle, called BLOODSDALE, and the ruins of an
-ancient cross. The church of St. Margaret is a plain building, with
-thatched roof and square tower. The living, in the gift of the Bishop of
-Norwich, is a rectory consolidated with Hellesdon, joint gross annual
-value £649. The Rev. Hinds Howell, B.A., is the incumbent, and resides
-at the Rectory. There is a National School recently opened for boys and
-girls; and there is also a Baptist Chapel in the village. The parish
-contains 1284 acres, and in 1851, the population was 472.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Bradshaw, Capt. Francis Green
-Bradshaw, Francis Weston, Esq.
-Howell, Rev. H., B.A., (rector) Rectory
-Magnay, Frederick Arthur, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Adcock, Edmund, farmer
-Adcock, Henry, Cock inn, and farmer
-Adcock, William, bootmaker
-Arger, John, pork butcher
-Bell, William, wheelwright
-Bessey, John, bootmaker
-Blyth, Matthew, brewer
-Bunn, Samuel, farmer
-Buttle, Henry, postmaster and shopkeeper
-Cannell, John, blacksmith
-Eke, Everett, blacksmith
-Fenn, Robert, shoemaker, and collector of rates and taxes
-French, Miles, farmer
-Fuller, Daniel, parish clerk
-Hipper, Robert, butcher
-Howard, Jeremiah, saw and corn mills
-Howard, William, Red Lion
-March, John, shopkeeper
-Norton, Hammond, landowner and farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-DUNSTON, in Humbleyard hundred and Henstead union, distant from
-Swainsthorpe station 1½ mile, and from Norwich 4 miles, contained, in
-1851, 126 inhabitants, and 613 acres of land, principally the property of
-Robert Kellett Long, Esq., of Dunston Hall, who is lord of the manor.
-The church of St. Remigius is a small building with square tower; it has
-a brass in the chancel, with effigies of Clere Talbot and his two wives.
-The living is a perpetual curacy, and the present incumbent is the Rev.
-H. C. Long, and his curate the Rev. J. W. Wenn, who resides at Mangreen
-Hall. There is a school, supported by the lord of the manor.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Fish, John
-Long, Robert K., Esq., Dunston Hall
-Moy, John
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Dady, John, parish clerk
-Le Neve, — farmer
-Lincoln, Jeremiah, steward to R. K. Long, Esq.
-Stimpson, Miss Mary A., schoolmistress
-
- * * * * *
-
-EARLHAM is a romantic little village, 2 miles from Norwich. The Hall—the
-birthplace and early residence of Elizabeth Fry—is now occupied by the
-Rev. William Ripley, M.A. The living is a vicarage, with Bowthorpe
-consolidated, enjoyed by the Rev. J. H. Payne, who resides at Colney.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Beauchamp, Mrs. Augusta
-Ripley, Rev. William Nottidge, M.A., Earlham hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Bone, Mrs. Hannah, post-office
-Bright, Edward, property and income tax collector
-Bright, John, carpenter
-Colman, William, farmer
-Cross, Mrs. Mary Ann, farmer
-Kett, James, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-EATON, 2 miles from Norwich, population nearly 800. The Dean and Chapter
-of Norwich are lords of the manor, and the living is a vicarage, in their
-gift. The Rev. George Day is the incumbent.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Beddingfield, Mr. Nelson, Newmarket road
-Bedford, Mrs., Fern Hill cottage
-Blythe, Miss Rhoda, Mile End lane
-Button, Mrs., Mile End lane
-Chamberlin, Mr. James, Mile End lane
-Crooke, Mrs., Mile End lane
-Davis, Mr. Samuel S., Mile End lane
-Day, Peter, Esq., Beech lodge
-Fickling, Miss Caroline, Mile End lane
-Flowers, Mrs., Unthank’s road
-Hill, Mr. Samuel S., Mile End lane
-Jeckell, George, Esq., Eaton road
-Muskett, Joseph, S., Esq.
-Rossi, George, Esq., Eaton villa
-Seed, Mr. Henry
-Steward, Edward, Esq., Eaton hall
-Stocks, Rev. Edward, M.A., Newmarket road
-Sudbury, Mr. Thomas, Mile End lane
-Taylor, Clement, Esq., Mile End lane
-Taylor, Mrs., Mile End lane
-Thorns, Mr. Robert, Eaton park
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Dix, William James, farmer
-Fish, John, The Cellar House inn
-Ewing, John W., nurseryman, seedsman, and lime burner
-Freeman, Charles R., wholesale grocer
-George, Thomas W., farmer and brewer
-Matthew, John, drillman
-Newman, Henry, farmer, North farm
-Nixon, Robert, Lamb inn
-Stannard, James, Red Lion
-Stannard, Thomas, cattle dealer
-Stocks, Rev. Edward, M.A., academy
-Stubbs, George, farmer, Mile end
-Thirkettle, William, blacksmith
-Webb, W., shopkeeper and postmaster
-
- * * * * *
-
-FRAMINGHAMS, two pretty and neatly-wooded parishes, called FRAMINGHAM
-PIGOT and FRAMINGHAM EARL, the latter seated 4 miles south-east of
-Norwich, and the former extending one mile further south-eastward. They
-are agricultural villages, possessing separate churches, both dedicated
-to St. Andrew. The Earl of Roseberry is lord of the manor. The land
-belongs to several owners, of whom G. B. Leak Knight, Esq., W. Jecks,
-Esq., and G. H. Christie, Esq., are the largest. The living of
-Framingham Pigot is in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and the
-incumbent is the Rev. William Henry Plume, B.A. Framingham Earl is a
-rectory, annexed to that of Bixley, joint annual value £608, in the gift
-of the incumbent, the Rev. Charles David Brereton, M.A.; his curate is
-the Rev. Godfrey John Bird. There is a small Baptist chapel in
-Framingham Pigot, and a National school in Framingham Earl; also a
-Wesleyan chapel. The population of Framingham Earl, in 1851, was 111,
-and Framingham Pigot, 345. The old church at Framingham Pigot is now
-replaced by a handsome edifice in the Early English style, from designs
-by Mr. Thomas Loyd, of Norwich.
-
- FRAMINGHAM EARL.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Bird, Rev. Godfrey John, curate
-Black, Capt. George
-Knight, George Brown Leak, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Barker, William, Railway tavern
-Barker, William, carpenter
-Blyth, Samuel, parish clerk
-Blyth, Samuel, farm bailiff
-Chaplin, Josiah, master of National school and postmaster
-Gedge, John, farmer and poor’s rate collector
-Utting, George, farmer
-
- FRAMINGHAM PIGOT.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Christie, George Henry, Esq.
-Hawkins, John, Esq.
-Jecks, William, Esq.
-Plume, Rev. William H., B.A., Rectory
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Alexander, David, farmer
-Barker, Thomas, farmer
-Barker, William, Feathers
-Beaumont, John, shoemaker
-Beaumont, Robert, shoemaker
-Ewing, John, bricklayer
-Ewing, Robert, shoemaker and parish clerk
-Grint, Miss Ruth, parochial schoolmistress
-Hawkes, John, jun., market gardener
-Holmes, William, market gardener
-Ives, Thomas, farmer
-Kirby, John, farmer
-Lawrence, William, shopkeeper and carpenter
-Long, George, market gardener and poor’s rate collector
-Nunn, William, grocer and baker
-Read, Charles, carpenter
-Riches, Henry, cowkeeper
-Sales, William, The Fox, and blacksmith
-Spinks, — farmer and butcher
-Wilkinson, Pinkingham, market gardener
-Yallop, James, market gardener
-Youngs, William, The Gull
-
- * * * * *
-
-GREAT AND LITTLE PORINGLAND. GREAT or EAST PORINGLAND, 4½ miles from
-Norwich, is in Henstead union and hundred. The Earl of Roseberry is lord
-of the manor. The living is a rectory, with residence; the Rev. S.
-Brereton is the patron and incumbent, and the Rev. L. C. Wallich, M.A.,
-is the curate. LITTLE PORINGLAND is chiefly the property of the Rev. J.
-Holmes, who is also lord of the manor. It is united with Great
-Poringland for the support of the poor, but not with regard to the roads.
-The church is in ruins. The living is a curacy consolidated with the
-rectory of Howe. The population of the joint parishes in 1851, was 605.
-
- GREAT PORINGLAND.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENT.
-
-Wallich, Rev. Leonard Calder, M.A., curate
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Aylmer, William, The Dove
-Beverly, Thomas, corn miller and farmer
-Beverly, Tobias, farmer
-Beverly, William, yeoman
-Bullen, John, carpenter
-Bullen, Thomas, wheelwright and carpenter
-Case, William Drackett, blacksmith
-Chalker, Mrs. Sarah, dressmaker
-Critoph, Joseph, shopkeeper
-Edwards, James, beer retailer and well sinker
-Fransham, Mrs. Susannah, farmer
-Goodrum, Benjamin, blacksmith
-King, Charles, farmer
-Lake, James, cattle dealer
-Lawrence, James, White Hart, and well sinker and pump maker
-Laws, R., White Swan, and bricklayer
-Lincoln, John, blacksmith
-Matthews, Norman, farmer
-Palmer, Herbert, wheelwright and shopkeeper
-Parker, John, miller and poor’s rate collector
-Taylor, Joseph, shoemaker
-Thetford, Robert Johnson, farmer
-Todd, David, cattle dealer
-Todd, J., cattle dealer, farmer and butcher
-Utting, James, parish clerk
-Utting, Mrs. Lydia, pork butcher
-Wright, Jonathan, shopkeeper
-
- LITTLE PORINGLAND.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Burrell, John, farmer
-Hubbard, Charles, farmer
-Seago, Thomas, farmer
-Shortins, James, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-GREAT MELTON, in Humbleyard hundred and union of Henstead, is 3 miles
-from Hethersett station, and 6 from Norwich. The Hall is a plain
-mansion, the seat of Charles Lombe, Esq., lord of the manor and chief
-owner. The living is a rectory, with residence, in the gift of Caius
-College, Cambridge, and the incumbent is the Rev. Charles Eyres, M.A.
-The village school-room, a very handsome building, was erected in 1850,
-at the sole expense of Charles Lombe, Esq. The school, which is for boys
-and girls, is conducted on the National system, and supported by the lord
-of the manor and the Rev. Charles Eyres, with a small weekly payment from
-the scholars.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Eyres, Rev. Charles, M.A., rector
-Rose, Mr. Thomas
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Barber, Miss, schoolmistress
-Barker, James, shopkeeper
-Bloom, Thomas, farmer, College farm
-Burrell, John, farmer
-Child, J., beer retailer and blacksmith
-Cunningham, James, shopkeeper
-Dodd, Robert, farmer, Church farm
-Howard, Matthew, farmer
-Howlett, William, market gardener
-Pearson, George, farmer, Whong farm
-Pearson, James, farmer, Chapel farm
-Reynolds, John, farmer
-Rose, Phillip, farmer, High House and Rail farms
-Sutton, William, farmer
-Woodcock, John, parish clerk
-
- * * * * *
-
-HELLESDEN, or HELLESDON, is situated in Taverham hundred, about 2 miles
-from Norwich. In 1851 the population was 467, but a great part is at
-Hellesdon hamlet, in the county of the city of Norwich. The church of
-St. Mary is small but neat: it is square built, without a tower, but has
-a wooden belfry and spire. The living is a rectory, consolidated with
-that of Drayton (see Drayton). A National school was erected in 1852, by
-Government grant and subscriptions.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Bleakley, Mrs., Fir house
-Delane, William, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Baldrey, John, market gardener, fruit, potatoe, and pea salesman, Upper
-Hellesden
-Batson, Edward, miller, and postmaster, Upper Hellesden
-Bleakley, Page, farmer, Fir house
-Blyth, James, wheelwright
-Cooper, John, farmer, Upper Hellesden
-Cox, James, market gardener, Upper Hellesden
-Cross, George, farmer
-Dennington, Job, market gardener, Upper Hellesden
-Gowing, George, farmer, Old Hall
-Greenfield, Mrs. Clara, market gardener, Upper Hellesden
-Holman, George, blacksmith
-Orris, Alfred, farmer, Upper Hellesden
-Larkman, Robert, market gardener, Upper Hellesden
-Reynolds, Joshua, miller and guardian, Upper Hellesden
-Tallowin, Joseph, Old Mile Cross, Upper Hellesden
-Wells, William Harrison, miller
-Wright, Miss Harriet, National schoolmistress, Upper Hellesden
-
- * * * * *
-
-HETHERSETT has a railway station on the Eastern Counties’ Railway. This
-village is in Humbleyard hundred; 3 miles from Wymondham, and 6 from
-Norwich. There is a chapel for Wesleyans; also a National and British
-school for boys and girls, which are both well attended. The living is a
-rectory, with that of Canteloffe annexed, in the gift of Gonville and
-Caius College, Cambridge. The present incumbent is the Rev. William
-Reynolds Collett, M.A. The Oak of Reformation, under which the two Ketts
-and their associates took a solemn oath in 1549 to reform the abuses of
-Church and State, is still to be seen on the road from Wymondham to
-Hethersett. The population is 1209. John Henry Gurney, Esq., M.P., and
-Henry Back, Esq., are the chief landowners. The station is in
-Ketteringham, about a mile distant.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Andrew, Rev. William Wayte, M.A., incumbent of Ketteringham, Wood hall
-Back, Alfred, Esq.
-Back, Henry, Esq. Hethersett hall
-Baker, Mr. Benjamin, Lynch green
-Brown, The Misses
-Collett, Rev. William Reynolds, M.A., Rectory
-Cook, Mr. Thomas
-Dickman, Mr. John
-Langford, Capt. George
-Norgate, Col. Charles
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Bailey, Jonathan, boot and shoe maker
-Bailey, Robert, bricklayer
-Bale, Mrs. S., butcher and brickmaker
-Barber, William, hairdresser
-Buckingham, Nicholas, farmer
-Buckingham, William, farmer
-Bush, Robert, farmer, Dairy farm
-Clarke, Mrs. Julia, shopkeeper
-Clarke, Rowland, baker
-Cunningham, W., boot and shoe maker
-Curson, John, boot and shoe maker
-Curson, John, builder and brickmaker
-Eldridge, James, schoolmaster
-Eldridge, Mrs. Maria, schoolmistress
-Emms, Mrs. Mary, straw bonnet maker, Miller’s row
-Fisk, Ed., saddler and harness maker
-Ford, William, King’s Head
-Fox, James, Greyhound
-Harvey, J., agricultural machine maker
-Herne, Thomas, blacksmith
-Hickling, T., saddler and harness maker
-Hood, John, jun., farmer
-Howard, David, butcher
-Ireland, Robert, carpenter, Lynch green
-
- * * * * *
-
-HOLVERSTONE, in Henstead hundred and union, 5 miles from Norwich,
-contains 345 acres of land, which mostly belongs to the executors of the
-late John Marcon, Esq., of Swaffham. The church of St. Mary was
-dilapidated some centuries ago, and no part of it now remains. The
-rectory is in three medieties, united to Rockland St. Marys, Bergh Apton,
-and Hillington. The population, in 1851, was 30.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Andrews, Jesse, farmer and poor’s rate collector, The Hall
-Andrews, William, farmer
-Sussams, Darius, market gardener
-
- * * * * *
-
-HORSFORD is a scattered village and parish, between 4 and 5 miles from
-Norwich, belonging principally to Viscount Ranelagh, and Sir Thomas B.
-Lennard, Bart., who is lord of the manor. The population is about 700.
-The living is a vicarage, held by the Rev. William Atthill M.A.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Armes, Mrs. Sarah
-Atthill, Rev. William, M.A., Vicarage
-Day, James, Esq.
-Gill, John Brooke, Esq.
-Mc’Donald, Mrs.
-Sambourne, Miss
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Andrews, Alfred, boot and shoe maker
-Andrews, Robert, farmer
-Armes, Mrs. Rachel, dressmaker
-Armes, Robert, parish clerk
-Baker, Charles, farmer
-Baker, Henry, farm bailiff
-Baker, John, farmer
-Barrett, Mrs. Elizabeth, farmer
-Barrett, Samuel, farmer
-Blyth, Philip, farmer
-Bowles, Benjamin Robert, farmer
-Bunn, John, bricklayer
-Bunn, Mrs. Sarah, farmer
-Bunn, William, joiner
-Canham, John, farmer and landowner
-Chapman, James, beer retailer
-Chubbock, Henry, Spotted Dog inn
-Chubbock, Robert, butcher
-Cole, James, The Crown inn
-Crome, Samuel, farmer
-French, Wallace, butcher and grocer
-Frost, John, farmer
-Greaves, Thomas and James, farmers
-Greaves, John Snelling, farm bailiff
-Greaves, William, farm bailiff
-Harsent, Samuel, market gardener
-Harvey, William, boot and shoe maker
-Howe, William, bricklayer
-Hutton, John and William, farmers
-Lacy, Pamela, day school
-Lacy, Virtue, dressmaker
-March, James, farmer
-March, Jeremiah, carpenter
-Oliver, Mrs. Mary, beer retailer
-Pratt, William, farmer
-Punt, Abraham, farmer
-Punt, Elijah, farmer
-Pye, Theophilus, baker and shopkeeper
-Reeve, Edmund, farmer
-Rice, Richard, coachmaker
-Springle, Elijah, bricklayer
-Wade, John, blacksmith
-Wade, Walter, shoemaker
-Walker, Mrs. Elizabeth, shopkeeper
-Williamson, Frederick, farmer
-Williamson, Mrs. Martha, dressmaker
-Wortley, Robert, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-HORSHAM ST. FAITH and NEWTON ST. FAITH are two villages forming one
-parish, generally known as “St. Faith’s,” from 4 to 5 miles from Norwich,
-in Taverham hundred. There were, in 1851, 923 inhabitants in Horsham,
-and 288 in Newton. The parish comprises 2700 acres, belonging to several
-proprietors, the largest of whom is Viscount Ranelagh, who is lord of the
-manor and patron of the living, a perpetual curacy, held by the Rev.
-William Atthill, M.A., of Horsford. The Wesleyans have a chapel in each
-village.
-
- HORSHAM ST. FAITH.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENT.
-
-Priestley, William Stanton, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Barker, Edmund, veterinary surgeon
-Blyth, John, boot maker
-Bridger, John, boot maker
-Cable, Robert, King’s Head
-Carman, Philip, farmer, and superintendent registrar
-Cook, James, farmer
-Cook, William Warner, farmer
-Cooper, James, market gardener
-Cox, Mrs. Charlotte Maria, schoolmistress to Union
-Cox, William Salisbury, schoolmaster to Union
-Dickerson, Mrs. Ann, matron of Union
-Dickerson, James, master of Union
-Eglinton, Richard, farmer and miller
-Harper, Miss Elizabeth, shopkeeper
-Leamon, Edmund, market gardener
-Livock, Thomas, farmer
-Lovick, John, beer retailer, and farmer
-Lovick, Samuel, shopkeeper
-Newton, William, boot maker
-Norm, Mrs. Eve Elizabeth, market gardener, and beer retailer
-Pearce, John, blacksmith
-Priestley, William Stanton, surgeon
-Randall, H., saddler and harness maker
-Ryner, Allen, tailor
-Reynolds, Edward, farmer, Elm farm
-Reynolds, Jas., corn and seed merchant
-Reynolds, Mrs. Kerenhappuch, farmer
-Reynolds, Samuel, farmer
-Rice, James, Black Swan, butcher and postmaster
-Rice, James, jun., butcher and dealer
-Richards, Robert, relieving officer, and registrar of births and deaths
-Scarnett, John, farmer, builder, and registrar of marriages
-Scarnett, John, junr., blacksmith and grocer
-Scarnett, John, senr., carpenter
-Turner, Edward, farmer
-West, John, farmer
-Webb, Benjamin, shopkeeper and basket maker
-Woodcock, Samuel, The Crown
-Yarrington, Henry, market gardener
-
- NEWTON ST. FAITH.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Batley, Stephen, chair maker
-Bullard, R., jun., shopkeeper and butcher
-Bullard, Robert, senr., farmer
-Cooper, John, shopkeeper
-Newton, Richard, boot maker
-Palmer, Benjamin, licensed hawker
-Pointer, Edmund, The Crown
-Pointer, George, shopkeeper
-Reynolds, James, farmer
-Reynolds, Joshua, farmer
-Smith, John, shoemaker
-Woodcock, Joseph, farmer
-Woodcock, Mark, cattle dealer
-
- * * * * *
-
-INTWOOD, a small village, near Hethersett station, 3½ miles from Norwich,
-containing upwards of 600 acres of land, all the property of Joseph
-Salisbury Muskett, Esq., of Eaton. The living is a rectory, consolidated
-with that of Keswick, of the joint annual value of £350, in the gift of
-J. S. Muskett, Esq.; the Rev. Edmund Saul Dixon is the incumbent, and the
-Rev. William Cufaude Davie, M.A., of Cringleford, curate. Hudson Gurney,
-Esq., is lord of the manor.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENT.
-
-Bacon, Richard, Noverre, Esq., Intwood hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Allden, William Spratt, farmer
-Cannell, Henry, parish clerk
-
- * * * * *
-
-KESWICK, a small parish in Humbleyard hundred and Henstead union, 3 miles
-from Norwich. The population, in 1851, was 126. The parish, which
-contains 722 acres of land, belongs principally to Hudson Gurney, Esq.,
-who is lord of the manor, and occupies the New hall. Of the church
-nothing remains but part of the round tower. The rectory is consolidated
-with that of Intwood.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Birkbeck, Mrs., Old Hall
-Gurney, Hudson, Esq., New Hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Beezer, John, postmaster
-Blomfield, Miles, miller
-Edwards, T., farmer and land agent
-
- * * * * *
-
-KIRBY BEDON, in Henstead hundred, 3 miles from Norwich, contains 300
-inhabitants and 1360 acres of land, belonging to the lords of the manor,
-Sir H. J. Stracey, Bart., and Charles Lombe, Esq., and to Mrs. Woolsey.
-The living is a rectory, annual value £200, with residence in the gift of
-Henry Muskett, Esq., and is now held by the Rev. E. Day.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Day, Rev. Edward, A.B., Rectory
-Harvey, William, Esq.
-Woolsey, Mrs. Maria
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Bird, William, farmer
-Butcher, James, farm bailiff
-Clare, Charles, farmer
-Crowe, Charles Bunn, carpenter and wheelwright
-Crowe, Simon R., carpenter and wheelwright
-Horne, Robert, Stracey Arms
-Mallett, James, parish clerk
-Money, William F., farmer
-Neave, Richard, shopkeeper and market gardener
-Varvill, James, bricklayer
-Varvill, James, sen., farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-LITTLE MELTON, a scattered parish, with 379 inhabitants, principally
-small farmers and agricultural labourers, is in Humbleyard hundred, and
-Henstead union. The lord of this manor is Charles Lombe, Esq. The
-living is a vicarage, of the annual value of £110, with residence, in the
-patronage of Emanuel College, Cambridge; the incumbent is the Rev. John
-Charles Barkley, M.A. There is a village school for boys and girls,
-supported by voluntary contributions.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENT.
-
-Barkley, Rev. John Charles, M.A., incumbent, Parsonage
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Aldred, Thomas Dove, farmer
-Aves, John, farmer
-Blyth, William, market gardener
-Drane, William Tuttell, surveyor and valuer, and manufacturer of cattle
-food, and at Norwich
-Eden, Edmund, market gardener
-Fisher, Thomas, farmer
-Forster, Tho., parish clerk and farmer, Corporation farm
-Fox, Edmund, plumber, painter and glazier
-Girling, The Misses Elizabeth and Juliana, shopkeepers
-Goward, Mary Ann, schoolmistress
-Hipperson, S., bricklayer and farmer
-Kemp, John, market gardener
-Lovett, John, shopkeeper
-Reynolds, Miss Maria, beer retailer and shopkeeper
-Ringer, Daniel, farmer, Low common
-Thompson, James, market gardener
-Wright, Frederick, miller
-
- * * * * *
-
-MARKSHALL, or MATTISHALL HEATH, 2½ miles from Norwich, contains but 4
-houses and 26 inhabitants. The land belongs chiefly to Mrs. H. Dashwood,
-of Caistor St. Edmund, with which, the church having been desecrated, the
-parish has long been consolidated in ecclesiastical matters.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENT.
-
-Gillett, Mrs.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Gillett, Thomas, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-MULBARTON, in Humbleyard hundred, and Henstead union, 5 miles from
-Norwich, contains 587 inhabitants, and 1350 acres of land. The living is
-a rectory, with that of Kenningham annexed, joint annual value £606, in
-the gift of the Rev. J. H. Steward, and the Rev. Richard Gay Lucas, B.A.,
-the incumbent. The Rev. J. H. Steward, M.A., and Sir William Bellairs,
-Knt., are the chief landowners; the former being lord of the manor.
-There is a school on the National system.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Bellairs, Capt. Edmund Hook Wilson, Mulbarton lodge
-Lucas, Rev. Richard Gay, B.A., J.P., Rectory
-Squires, Mr. Paul
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Banham, Joshua, carpenter
-Barrell, Mrs. Charlotte, shopkeeper
-Barrell, William, miller
-Blake, John, butcher
-Blake, Robert, butcher and farmer
-Blomfield, Dennis, miller
-Catchpole, John, boot and shoe maker
-Fiddymont, Samuel, farmer
-Forster, Charles, farmer
-Francis, George, plumber, painter and glazier
-Girling, Robert, pork butcher
-King, Randall, farmer
-Lain, John, farmer
-Mitchell, Mrs. Mary Ann, shopkeeper
-Rice, James, blacksmith
-Petchell, Mark Bean, boys’ school, and registrar of births and deaths
-Rice, John, baker
-Rice, R., beer retailer and wheelwright
-Spratt, Andrew, parish clerk
-Todd, Miss Harriett, shopkeeper and postmistress
-Todd, William, World’s End inn, and collector of taxes
-Turner, James, landowner, farming his own land
-Turner, John, farmer
-Youngman, Miss Fanny, schoolmistress
-
- * * * * *
-
-NEWTON ST. FAITH—see Horsham St. Faith.
-
- * * * * *
-
-PLUMSTEAD (GREAT), a small parish in Blofield hundred, distant from
-Norwich 5 miles. The population, in 1851, was 359. The living is a
-perpetual curacy, annual value £100, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter
-of Norwich; the incumbent is the Rev. Edward Cole, M.A.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Campbell, Alexander, F., Esq.
-Cole, Rev. Edward, M.A.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Barker, Peter, farmer
-Browne, Robert, farmer
-Crow, Frederick, carpenter
-Forster, Francis, farmer
-George, William, wheelwright
-Goose, William, farmer
-Gosling, John, farmer
-Lond, John, shoemaker
-Maidstone, R., parish clerk, and postmaster
-Newman, Robert, farmer
-Pyle, Henry, Hare inn
-Scott, Jonathan, farmer
-Simmons, Francis, shoemaker
-Sutton, Francis, blacksmith
-Tills, John, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-PLUMSTEAD (LITTLE), in Blofield hundred, distant 5 miles from Norwich,
-contains about 300 inhabitants. The living is a rectory, and the Rev.
-John Leatherdale is the incumbent.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Gaze, Mr. Charles
-Leatherdale, Rev. John
-Moss, Charles
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Boast, Moses, farmer
-Boughton, John, farmer
-Bunn, Samuel, Bookmakers’ Arms
-Chamberlain, Charles, shoemaker
-Crow, Robert, farmer
-Dye, George, farmer
-Harmer, William, carpenter
-Nicholls, Fitt, carpenter and wheelwright
-Read, Clare Sewell, farmer
-Stevens, William John, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-POSTWICK, a small village in Blofield hundred, 2 miles from Brundall
-station, and 4 from Norwich, contains 271 inhabitants. The Earl of
-Rosebery is lord of the manor and patron of the benefice. The living is
-a rectory, held by the Rev. Charles Ford, M.A., who resides here. The
-whole parish belongs to the Earl of Rosebery, except the detached
-marshes.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Ford, Rev. Charles, M.A., Rectory
-Gostling, Mrs. Ann
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Attoe, G., wheelwright and postmaster
-Attoe, Miss Mary, mistress of National school
-Edwards, James, shopkeeper
-Gillett, Cyrus, farmer, Hall
-Goose, William Norman, farmer
-Hood, Peter, blacksmith
-Parker, James, farmer
-Parker, John William, farmer
-Pummell, James, parish clerk
-Seeley, John, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-RACKHEATH, in the Taverham hundred, 4½ miles from Norwich, has a
-population of nearly 200 inhabitants, and 2000 acres of land. Sir H. J.
-Stracey, Bart., who resides at the Hall, is lord of the manor and patron
-of the living. There is a village school supported by Sir H. J. Stracey.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Hodgson, Rev. Frederick, M.A., rectory
-Stracey, Sir Henry, Bart., the Hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Barnes, George, farmer
-Clarke, John, Green Man
-Forder, Joseph, blacksmith
-Gillingwater, Edward, farmer
-Kemp, William, farmer
-Jones, Mrs. Catherine, mistress of free school
-Utting, Henry, farmer
-Watts, Robert, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHOTTESHAM ALL SAINTS, or HIGH SHOTTESHAM, a village 2 miles from
-Swainsthorpe station, and 6 from Norwich, is in Henstead hundred and
-union. The area of the parish is 1591 acres, nearly all of which belong
-to Robert Fellowes, Esq., the lord of the manor and patron of the
-vicarage, to which those of Shottesham St. Mary, St. Botolph, and the
-rectory of St. Martin, are annexed. The Rev. Charles Fellowes, M.A., is
-the present incumbent. The two parishes have the privilege of sending
-eight poor people to the East Greenwich Hospital. There is a school in
-the parish, supported by R. Fellowes, Esq., and the Rev. C. Fellowes.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Fellowes, Rev. Charles, M.A., vicar, Vicarage
-Merry, Francis William, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Barnes, William, pork butcher
-Baxter, Robert, market gardener
-Baxter, Thomas, farmer
-Boyce, Francis, maltster and farmer
-Burgess, Thomas, farmer
-Burgess, Thomas, jun., farmer
-Cutts, William, Duke’s Head inn, and blacksmith
-Cutts, William and Co., artificial manure manufacturers
-Godfrey, Thomas, farmer
-Gooch, James, shopkeeper, agent for British Economical manure, and
-postmaster
-Harvey, Mrs. Maria, shopkeeper
-Herne, Miss Mercy, shopkeeper
-Huggins, Thomas, farmer
-Huggins, William, farmer
-King, G., Crown, and market gardener
-Martins, Charles, shoemaker and carrier
-Merry, Francis William, surgeon
-Mitchell, John, shopkeeper
-Nicholls, Mrs. Anderlinda, milliner and dressmaker
-Parfitt, Robert, butcher; and at Brooke
-Purday, H., tailor and woollen draper
-Riches, G., shoemaker and parish clerk
-Riches, Jeremiah, beer retailer and market gardener
-Sayer, James, rat destroyer
-Tyrell, Abraham, butcher
-White, T., carpenter and wheelwright
-White, Mrs. M. A., parish schoolmistress
-Whiting, Samuel, shoemaker
-Wilson, Philip, shopkeeper
-Winter, John, farmer, and poor’s rate collector
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHOTTESHAM ST. MARY, or LOW SHOTTESHAM, comprises the parishes of St.
-Mary, St. Martin, and St. Botolph, and is situated 5 miles from Norwich,
-in Henstead hundred and union. The parish contained, in 1851, a
-population of 352. The church of St. Mary is a small edifice, in good
-condition; but St. Martin’s and St. Botolph’s have been in ruins for
-several centuries. Their benefices, with the rectory of St. Martin, were
-consolidated with Shottesham All Saints soon after the Reformation.
-Charles Fellowes, M.A., is the incumbent. Shottesham Park is the seat of
-Robert Fellowes, Esq., who is lord of the manor. A small school was
-established in 1852, by Mrs. Fellowes, the average attendance at which is
-52.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENT.
-
-Fellowes, Robert, Esq., Shottesham park
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Boyce, F., plumber, painter and glazier
-Brighton, Henry, machine thrasher
-Grice, Saul, farmer
-Lee, Walter, farmer
-Martin, J., shoemaker and shopkeeper
-Miles, John Wakelin, corn miller, merchant, and farmer
-Raven, William Beverley, farmer
-Sayer, Mrs. Mary, farmer
-Smart, — land agent
-Warmoll, John, farmer
-Welley, Mrs. Mary, mistress of parish school
-
- * * * * *
-
-SPIXWORTH, in Taverham hundred, 4 miles north of Norwich, contains about
-2000 acres of land, and in 1851, the population was 41. The church of
-St. Peter, a neat building, with chancel, one aisle, and small tower,
-contains a large handsome monument to the memory of the Pecks, and
-several to the Longes and others. The living is a rectory, annual value
-£362, with residence, in the gift of John Longe, Esq., and held by the
-Rev. Henry Howes, M.A.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Howes, Rev. Henry, M.A., Parsonage
-Longe, John, Esq., The Hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Eaton, George, farmer
-Graver, William, blacksmith
-Holmes, Benjamin, farmer
-Porter, Mrs. Jane, farmer, The Grange
-
- * * * * *
-
-SPROWSTON is an extensive village in the Taverham hundred, 3 miles from
-Norwich, with a population of upwards of 1300. The living is a curacy,
-in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and the present incumbent
-is the Rev. H. Banfather.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Aldridge, John
-Anderson, William
-Banfather, Rev. Henry, B.D.
-Chambers, John William, Esq.
-Cobb, Mrs.
-Gale, Mr. William
-Harman, Leonard
-Hastings, Edmund, Esq.
-Kitton, John, Esq.
-Loose, Charles, Esq.
-Massingham, Henry Alpe, Esq.
-Pratt, William, Esq.
-Riches, Robert, Esq.
-Rushmare, William, Esq.
-Slade, Daniel Davis, Esq.
-Stewart, Isaac, Esq.
-Stracey, Edward, The Lodge
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Andrews, F., blacksmith, wheelwright, carpenter, and postmaster
-Atkinson, Robert, farmer
-Austin, Edward, wind saw mills
-Bacon, C., brickmaker, steam sawing mills, and farmer
-Bacon, Thomas, market gardener
-Barker, John, market gardener
-Barnes, George, farmer
-Blake, Benjamin, butcher
-Blake, George, brickmaker
-Bond, Henry, miller
-Browne, David, seedsman and florist
-Burrows, John, baker and grocer
-Burrows, P., Norfolk and Norwich Arms
-Burrows, Thomas, yeoman, The Ship
-Catton, Richard, market gardener
-Chambers, John William, farmer
-Chilvers, John, blacksmith
-Crumpton, William, farmer
-Cutler, John, market gardener
-Durrant, William, relieving officer, and registrar of births and deaths
-Easton, Isaac, baker
-Edwards, William, lime burner
-Edwards, T., lime burner and postmaster
-Edwards, Thomas P., agent to the British Life Insurance Society
-Everett, John, steward to Col. Stracey
-Fitt, John, market gardener
-Fox, John, carpenter
-Gale, Mrs. Miriam, midwife
-George, George, butcher
-Gilbert, James, plumber and glazier
-Goodson, Henry, hurdle maker
-Harrison, Edmund, farmer
-Hudson, Charles, beer retailer
-Jarmy, Thomas, brickmaker
-Lloyd, Mrs. Hannah, farmer
-Ludkins, David, farmer
-Ludkins, Richard, farmer
-Olyott, Thomas, Blue Boar and farrier
-Pearce, Miss Ann, straw bonnet maker
-Peart, William, tailor
-Perowne, Miss Mary Ann, farmer, Denmark farm
-Poll, David, brickmaker
-Read, John, steward to Mr. Kitton
-Robertson, George, flour miller
-Rolfe, Matthew, shoemaker
-Sidney, Mrs. Emily, shopkeeper
-Sursham, Miss Susan, shopkeeper
-Tooley, Jeremiah, cow keeper
-Walker, Thomas, baker
-Wiley, Jeremiah Cozens, farmer, Oak lodge
-Yallop, William, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-ST. FAITH’S—see Horsham St. Faith.
-
- * * * * *
-
-STOKE HOLY CROSS, 2 miles from Swainsthorpe station and 5 from Norwich,
-in Henstead hundred and union, contained, in 1851, 451 inhabitants. The
-land belongs chiefly to Sir R. J. Harvey, Knt., H. Birkbeck, and R. K.
-Long, Esqrs. The living is a vicarage, in the gift of the Dean and
-Chapter of Norwich, now held by the Rev. John Bailey, A.M. There is a
-small Baptist chapel, built by Messrs. Colman; and a weekday and Sunday
-school, supported by Mrs. Birkbeck and the Vicar.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Bailey, Rev. John, M.A., vicar, surrogate and chaplain to Henstead union
-Birkbeck, Henry, Esq., The Hall
-Cremer, Mr. Charles
-Miles, The Misses
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Barnes, Fiddy, parish clerk
-Bush, Mrs. Mary Ann, lime burner
-Castleton, Elijah, farmer
-Claxton, William, farmer
-Colman, Henry, manager at Messrs. J. and J. Colman’s mustard and starch
-manufactory
-Dix, Joshua, farmer
-Drake, John, farmer
-Dunt, Robert, blacksmith
-Gunn, Daniel, farmer
-Hazell, William, Rummer inn
-Hearne, Matthew, farmer
-Horne, W., shopkeeper, and postmaster
-Lincoln, Robert, bricklayer
-Lincoln, Robert, jun., bricklayer
-Pearce, Joshua, The Lion
-Seago, Jeremiah, farmer
-Tillett, John, farmer
-Webster, David, farmer
-Westrup, Philip, farmer
-
- * * * * *
-
-SWARDESTON, in Humbleyard hundred and Henstead union, near the
-Swainsthorpe station, and 4 miles from Norwich, contains 950 acres of
-land, and, in 1851, a population of 381. The living is a vicarage; the
-Rev. John Henry Steward, M.A., of East Carleton, is patron and incumbent,
-and the Rev. Henry Steward, B.A., curate. There is a chapel for the
-Wesleyans; and a village school for boys and girls, under the
-superintendence of the clergy. The Rev. J. H. Steward, M.A., and Robert
-Palmer Kemp, Esq., of Coltishall, are the chief landowners.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Featherston, Thomas, Esq., Rectory
-Steward, Rev. Henry, B.A., curate
-Wenn, Rev. James William, M.A., curate of Dunston, Mangreen hall
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Arundell, Samuel, cooper
-Barrett, Mrs. Elizabeth, shopkeeper
-Barrett, William, thatcher
-Bayley, Edward, farmer
-Bond, Robert, farmer
-Brown, James Smith, shopkeeper
-Brown, Robert, bricklayer
-Cannell, Henry, market gardener
-Cunningham, William, butcher
-Davy, Barnard, blacksmith
-Dye, John, parish clerk and vermin destroyer
-Fairman, Samuel, bricklayer
-Hall, James, jun., farmer, the Common
-Hall, James, sen., wheelwright
-Hemnell, Paul, postmaster, and boot and shoe maker
-Hubbard, John, farmer
-King, Robert, butcher and farmer
-Parr, Ezra, relieving officer
-Raven, Benjamin, farmer, Mangreen
-Smith, Isaac, market gardener
-Thrower, Mrs. Mary, schoolmistress
-Turner, Edward, Dog inn
-Twiss, Christopher, farmer, the Hall
-Whittaker, Charles, market gardener
-
- * * * * *
-
-THORPE, next Norwich, or THORPE ST. ANDREW, is 2 miles from Norwich, in
-Blofield hundred, and has about 1000 inhabitants. The Norfolk County
-Lunatic Asylum is situated here. The living is a rectory, in the gift of
-the Rev. Armine Herring, who is the incumbent. There is an Independent
-chapel in connection with the Rev. J. Alexander’s, Norwich.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Allen, Joseph Howes, Esq.
-Bacon, Miss
-Batley, Mrs. Susan
-Birkbeck, William, Esq.
-Blackiston, Mrs.
-Bolingbroke, Frederick A., Esq.
-Brightwen, John, Esq.
-Browne, David
-Clabburn, Thomas, Esq.
-Clabburn, William, Esq.
-Clarke, Mrs.
-Clayton, Miss
-Clear, James, Esq.
-Davey, Joseph, Esq.
-Foster, Charles, Esq.
-Frost, Rev. William, M.A.
-Gurney, Charles, Esq.
-Gurney, Francis Hay, Esq.
-Herring, Rev. Armine, M.A.
-Jecks, Charles, Esq.
-Jecks, William, Esq.
-Johnson, The Misses
-Kendle, The Misses
-King, Capt. Robert
-Postle, The Misses
-Rowling, Nathan S., Esq.
-Savage, Mr. John
-Upcroft, Mrs.
-Wells, Robert, Esq.
-Weston, Charles, Esq.
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Albin, Daniel, farmer
-Albin, Samuel, farmer
-Bracey, Frederick, boot and shoe maker
-Bracey, Robert, baker, grocer, butcher, and lime burner
-Bright, John, Red Lion, and farmer
-Bright, Zachariah, Hero of the Redan
-Burton, T., grocer and corn chandler
-Casson, Edward, surgeon at the Asylum
-Cattermole, Mrs., Three Tuns tavern
-Dabson, Miss J., mistress of Free school
-Dale, James, market gardener
-Dowland, John, King’s Head tavern
-Drew, John, bowl turner
-Fearnley, Joseph, grocer
-Firman, Robert, carpenter
-Gaff, Robert, master of Free school
-Hardy, John, bricklayer
-Lacey, John, commercial traveller
-Martin, William, blacksmith
-Owen, Ebenezer, superintendent of County Lunatic Asylum
-Owen, Mrs. E., matron of County Lunatic Asylum
-Rayner, John, gardener
-Rodwell, E., lodging-house keeper
-Rose, Miss Ann, grocer
-Sabberton, Thomas, engineer, general smith, and coal merchant
-Shardelow, Benjamin, plumber, glazier, and painter
-Smith, John, The Buck
-Southgate, Henry, The Griffin
-Starling, Samuel, farmer
-Todd, Daniel, sub-postmaster
-Weeds, F., parish clerk and shoemaker
-Whitaker, S., farmer and brick maker
-White, William, gardener
-
- * * * * *
-
-TROWSE NEWTON, one mile from Norwich, contained in 1851, a population of
-639; but the entire parish, which extends into the county of the city of
-Norwich, had as many as 1363 inhabitants. The principal owners of the
-land are the Rev. F. Money, the Great Hospital, and the Dean and Chapter
-of Norwich; the last of whom are lords of the manor, impropriators of the
-great tithes, and patrons of the vicarage. The Rev. George Carter, M.A.,
-of Norwich, is the incumbent.
-
- PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
-
-Money, Rev. Frederick, Crown Point
-Sparks, Alfred, the Lodge
-
- COMMERCIAL.
-
-Aldis, Jonathan, shoemaker
-Alborough, Thomas, farmer
-Betts, Samuel, butcher
-Browne, Thomas, Trowse Eye inn
-Bullard, Maria, shopkeeper
-Cannel, James, market gardener
-Daniels, Robert, blacksmith
-Denny, Thomas, butcher
-Digby, Robert, the White House inn
-Finch, John, wheelwright
-Fox, Henry, the Lime Kiln inn
-Gowing, George, farmer
-Grief, James, the White Horse inn
-Grief, Jonathan, butcher
-Harris, Robert, market gardener
-Howlett, Robert, bricklayer
-Jacobs, William, butcher
-Middleton, Alfred, carpenter
-Murrell, George, Crown Point tavern
-Newman, George, manure manufacturer
-Plant, James, farmer
-Proudfoot, E. and Ann, shopkeepers
-Read, T. W. and Co., merchants and millers
-Spence, Jonathan, carpenter
-Stageman, Susanna, National school
-Thurlow, John, shopkeeper
-Tomkins, Emma Jane, British school
-Turner, John, farmer
-Varvel, James, lime burner
-Youngs, William, Carpenters’ Arms inn
-
- * * * * *
-
-WHITLINGHAM is a small parish, 3 miles from Norwich. The land, 535
-acres, belongs to Charles Lombe, Esq., lord of the manor, impropriator of
-the tithes, and patron of the sinecure curacy. Whitlingham White House,
-which is situate in Trowse Newton, is a favorite resort of pleasure
-parties.
-
-Taylor, Samuel, farmer
-Ward, William, farm bailiff
-
-
-
-
-ADVERTISEMENTS.
-
-
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-Office_, _in most instances manufactured expressly for_ JARROLD AND SONS,
-_are displayed in Show Rooms_, _and will be found much under the charges
-of the London Advertizing houses_.
-
- Writing Desks
-
- In Mahogany, Rosewood, Ebony, Walnut, and other Woods, in a Variety of
- Sizes. From 4s. to £6 6s.
-
- Leather Writing Cases
-
- Fitted with Paper, Envelopes, Ink Glass, &c. From 1s. 9d. to £3 3s.
-
- Portable Travelling Desks
-
- In Leather. From 6s. to £5.
-
- Despatch Boxes,
-
- Bramah Locks, in Russia or Morocco, with Leather Covers
-
- Stationery Cabinets
-
- For the Library, Office, &c., in Various Woods. From 3s. 6d. to £3 3s.
-
- Ladies’ or Gentlemen’s Dressing Cases
-
- In Rosewood or Coromandel Wood, with Bottles, Trays, &c. Price from 6s.
- to £5 5s.
-
- Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Dressing Cases
-
- In Leather, Fitted with every Requisite. Price from 6s. to £3 3s.
-
- Ladies’ Work Boxes
-
- In Rosewood, Ebony, Coromandel Wood, &c., a very Extensive Assortment.
- From 1s. 6d. to £3 3s.
-
- Mordan’s Improved Postage Scales.
-
- Inkstands
-
-In Papier Machie, Oak, Black Wood, &c., in great Variety. From 1s. to £3
- 10s.
-
- Ladies’ Carriage Bags and Reticules
-
- In Leather. From 1s. 6d. to £3 3s.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-TO VISITORS
-
-
- THE GUIDE TO NORWICH & ITS NEIGHBOURHOOD.
-
- _With Steel and Wood Engravings_. _Price_ 1_s._
-
- THE VISITOR’S GUIDE IN A DAY’S RAMBLE
- THROUGH NORWICH. _Price_ 1_d._
-
- * * * * *
-
- TEN BEAUTIFULLY LITHOGRAPHED
- VIEWS IN NORWICH.
- ONE SHILLING EACH.
-
-1. A General View of the City, taken from Mousehold (Silver Hill, St.
-James’).
-
-2. A Picturesque View of the City, taken from Mr. Jarrold’s Garden,
-Thorpe Road.
-
-3. The Cathedral, North-west View.
-
-4. The Castle.
-
-5. The Castle and part of the Market-place, from the Guildhall.
-
-6. The Railway Station and Foundry Bridge.
-
-7. Sandling’s Ferry, Lower Close.
-
-8. Gate-House to the Bishop’s Palace, from St. Martin’s Palace Plain.
-
-9. A View of Thorpe, Norwich.
-
-10. A View of the Market-Place, from the Gaslight Corner.
-
- TWELVE VIEWS IN NORWICH, ENGRAVED ON STEEL,
- FOR ONE SHILLING.
-
- * * * * *
-
- THE NORWICH ROSE.
-
- Twenty-Eight beautifully Engraved Views in Norwich
- and its Vicinity, in the form of a Rose.
-
- PRICE ONE SHILLING. FREE FOR THIRTEEN STAMPS.
-
- * * * * *
-
- LONDON: JARROLD & SONS, 47, ST. PAUL’S CHURCHYARD.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-To Professional & Amateur
-PHOTOGRAPHERS.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- MESSRS. ROGERS & HAVERS,
- 5, Davey Place, Norwich,
-
-Have in stock everything that a Photographer, whether professional or
-amateur, can possibly require for the successful prosecution of his art.
-
- PRICES VERY LOW, & TERMS STRICTLY CASH.
-
-All orders punctually despatched, and information readily afforded to all
-purchasers of goods.
-
- _N.B._ _Track Price Lists free to Professionals only_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THE BEST PORTRAITS IN THE
-EASTERN COUNTIES.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- Messrs. Rogers & Havers,
- 5, DAVEY PLACE,
- NORWICH.
-
-Have constructed a large, comfortable, and well-lighted studio, in which
-Portraits are taken daily, from 10 till dusk, in all the best and most
-approved styles, on glass, leather, paper, &c., at reasonable prices.
-_For beauty and durability these pictures are no where excelled_.
-
- Paper Pictures finished in Sepia, Water Colours,
- and Oil, by First-Class Artists.
-
- VIEWS TAKEN TO ORDER IN THE CITY OR COUNTY.
-
- Faded Daguerreotypes Copied.
-
-Having devoted great care and attention to this very difficult work,
-Messrs. ROGERS & HAVERS beg to assure the public that they can now insure
-enlarged and very accurate likenesses, beautifully finished, from spotted
-and fading daguerreotypes.
-
- Stereoscopes & Stereoscopic Views,
-
-And a large assortment of Copies of the Works of the Great Masters, very
-cheap, constantly on sale.
-
- 5, DAVEY PLACE, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Picture: Norgate & Co.’s premises]
-
-
-
-NORGATE & CO.,
-ST. STEPHEN’S STREET,
-NORWICH,
-
-
- DIRECT IMPORTERS OF
-
- Wines, Spirits, and Liqueurs,
-
- AGENTS FOR COMBE, DELAFIELD, & CO.’S
-
- LONDON STOUT PORTER.
-
- Guinness’s Extra Stout Dublin Porter,
-
- BASS & CO.’S
-
- EAST INDIA PALE & OTHER BURTON ALES
-
- AITCHISON & CO.’S EDINBORO’ ALES.
-
-_On comparing their prices with those of Wine Merchants in general_, _it
-will be observed that a much lower scale is adopted_; _this advantage to
-buyers is effected by Norgate and Co.’s direct importation of Wines and
-Spirits from the country of their growth_, (_preventing an intermediate
-profit and enabling them to select the very choicest Wines_); _and by
-their immense saving in the non-employment of Travelling Salesmen_.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Sole Agents for Norfolk and Norwich for the Sale of
- Thorley’s Food for Cattle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-HOLMES AND SONS,
-PROSPECT-PLACE WORKS, NORWICH,
-Agricultural Engineers, Millwrights,
-
-
- AND MANUFACTURERS OF ALL THE MOST APPROVED
- IMPLEMENTS FOR AGRICULTURAL PURPOSES,
-
-WOULD invite attention to the position they have taken for superiority in
-Seed Drills, Manure Distributors, &c., &c. at the Royal, the Bath and
-West of England, and the Norfolk Agricultural Societies’ Meetings, where
-they had awarded them the THREE FIRST PRIZES for the best Corn and Seed
-Drill; the THREE PRIZES for Manure Distributor; PRIZE for Seed and Manure
-Drill; and HIGH COMMENDATIONS for their General Purpose Drills, Ridge
-Drill, Horse Hoes, Circular Saw Bench, &c.
-
-[Picture: Holmes and Sons’ Salisbury first prize drill] SALISBURY
-FIRST PRIZE DRILL.
-
-H. & SONS have been engaged in the manufacture of Drills for the past 32
-years, during which time every useful and practical improvement which has
-suggested itself has been introduced into their manufacture, adapting
-them to every description of soil, simplifying the different parts,
-decreasing the cost both in first price, and also in those parts subject
-to wear or derangement.
-
- _Royal Agricultural Society of England_—_Salisbury Meeting_, 1857. _The
- following_ _Prizes were awarded to Holmes & Sons at the last competition
- for Prizes_—
-
-For the best Corn and Seed Drill First Prize of £7
-For their best Manure Distributor Prize of £5
-
-_Also at the Bath & West of England Agricultural Society’s Meeting_, _at
-Newton_, _June_, 1857
-
-For the best Manure Distributor The First Prize
-For the best Corn and Seed Drill The First Prize
-For the best Corn and Seed Drill in Hilly The First Prize
-Districts
-For their Seed and Manure Drill The First Prize
- Being the fifth year this Drill has taken the Prize of this Society.
-
- _Also at the Norfolk Agricultural Show_, _Swaffham_, _June_, 1857, _H. &
- Sons’ Improved Manure Distributor proved the best Machine for that
- purpose_, _and had the Society’s Prize_.
-
- Their improved STEAM ENGINES, Portable and Fixed, for durability,
- efficiency, strength, and small consumption of coal, are not equalled by
- any other manufacturers.
-
-Fixed Engines of all sizes, and Steam Mills fitted up complete, of the
-most approved arrangement and best construction, whereby considerable
-saving of fuel is effected, and durability and efficiency increased.
-Twelve-Horse Engines doing full duty, with from six to seven cwts. of
-Coal per day.
-
-The COMBINED PORTABLE THRASHING MACHINE has had much of their attention
-since being awarded the First Prize Medal for Thrashing Machines at the
-Great Exhibition, 1851, and they can confidently guarantee them to be the
-simplest and most expeditious, making the most perfect separation of
-Corn, Chaff, Colder, and Straw, each being delivered at the most
-convenient places to take away. They are extremely portable and durable;
-and are mounted on high wooden carriage wheels.
-
-They would also call attention to their PRIZE CLOVER SHELLER, also
-adapted for Trefoil; and their WINNOWING and DRESSING MACHINES, of which
-more than 3,000 have been sent out; their CIRCULAR SAW TABLES, of
-improved construction; and other improved implements, which, with prices,
-will be found in Catalogues, sent free by post on application.
-
-H. & SONS, in soliciting a continuance of an extended patronage, beg to
-state that they have now every facility for executing orders with
-dispatch, and by the use of the best mechanical tools, in the very best
-style of workmanship. The greatest care and attention will continue to
-be used by them in the selection of the very best description of
-material, and they feel confident their present success is attributable
-to their attention to this most important point.
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Picture: Mechanical sawing machine]
-
- AS AT WORK
- At the Norfolk Agricultural Society’s Meeting at Swaffham, June, 1857;
- HOLMES AND SONS’
-Improved Self-Acting Circular Saw Table was the only one Commended by the
- Judges.
- At Norwich, 1858, it was also Highly Commended.
-
- * * * * *
-
-These Portable Machines consist of a strong iron frame capable of taking
-a 48-inch saw, firmly fixed to strong timber rails; can be unloaded and
-put to work as quickly as a Portable Thrashing Machine; require no
-fixing, the whole being placed on one frame with timber carriages, &c.
-attached. The motion for drawing the timber to or from the saw is by
-gear wheels, and can be varied as required; this arrangement is
-exceedingly simple, very strong and durable, and can be relied upon
-better than when driven by a strap and cone pulleys; it has an improved
-parallel fence which cannot move otherwise than parallel with the saw.
-
-These will be found the most simple and complete saw tables manufactured,
-and of the very best workmanship. Can be driven by the portable engines
-of 7 or 8-horse power.
-
-Illustrated Catalogues, with Prices, &c. sent Free by Post on application
- at the Works.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-LLOYD & CO.,
-LADIES’ & GENTLEMEN’S
-Fashionable
-BOOT & SHOE
-MANUFACTURERS,
-20 & 21,
-DAVEY PLACE,
-NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-A Genuine Assortment of Ladies’, Gentlemen’s and Children’s Home-made
-Boots and Shoes of the most approved kind always in Stock.
-
- * * * * *
-
- India Rubber Overshoes
- OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-ESTABLISHED 1845.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- GEORGE S. BARDWELL’S
-
- GENERAL
-
- Business & Estate Agency Offices,
-
- (Opposite the Norfolk & Norwich Hospital)
-
- ST. STEPHEN’S ROAD,
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Rents and Debts Collected. House Property Managed either on Commission
-or otherwise. Repairs Superintended or Executed if required. Books
-Posted, Balanced, and Arranged. States of Affairs Prepared. Meetings of
-Creditors called and attended. Settlements with Creditors carried
-through, and parties instructed as to the State of their Affairs.
-
- MONEY ADVANCED ON
- OUTSTANDING DEBTS.
-
- Terms for Collecting Small Debts, 10 per cent.
-
- _Special agreements made for Debts exceeding Five Pounds_.
-
- RENTS—FIVE PER CENT.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- AGENT FOR THE
- ST. GEORGE ASSURANCE COMPANY.
-
-Loans on real or personal security, re-payable by monthly or quarterly
-instalments, from one to five years, may readily be obtained on
-application.
-
- £80,000 _has been afforded in Loans of from_ £30 _to_ £1000, _in less
- than five years_, _in connection with the St. George Advance Fund
- Association_
-
- PUBLISHER OF THE NORWICH HOUSEHOLD ALMANACK.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THE PATENT SELF-SHARPENING
-PORTABLE
-AMERICAN GRIST MILL,
-
-
- [Picture: The portable American grist mill]
-
-Now for the first time introduced to the notice of British
-Agriculturists, is the most SIMPLE and EFFICIENT Grinding Mill ever
-brought out for Farmers’ Purposes; its extreme SIMPLICITY, portability,
-and cheapness, gives it a decided advantage over the ponderous machines
-now used for similar purposes. It will grind all kinds of Grain nearly
-THREE TIMES as fast with the SAME power that ordinary mill-stones will.
-The Grinding Surfaces are very durable; being made of COLD BLAST WHITE
-IRON (a material harder than cast steel), they are easily and cheaply
-re-placed when worn or broken.
-
- CAN BE WORKED BY HORSE, STEAM, OR WIND.
-
- No. 2 Mill, with 2 to 3-Horse Power, will grind 6 to 10 Bushels per
- hour
-
- No. 3 „ „ 4 to 6 „ „ 20 to 25 „ „
-
- _Full particulars_, _with prices_ (_free_) _on application to_
-
- Howard, Riches, and Watts,
- DUKE’S PALACE IRON WORKS, NORWICH.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- SOLE MAKERS FOR THIS COUNTRY.—N.B. AGENTS WANTED.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Picture: Decorative graphic with text—The Palma Christi hair wash is now
- selling largely throughout England, being preferred to all others. It
- removes scurf, keeps the head cool, & prevents greyness. Pomade or oil
- is not required when the wash is used as it does not suffer the hair to
- become dry. Manufactured only by Harper & Sutton Norwich. Sold by all
- chemists & perfumers]
-
- in bottles, 1s. 6d., 3s. 6d., and 10s. 6d. each.
-
- Numerous Testimonials have already been received by the Proprietors,
-
- _As to its efficacy in removing Scurf and preventing the Hair from
- falling off_.
-
- Sold in Yarmouth by Mr. J. S. Cobb—Lowestoft, Mr. Dennes—Beccles,
- Mr. J. B. Corbyn—Dereham, Mr. F. J. Smith—Ely, Mr. N. Lincolne.
-
- _Sold in London by Messrs. Barclay_, _Edwards_, _Sanger_, _Sutton_, _and
- Newbery_; _Liverpool_,
- _Aspinall & Son_: _and can be obtained by order of any Druggist or
- Perfumer_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-MR. F. SUTTON,
-ANALYTICAL CHEMIST
-(Harper & Sutton, Bank Plain, Norwich)
-
-
- BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO
- FARMERS, MERCHANTS, AND MANURE MANUFACTURERS,
- THAT HE UNDERTAKES THE
-
- Analysis of Manures, Soils, Oil Cakes, Coprolite,
-
- _And the Miscellaneous Articles used in Agriculture_, _the Arts_, _&c._
-
- * * * * *
-
-Having for many years studied Practical Chemistry, and received
-instruction in the Laboratory of Dr. Richardson, from Professor Liebig’s,
-he solicits the confidence of the Agricultural and Commercial Public,
-assuring them that a conscientious regard to accuracy, coupled with
-reasonable charges, shall always be maintained in all matters committed
-to him.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _List of Fees may be had on application to HARPER AND SUTTON_,
- _Chemists_, _Gurney’s Bank Plain_, _Norwich_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-T. DIXON,
-WATCH MAKER, &c.
-6, Bridewell Alley, Norwich,
-
-
-Wishes to direct public attention to his large Stock of Gold and Silver
-Watches, which he is enabled to offer at the Lowest Prices, consistent
-with good quality; observing that each Watch before being placed in the
-purchaser’s hands, is skilfully examined and timed, so that its accurate
-performance is warranted.
-
- Gold Watches, elegant in appearance, and such as can be warranted
- to perform correctly, from £5 5s.
-
- The same in Silver Cases, from £2 10s.
-
- Gold Lever Watches, from £10 10s. Silver Levers, from £4 4s.
-
-English and Geneva Watches and Clocks of every description Cleaned and
-Repaired: on this point remarking that the skill with which a watch is
-cleaned or repaired is almost of as much importance as its quality; the
-best watch cleaned by a clumsy workman will never go well. There are
-more watches spoiled by incompetent persons, than are actually worn out
-by ordinary use. T. DIXON solicits the patronage of all who are desirous
-of having their WATCHES MADE TIMEKEEPERS, which, from the fact of
-employing none but skilful workmen, he is in a position to guarantee.
-All Watches repaired at the above Establishment are warranted for Twelve
-Months, and no charge is made for any alteration that may be required
-during that period.
-
- Plate & Jewellery Carefully Repaired at Reasonable Prices.
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Picture: Pair of glasses with Dixon Optician on the lenses]
-
-
-
-T. DIXON, OPTICIAN, ETC.
-6, BRIDEWELL ALLEY, NORWICH,
-
-
-From extensive experience, is enabled in all cases of impaired vision,
-arising from premature decay, or excessive use of the visual organs, to
-suit, upon correct principles, at a moderate cost, every description of
-sight with Spectacles and Eye Glasses, upon the most improved Structure.
-
- PRICES.
-
- _s._ _d._ _s._ _d._
-In Blue Steel Frames 2 0 to 10 0
-„ „ Pebbles 8 6 to 15 0
-Silver ditto 10 0 to 25 0
-Gold ditto 20 0 to 60 0
-
- _Spectacles purchased at this Establishment exchanged if not approved_.
-
- GLASSES FITTED TO SPECTACLES.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-ST. ANN’S IRON WORKS,
-KING STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- THOS. SMITHDALE,
-
- Engineer, Millwright, Boiler Maker,
- Iron and Brass Founder.
-
- [Picture: Steam engine]
-
-Manufacturer of all kinds of Stream Engines on the most improved
-principles, Hydraulic Presses adapted for all purposes, Cranes and Crabs,
-Railway Work of all kinds; also Machinery suitable for Wind, Water, Gas,
-Sawing, Grinding, and all other Works, Breweries, etc.
-
- ENGINEER & MACHINISTS’ TOOL MAKER.
-
- _Planing_, _Boring_, _Turning_, _Screw Cutting_, _and Smith’s Forging_
- _Work of every description_.
-
-N.B. All kinds of Engines, Boilers, and General Machinery Repaired on the
-Shortest Notice, by first-class workmen, and on reasonable terms.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Removed from the Back of the Inns.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~
-
-
-
-W. HALL,
-ENGRAVER & LITHOGRAPHER,
-22, WHITE LION STREET, NORWICH,
-THREE DOORS FROM THE MARKET.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-S. FENNING,
-Ladies & Gentlemen’s Fashionable
-BOOT AND SHOE MAKER
-ORFORD HILL, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-H. DURRANT,
-
-
- GROCER, TEA-DEALER,
-
- Cheese, Butter, and Bacon Factor,
-
- BER STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-SARAH LAMB,
-
-
- WIRE WORKER, WIRE WEAVER,
-
- Corn Dressing and Blowing Machine Maker,
-
- 5, GOLDEN BALL STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _All sorts of Wire Screens_, _Sieves_, _Fire and Window Guards_.
-
- WINDOW BLINDS, ETC.
-
- The Trade supplied with every article either complete or in parts.
-
- * * * * *
-
- NOTICE OF REMOVAL.
-
- * * * * *
-
- C. G. STARLING,
- DRAPER, HOSIER,
- HABERDASHER, ETC.
-
-RETURNS his most sincere thanks to his numerous Patrons and Friends, for
-their liberal support during the last two years, and begs to inform them
-that he has REMOVED to more Commodious Premises,
-
- No. 2, White Lion Street,
- MARKET-PLACE,
-
-Next door to Harvard and Co., late Black and Raynes, where he hopes to
-have a continuance of their kind support.
-
- No. 2, White Lion Street, Market-Place.
-
- * * * * *
-
- All who value a Beautiful Set of Teeth
- should use the
-
-
-
-AROMATIC TOOTH PASTE,
-PREPARED BY
-J. H. HULME,
-CHEMIST AND DRUGGIST
-AND SURGEON DENTIST,
-Hall Plain, Saint Andrew’s,
-NORWICH,
-
-
-Which imparts delicious fragrance to the breath, and confers the most
-signal benefit upon Spongy and Tender Gums, arising from whatever cause,
-producing a healthy firmness; and not only cleansing the teeth but
-preventing them from decay to the latest period of life, removing all
-discolouration, and entirely eradicating all appearance of Tartar,
-renders them of the most beautiful pearly whiteness. Sold in Jars, 1s.
-each.
-
- Teeth filled with a New Succedaneum, which preserves the Colour.
-Extracting and Scaling and every operation connected with Dental Surgery.
-
- PRESCRIPTIONS DISPENSED WITH DRUGS OF THE PUREST QUALITY
-
- _Horse & Cattle Medicines_. _Perfumery of every kind_. _Genuine Patent
- Medicines_. _Leeches_, _&c._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-6 Shirts for One Guinea.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- GENERAL
- GLOVE, HOSIERY, & OUTFITTING
- ESTABLISHMENT,
- BRIGGS’ STREET, NORWICH,
- (OPPOSITE THE SAVINGS’ BANK.)
-
- * * * * *
-
- H. BIRD
-
-Begs most respectfully to inform the Nobility, Clergy, Gentry, and
-Inhabitants of Norwich and Norfolk, that he has taken the premises late
-in the occupation of Mr. Smith, Bookseller, Stationer, &c., Briggs’
-Street, where he hopes, by strict personal attention and supplying a
-first-rate article, to merit a share of that patronage which he so
-earnestly solicits.
-
- One dozen Shirt Collars for 6s. 6d.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-Alterative and Restorative
-Horse Powders.
-
-
-The flattering accounts which have been received from parties who have
-tested the properties of these Powders, induce the Proprietor to call the
-attention of Agriculturists and all who employ Horses, to this Medicine,
-which has been found eminently successful in removing all diseases of the
-skin, want of condition, hide-bound, surfeit, mange, &c. for improving
-the coat and giving it a fine glossy appearance; also for Horses that are
-heavy and incapable of work, or off their food, from indigestion or other
-causes, or that have a tendency to grease, swelling, and humours of the
-legs, or cracked heels; in all which cases this preparation will
-gradually but certainly remove the disease. When Horses are weakly, and
-it would be an inconvenience to spare them from their regular work, these
-Powders will be found eminently useful, as they may with great advantage,
-be frequently substituted for purgative medicines.
-
- SOLD IN PACKETS, AT 1s. EACH, WITH DIRECTIONS.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Cough Balls for Horses.
-
-These Balls are a most valuable remedy for Coughs, Colds, Difficulty of
-Breathing, &c. whether of recent or long standing. They are effectual in
-their operation, require no alteration of diet, and do not interfere with
-the horse’s regular work. One Ball, given every other night, for three
-or four times, is generally found sufficient to remove the most obstinate
-Cough.
-
- IN PACKETS, 1s. 6d., CONTAINING SIX BALLS.
-
- Prepared only by JAMES ORISSA PEGGS,
-
- CHEMIST, GOLD IN BALL STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-HENRY DUFFIELD,
-TAILOR & TROWSERS MAKER,
-12, EXCHANGE STREET,
-NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THOMAS GOOD,
-
-
- LADIES & GENTLEMEN’S
-
- Boot, Shoe, and Last Manufacturer,
-
- BRIDGE STREET, ST. GEORGE’S,
-
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-H. BREEZE,
-
-
- DYER, ETC.,
-
- St. George’s Bridge Street, Norwich.
- DYEING & DRESSING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES.
-
- Ladies’ Shawls and Dresses of every description Cleaned, and the
- Colours of Printed ones warranted to be preserved.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-J. NOBBS,
-
-
- BOOT AND SHOE MANUFACTURER
-
- Bridge Street, St. George’s,
-
- NORWICH.
-
- N.B. ALL ORDERS EXECUTED ON THE SHORTEST NOTICE.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-PHŒNIX BREWERY,
-MAGDALEN STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- BOARDMAN & SURSHAM,
-
- BREWERS,
-
- HOP, CORN, AND COAL MERCHANTS.
-
- LONDON BROWN STOUT.
-
-COUNTING HOUSE, WENSUM STREET.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-BROWN AND WRIGHT,
-
-
- Millwrights, Engineers, Stone Builders,
-
- AND WORKERS OF BRASS, ETC.
-
- UPPER KING STREET, NEAR ROSE LANE,
-
- NORWICH,
-
-Having commenced Business in the above Trades, beg respectfully to inform
-their Friends that all Orders entrusted to their care will be thankfully
-received and promptly executed on the most reasonable terms.
-
- MACHINERY OF EVERY DESCRIPTION REPAIRED.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-W. V. BULLEN,
-
-
- CONFECTIONER & FRUITERER,
-
- Grocer, Tea Dealer, Tobacconist
-
- AND HAIR DRESSER,
-
- GOLDEN BALL STREET, NORWICH.
-
-_Every article of First-rate Quality_, _and charged at the Lowest Price_.
-
- MANUFACTURER OF GINGER BEER AND CORDIALS.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JOHN PHILLIPS,
-
-
- Ale Brewer and Porter Merchant,
-
- GOLDEN BALL STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Families supplied with Small Casks. Scotch, Burton, and other Ales, in
- Bottles.
-
- _Importer of Foreign Wines and Spirits_, _Wholesale and Retail_.
-
-Packages and Bottles to be paid for, unless returned within Three Months.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ENGRAVING. [Picture: Printing LITHOGRAPHY
- machine]
- _A Gentleman’s_ _Show Cards_,
- _Card Plate_ _Show Bills_,
- _Elegantly_ _Fancy Labels_, _&c._
- _Engraved and_ _Ornamental_
- 50 _Cards Printed_ _Circulars and_
- _for_ 2_s._ 3_d._ _Fac Similes_.
-
- ESTIMATES GIVEN.
-
-EMSLIE AND SON,
-Engravers, Chromo-Lithographers, & Copper-plate Printers,
-
-
- BACK OF THE INNS, NORWICH,
-
- OPPOSITE MR. WOMACK’S, MERCHANT TAILOR.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-TEETH
-
-
- CAREFULLY EXTRACTED, SCALED AND STOPPED.
-
- TOOTHACHE INSTANTANEOUSLY CURED.
-
- DECAY IN TEETH PROMPTLY ARRESTED.
-
- WHEELER’S PREPARATIONS
-
-Impart to the Teeth a pearly whiteness, to the Gums a beautiful
-appearance, and to the Mouth a pleasant taste. They prevent decay in
-good Teeth, stop its progress in unsound ones, and strengthen and
-preserve the Gums.
-
- Teeth Extracted Gratis for the Poor every Morning,
-
- From Nine till Ten o’clock, by
-
- FRANCIS WHEELER,
-
- PHARMACEUTICAL CHEMIST AND DENTIST,
- SWAN LANE, LONDON STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-CHARLES BRAY,
-
-
- House and Decorative Painter,
-
- PLUMBER AND GLAZIER,
-
- ORFORD HILL, & CASTLE HILL,
-
- NORWICH.
-
- Imitator of Woods & Marbles. Bronzing, Gilding, Japanning.
-
- _Crown_, _Sheet_, _Patent Plate_, _Rough_, _Cast_, _and Boiled Plate_,
- _Ornamental and Coloured Glass of every description_.
-
- Water Closets, Engine Pumps, Steam Apparatus, Baths, etc. Fixed and
- Repaired.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-SMITH’S
-APERIENT
-FEVER POWDERS.
-
-
- FOR THE
- DISEASES OF CHILDREN.
-
- * * * * *
-
-THESE powders are strongly recommended to general attention as being a
-most appropriate Medicine for Children whilst cutting their teeth, and
-for the relief of those derangements of the system to which during the
-period of Infancy they are peculiarly the subjects, they also possess
-this great advantage, that Children of all ages, and even Adults, may
-take them with the same beneficial results. Perhaps better testimony as
-to their utility cannot be adduced, than the fact of their having been
-extensively used for more than fifty years. Directions for using the
-Powders contained in each packet.
-
- Sold in Boxes, at One Shilling each.
-
- SMITH & SONS, DISPENSING CHEMISTS,
-
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THOMAS CALVER,
-LADIES’ AND GENTLEMEN’S
-Fashionable Boot & Shoe Maker
-ST. GILES’ STREET,
-NEAR THE MARKET-PLACE, NORWICH,
-
-
-In returning his sincere thanks to his Friends and the Public, for the
-liberal patronage hitherto received, begs to inform them that he has
-removed FROM THE UPPER MARKET to more convenient premises in St. Giles’,
-where he trusts to receive an increased share of their patronage and
-support.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THOMAS WICKS,
-PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL
-WIRE WORKER,
-TOMBLAND, NORWICH.
-
-
- _All Sorts of Wire Sieves_, _Screens_, _Riddles_, _Meat Safes_, _Wire
- Window Blinds_, _Fire and Window Guards_, _Flower Stands_, _and every
- Article of Wire Work Made to Order_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-BANK PLAIN, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- JOHN SHALDERS,
- (_Late WM. SHALDERS_)
- HYDRAULIC ENGINEER,
-
- PATENT FOUNTAIN PUMP, ENGINE, HYDRAULIC,
- AND LEATHER WORKS.
-
- SHALDERS’, NORWICH,
- PATENT FOUNTAIN PUMPS,
- POWERS No. 20, 4-inch Barrels.
- JACK & LIFT FORCE
- For Tanks, Cesspools, Wells, &c.,
-
-Will draw water through any length of Suction Pipes, if not exceeding 28
-feet high.
-
- [Picture: Pump]
-
- 16th Scale.
-
- AIR Regulator, A.R.
-
-The Discovery of and method of adapting this Vessel by W. Shalders, is of
-indispensible service in causing a continuous stream in long, high, or
-contracted Suction Pipes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_Copper-rivetted Leather Hose Pipes_. _Spiral Rivetted Suction ditto_.
-_Machinery Bands—Rounded Leather_, _Lathe_, _Sash_, _etc._, _Pulley
-Bands_, _any length without joint_. _Cupped Pump Bucket Leathers_,
-_Flanch Ditto_, _etc._ _Metal_, _Wood_, _Gutta Percha_, _etc._, _Pipes_.
-_Cocks_, _Joints_, _Valves_, _Retaining Valves_, _in easily accessible
-Screw Boxes_; _Swivel Nut Brass Screw Couplings_, _Jet Pipes_, _Jets_,
-_and other Hydraulic_, _etc._, _Fittings_.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-SHALDERS’ FOUNTAIN PUMPS are matchless, as fully TESTIFIED by being
-adopted by other Pump Makers and Engineers for their own special use.
-
- Shalders’ Patent Norwich Pumps work without Friction
- or Leakage, and do not Choke.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thirty-four years’ practice has proved these _ne plus ultra Hydraulic
-Machines_, in their _average results_, to be cent per cent the most
-_effective and durable_, the _best_ and _cheapest_ of any in the _world_;
-they are made to discharge from half a pint to a ton weight of water, at
-a single clip or stroke, and are readily applied to any _motive power_ to
-_draw_ or _force water_, _air_, or any not rapidly injurious _fluids_, in
-any quantity, or to any _height_ or _distance_, for any purpose, by JOHN
-SHALDERS, Manufacturer, and Sole Proprietor.
-
-Descriptive 21 20 18 14
-Sizes.
-Powers.
-Number
-Sizes of the 3½ 4 5 7
-working Cone
-Barrels,
-Inches
-Prices Net 30s. 35s. 50s. 110s.
-Jacks
-„ Engine or 60 70 110 200
-Lift Forcers
-on Planks
-„ If with Air 5 5 6 10
-Regulator,
-extra
-,, Connector & 1s. 8d. 2s. 3d. 3s. 0d. 5s.
-Valve
-Leathers, pr.
-set
-,, Lead or 1s. 1s. 4d. 2s. 2d. 3s.
-Gutta Percha
-Suction &
-Rising Main
-Pipes & Flanch
-Joints from
-per foot
-Discharge at 9 16 24
-regular work,
-per min.
-gallons
-
- A Variety in Stock and made for all purposes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JOHN MORRIS,
-
-
- SLATE MERCHANT,
-
- AND SLATER,
-
- KING STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-If you like Strong Tea and Fresh Roasted
-Coffee, at Low Prices, try
-H. LOCK’S,
-GROCER AND TEA DEALER,
-9, ST. AUGUSTINE’S STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- A Good Supply of Fine Fruits and Fancy Biscuits.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JAMES PEARSON,
-(_From Sheffield_)
-CUTLER & TRUSS MAKER,
-ST. ANDREW’S HILL, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Razors_, _Scissors_, _Knives_, _and Surgical Instruments carefully
- ground and set_. _Table and Dessert Knives Re-Bladed_.
-
-Home-made Blades fitted into Penknives, 6d. each. Trusses and Cutlery of
- every description made to order. Shoe-Kit made and re-cut.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-HAINES BROTHERS,
-FAMILY GROCERS,
-AND PROVISION MERCHANTS,
-58, ST. STEPHEN’S, NORWICH
-
-
- _Sole Agents in Norfolk for Brown & Colson’s Patent_
- _Indian Corn Flour_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-124, Bedford Street, Saint Andrew’s,
-NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- ABRAHAM PANK,
- GAS FITTER,
- BELL HANGER & BRASS WORKER,
- BEER ENGINE & FOUNTAIN MAKER.
-
-A. P. begs to inform his friends and the public that he has removed to
-more commodious premises, which enables him to keep a larger assortment
-of every description of Gas Fittings, Glasses, &c., of the newest
-designs, for public and private buildings.
-
- RE-BRONZING AND LACQUERING.
- ALL KINDS OF BRASS WORK.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-WALKER AND BIRD,
-PRACTICAL
-Sign & Decorative Painters,
-WRITERS & GRAINERS,
-TAYLOR’S COURT, SURREY STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- _Heraldry_, _Altar Tablets_, _Scrolls_, _Banners_, _Gilding_,
- _Enamelling_.
- _Plain and Ornamental Japanning_, _etc._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THE OLD ESTABLISHED
-BOOT & SHOE WAREHOUSE
-Back of the Inns, Norwich.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- C. H. BUCK
-
-Presents his thanks to those Ladies and Gentlemen who have favoured him
-with their patronage for so many years, and begs to assure all who may
-give him their support, that he personally superintends all orders, and
-warrants all goods supplied by him to be strictly home made.
-
- REPAIRS NEATLY EXECUTED.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-GEORGE MORRIS,
-(LATE CORDRAN,)
-COACH AND GIG MANUFACTURER
-ADJOINING THE CAT & FIDDLE INN,
-MAGDALEN STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- _N.B._ _Any Orders conferred will be thankfully received and neatly
- executed on the most reasonable terms_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THOMAS SELF,
-Gas Fitter, by Appointment to
-the Company,
-
-
- BELL HANGER, BRASS WORKER & GENERAL SMITH
-
- PLUMBER, GLAZIER, & PAINTER,
-
- No. 112, POTTERGATE STREET,
-
- (Opposite St. John’s Maddermarket Church, Norwich,)
-
-Begs respectfully to acknowledge the liberal support he has received of
-his friends and the public generally during the period he has been in
-business, and takes this opportunity of announcing that in consequence of
-the Gas Company’s laying services free of expense, he is fitting up
-either public or private premises with fittings cheaper than any other
-house in Norwich, following up the principle of small profits and quick
-returns.
-
- _Hydraulic_, _Cork Slide_, _and other Pendants_, _Lustres_, _Pillars_,
- _Brackets and other Fittings_, _Gas Globes_, _Chimney_, _and Bell
- Glasses_, _etc._, _of the Newest Designs_, _always in Stock_.
-
- The Trade Supplied. Old Brass Work Repaired, Re-lacquered, and Bronzed.
-
- ESTIMATES GIVEN.
-
- NO CONNEXION WITH ANY OTHER HOUSE.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-FREDERICK COGMAN,
-TAILOR AND TROWSERS MAKER,
-
-
- PRINCE’S STREET, TOMBLAND,
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-PLUMMER & BLOOM,
-CARPENTERS,
-Builders and Contractors,
-BETHEL STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- DRAWINGS & ESTIMATES GIVEN FREE OF CHARGE.
-
- _N.B._ _Hot and Green Houses erected on the Shortest Notice and most
- Reasonable Terms_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-CASTLE MEADOW, NORWICH.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- G. C. GOOCH,
- WATER CLOSET MANUFACTURER.
-
-The most simple and yet efficient Water Closet yet manufactured, and not
-liable to get out of order; the whole of the working parts can be
-re-placed in after years for a few shillings.
-
-G. C. G. would recommend to visitors, invalids, and lodging-house keepers
-his Model Portable Water Closet. It is perfectly seated, and cannot
-possibly smell. The cheapest and most complete yet brought before the
-public.
-
- Estimates given for fixing Water Closets, and all necessary alterations
-
- PAINTING, PLUMBING, & GLAZING.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-ST. MARY’S STEAM GRIST MILL
-
-
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Messrs. Baldwin & Co.
-
-Respectfully inform the public that they have established a Grist Mill,
-with powerful and well-fitted machinery, worked by steam power; and
-assure their patrons that all corn sent to them will be ground with the
-utmost care and despatch, and that the fullest reliance may be placed in
-Messrs. B. & Co. for returning precisely the same article as sent to
-them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-T. C. R. KING,
-
-
- TOMBLAND, & 5, ELM HILL,
-
- NORWICH,
-
- PLUMBER, PAINTER, GLAZIER,
-
- House and Church Decorator.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Every description of work executed on the lowest terms.
-
- VALVE PAN AND SELF-ACTING WATER CLOSETS.
-
- _Hot and Cold Baths_, _Fountains_, _Lead_, _Force_, _Deep Well and Cast
- Iron Pumps Fixed and Repaired_.
-
- EVERY DESCRIPTION OF PLAIN & ORNAMENTAL GLASS,
- AND GLASS FOR HORTICULTURAL PURPOSES.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-THOMAS GREENGRASS,
-
-
- BRICKLAYER & PLASTERER,
-
- No. 9, ELM HILL, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Distemper, Whitewashing, & Colouring done on the most
- Reasonable Terms.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-ANN HOWES & SON,
-TALLOW MELTERS,
-AND
-Candle Manufacturers,
-
-
-BER STREET, NORWICH.
-RESIDENCE, GRAPES HILL.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JOHN MASON,
-BUTCHER,
-GOLDEN BALL STREET, ST. JOHN’S TIMBERHILL
-NORWICH,
-
-
-Begs to return thanks to his Friends and the Public generally for the
-liberal patronage he has received since commencing the above business,
-and trusts by attention to all orders, and the quality of goods supplied
-by him, to merit an increased share of their patronage and support.
-
- SAUSAGES FRESH EVERY DAY, WHOLESALE & RETAIL.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-W. C. HOWES,
-Plumber, Glazier, & General Decorator,
-BER STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- _Writing_, _Graining_, _& Gilding_. _Paper-Hanging Neatly Executed_.
-
- DESIGNS FURNISHED. ESTIMATES GIVEN.
-
- ZINC & WIRE BLINDS PAINTED TO ANY DESIGN.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-FLOUR, MALT, GRAIN, SCOTCH OATMEAL,
-AND SEED STORES.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- RANDLE’S,
-
- 10, UPPER MARKET, NORWICH.
-
- COUNTRY ORDERS PUNCTUALLY ATTENDED TO.
-
-The cheapest house in the City for Rice, Haricot Beans, Pearl and Scotch
-Barley, Revalenta, Mustard, and Starch. Oats of the finest quality.
-Barley Meal and other Meals for Pigs. Pea Flour, Baking Powder, Oswego,
-Polenta, Carr’s Biscuits, Cumberland Oatmeal, Infant Powder, Linseed
-Meal, Dog Biscuits, Crushed Oats, Pollards of all kinds; and the best
-house in the County for Best Whites Flour.
-
- TEWKESBURY MUSTARD.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-GEORGE LEACH,
-GAS FITTER,
-Bell Hanger, Brass Pounder, etc.
-
-
- LOWER GOAT LANE, ST. GILES’, NORWICH,
- ADJOINING MR. KERR’S.
-
- _All kinds of Brass Work neatly executed_. _Lacquering & Bronzing equal
- to new_. _Castings of every description executed_.
-
- N.B. BEST PRICE GIVEN FOR OLD METALS.
-
- * * * * *
-
-BIRMINGHAM [Picture: Invalid INVALIDS’
-AND carriage] CARRIAGES
-SHEFFIELD GOODS MADE TO ORDER.
-
- T. BOSWELL,
- PERAMBULATOR, TOY & CARRIAGE
- MANUFACTURER,
- No. 9, St. John’s Maddermarket, Norwich.
-
-T. B. begs most respectfully to inform his Friends and the Public that he
-has now on hand an assortment of Children’s Perambulators, Carriages, and
-Fancy Toys of every description constantly on sale, on the most
-reasonable terms.
-
- SHUTTLES, SNIPS, ETC., AT THE USUAL PRICES.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-EDWARD BANHAM;
-COMMERCIAL AGENT,
-Fixture & Furniture Valuer and
-Creditors’ Accountant.
-
-
- _Stocks Bought or Sold_. _Businesses Transferred and Creditors arranged
- with_.
-
- VALUATIONS FOR PROBATE AND LEGACY DUTIES.
- Office—Methwold, Brandon, Norfolk.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-13, Charing Cross, Norwich,
-ESTABLISHED 1851.
-SAML. T. TOWNSHEND, JUN.,
-WORKING
-CARVER, GILDER,
-Looking-Glass & Picture Framer Manufacturer,
-
-
- _The Best and Cheapest House for all kinds of Picture and Print Frames_,
- _Cornices_, _Gilt Mouldings_, _and Re-Gilding_.
-
- THE TRADE SUPPLIED.
-
- WORKMEN SENT TO ANY PART OF THE KINGDOM.
-
-S. T. T. begs to return his most sincere thanks for all past favours, and
-hopes by paying every attention, to merit a continuance of public
-patronage, which will at all times be gratefully received.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-MONEY ADVANCED
-AT FIVE PER CENT.
-
-
- _On Personal or other Security_,
- FOR ONE, TWO, OR THREE YEARS,
- BY THE
- London Monetary Advance Company
-
- (LIMITED) IN SUMS FROM
-
- £40 TO 1,000.
-
- _Repayable by Instalments_.
-
-TERMS and every required information may be obtained at the Company’s
-Offices, 14, MANCHESTER SQUARE, LONDON; or of the Agent for Norwich and
-Norfolk,
-
- ALFRED SMITH,
- Auctioneer and Estate Agent,
- UPPER KING STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-HORTICULTURAL GARDENS,
-NORWICH.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- WILLIAM HUSSEY
-
-Begs to offer the undermentioned, of which he possesses a large stock of
-strong and healthy Plants, viz. Rhododendron Ponticum, in varieties 1½
-to 3 ft. high, well set with Flower Buds, at 6_d._ and 1_s._ each;
-Pyramidal Pears, of the choicest sorts, from 1_s._ to 1_s._ 6_d._ each;
-Dwarf-Trained Peaches, Nectarines, Apricots, Cherries, and Plums, 2_s._
-6_d._ to 5_s._ each, and a general assortment of Evergreen Shrubs, also
-the undernamed Bedding Plants, etc.
-
- PER DOZEN. _s._ _d._
-Ageratum, blue 3 0
-Anagallis, sorts 4 0
-Alonzoa grandiflora 3 0
-Cupheas, in sorts 3 0
-Cinerarias, by name 6 0
-Cineraria Maritima, fine for edging of beds 4 0
-Calceolarias, bedding varieties 3 0
-Calceolaria aurea floribunda, fine dwarf yellow, large truss 4 0
-Calceolaria, Yellow Prince of Orange, very fine dwarf yellow 4 0
-Calceolaria, Prince of Orange, an excellent bedding variety 3 0
-Camellias, from 2_s._ 6_d._ to 21_s._ each
-Dahlias, sorts, from 3_s._ to 6 0
-Delphinum Formosum, very fine 3 0
-Fuchsias, sorts for bedding 4 0
-Geraniums, mixed sorts 4 0
-„ Flower of the Day 3 0
-Geranium, Golden Chain 4 0
-Gorteria, rigens 4 0
-Heliotropes, sorts 3 0
-Hardy Ferns, sorts 6_s._ to 12 0
-Herbaceous Plants, 4_s._ to 6 0
-Koniza Variegata, pretty for edging 4 0
-Lobelias, sorts 4s. to 6 0
-Lantanias, sorts 4s. to 6 0
-Œnothera riparia 4 0
-Pentstemons, sorts 4 0
-Pinks, sorts 3 0
-Picotees, for borders 4 0
-Petunias, of sorts 4 0
-Scarlet and other Geraniums sorts 3_s._ to 6 0
-Salvias, sorts 4_s._ to 6 0
-Verbenas, in colours for beds 3 0
-„ Mixed Sorts, by name 2 6
-
- Descriptive Catalogues sent Free on Application.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-Removing from the Castle Meadow, to
-Little Orford Street.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- THOMAS KEMP,
- SADDLER & HARNESS MAKER,
-
-In returning thanks to his Friends and the Public generally for their
-liberal support, begs to inform them that he is removing to more
-commodious premises, where he trusts to receive an increased share of
-their patronage.
-
- _Every article in the above Trade of the best materials and workmanship
- made to order on the most reasonable terms_. _Contracts taken for
- repairing Farmer’s harness by the year_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-CULLINGFORD & SONS,
-RAG MERCHANTS
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- THOMAS CULLINGFORD,
-
- Botolph Street, St. Saviour’s.
-
- FRED. CULLINGFORD, WM. CULLINGFORD,
- ST. BENEDICT’S. BER STREET.
-
-_At the above Shops the Public may obtain the full market value for
-Rags_, _and all articles used in the manufacture of Paper_, _&c._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-PULLEN, MASE, & FURSE,
-
-
- Sign and Decorative Painters,
- Grainers, Writers, etc.
-
- ST. LAWRENCE LANE, NORWICH
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Heraldry_, _Altar Tablets_, _Scrolls_, _Banners_, _Gilding_,
- _Enamelling_, _Japanning_, _etc._
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JOHN STEVENS,
-CIGAR MERCHANT AND TOBACCONIST,
-BACK OF THE INNS, NORWICH.
-
-
- _Foreign Cigars of the Finest Brands_. _Snuffs in every variety_.
- _Syrian_, _Turkish_, _and all the Tobaccos of the Levant and America_.
-
- A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF MEERSCHAUM PIPES.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-The Best Price Given for Household
-Furniture and other Effects.
-
-
- _Innkeepers’ and other Valuations accurately made_.
-
- Cash Advanced on Property for immediate sale by
- Auction, by
-
- H. J. MASON,
-
- At the Auction Mart, Corner of Upper Goat Lane,
- Opposite St. Gregory’s Church, Norwich.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-T. GRIMWOOD,
-CLOTHING EMPORIUM,
-4, LOWER GOAT LANE, NORWICH.
-
-
- STYLE, QUALITY, AND CHEAPNESS COMBINED.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-EDMUND DEVEREUX,
-PLUMBER, GLAZIER,
-House and Ornamental Painter,
-ST. GEORGE’S COLEGATE, NORWICH.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Graining, Writing, Gilding, etc., of every Description.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-To Executors, Shopkeepers, Parties Declining
-Housekeeping, etc.
-
-
- THOS. FOULSHAM
-
-Begs to announce that he purchases every description of Property, giving
-the utmost value for immediate Cash, thereby saving the delay and
-uncertainty of an Auction.
-
-_Valuations correctly made for Probate Duty_, _for Outgoing and Incoming
-Tenants_, _with Dispatch_. _Sales effected in City and Comity_, _on
-Reasonable Terms_.
-
- THOMAS FOULSHAM, AUCTIONEER,
-
- WESTLEGATE STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-GOLDEN DOG BREWERY,
-MAGDALEN STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- JAMES HUBBARD
-
-Avails himself of this opportunity to tender his best thanks for the many
-favours conferred on him for the last twenty years, and to state that the
-greatest attention is paid to the BREWING DEPARTMENT, for supplying
-Families with pure
-
- HOME-BREWED ALE.
-
-J. H. begs to state that his WINES AND SPIRITS are of the best quality;
-also, that he has always ready for immediate use, a large stock of
-
- London Stout Porter, Scotch, East India, and
- Home-brewed Ales, in Bottles.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-WESTMINSTER FIRE OFFICE,
-ESTABLISHED 1717,
-AND
-Westminster & General Life Assurance
-
-
- ASSOCIATION. ESTABLISHED 1836.
-
- J. M. HUBBARD, Agent, Magdalen Street, Norwich.
-
- _Prospectuses will be forwarded on application by letter_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-PIGGIN & DYBALL,
-PRACTICAL
-Opticians and Spectacle Manufacturers.
-
-
- [Picture: Crystal Spectacles]
-
-From their long and extensive practice in the science of Optics, Messrs.
-PIGGIN and DYBALL are enabled to keep the largest and best assorted Stock
-of Spectacles, Eye Preservers, Eye and Reading Glasses, in Norwich, and
-from their practical knowledge of the science are able to suit, on
-correct principles, every shade of impaired vision; and being
-manufacturers of the same, can supply them on the most reasonable terms.
-
- _s._ _d._
-Spectacles from 1 6
-Best Steel Frames, with best Glasses & Case 4 6
-Ditto ditto with best Pebbles & Case 12 6
-Solid Gold Frames, with ditto „ 18 6
-
-Eye Glasses to suit all sights, in Shell, Steel, and Gold Frames. A
-large Stock of Spectacle Cases of every description. New Glasses to suit
-the sight cut to old frames.
-
- OPPOSITE THE POST-OFFICE,
- POST-OFFICE STREET, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-110, POTTERGATE STREET
-Near St. John’s Church, Norwich.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- C. ROBINSON,
- PRACTICAL
- CARVER AND GILDER,
- Picture frame and Looking Glass Manufacturer,
-
-Begs to call the attention of his Patrons and Friends to his Stock of
-Chimney & Dressing Glasses of the Newest Patterns, which he is enabled to
-offer at Prices greatly below those usually charged, at the same time C.
-R. can warrant them to be of first-class workmanship, as they are of his
-own manufacture. Gilt Cornices, Pier Tables, Chairs, Screens, and
-Brackets made to order. Pictures Cleaned and Varnished. Old Prints
-Bleached. Needlework carefully Strained and Framed.
-
- Picture Frames of every description Made to Order.
-
- OLD FRAMES RE-GILT EQUAL TO NEW.
-
-Parties Furnishing, by paying cash, may insure a first-rate article and a
-saving of 20 per cent. by giving their orders to C. R. Patterns and
-Samples of every description of Furniture kept. Old Couches and Chairs
-Re-Stuffed, Covered, and Polished, at the lowest prices.
-
- _The Trade Supplied with Chair and Couch Frames at London Prices_.
- _Best Leaf Gold_, 1_s._ 4_d._ _per Book_. _Old Books Bought_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-ST. GEORGE ASSURANCE COMPANY,
-118, PALL MALL, LONDON, S.W. CAPITAL £100,000.
-
-
- Chairman—HENRY POWNALL, Esq., Ladbroke Sure, Notting Hill.
- Deputy Chairman—HENRY HAINES, Esq., Moorgate Street, City.
-
- _The leading features of this Office are_—
-
-Every description of Life Assurance on the most favourable terms.
-Endowments for Husbands, Wives, or Nominees. Endowments for Children on
-attaining a certain age. Annuities of every description granted on terms
-peculiarly favourable. Notices of Assignments of Policies Registered.
-Medical Referees paid by the Company. Age of the Life Assured admitted
-on all Policies, on reasonable proof being given. Stamp Duties on Life
-Policies paid by the Company. Loans on real or personal Security,
-repayable by MONTHLY or QUARTERLY instalments, from one to five years.
-For further particulars, Forms of Proposal and Prospectuses, apply to
-
- G. S. BARDWELL, ST. STEPHEN’S ROAD, NORWICH,
-
- £80,000 _has been afforded in Loans of from_ £30 _to_ £1,000 _in less
- than five years_, _in connection with the St. George Advance Fund
- Association_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-J. SCALES,
-DEALER IN
-ENGLISH TIMBER
-CHAPEL FIELD ROAD, NORWICH.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-Always on hand a large Assortment of Ash and other Planks, Spokes, Coffin
- Boards, etc., Selling at Low Prices.
-
- [Picture: Searles door and card plates etc., Trory Street, Unthank’s
- Road, Norwich]
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-MONEY ADVANCES.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- Important to Farmers,
- Tradesmen & others.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Sums in Money, varying in amount from £50 to £1,000, are advanced in
-connection with Life Assurances, on personal or other security, at a rate
-of Interest not exceeding £5 per cent. per annum.
-
- _For Prospectuses and Forms of Application_, _apply to_
-
- MR. O. D. RAY,
-
- KING STREET, NORWICH,
-
- AGENT TO THE
-
- PROTECTOR
- ENDOWMENT, LOAN, & ANNUITY
- COMPANY.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-O. D. RAY,
-Auctioneer, Estate Agent, & Valuer,
-11, UPPER KING STREET,
-NORWICH.
-
-
-Valuations for Probate on reasonable terms. Drapers’, Grocers’, and
-General Stocks Valued.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-Wholesale Embroidery Warehouse,
-29, LONDON STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- J. GANLY,
-
-The only Manufacturer in the Eastern Counties, supplies the trade with
-every description of
-
- Traced and Stamped Muslins
-
- PRICE LIST FREE ON APPLICATION.
-
- _All Orders to the amount of_ 20_s._ _carriage paid_, _or_ 5 _per cent
- for cash_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-W. F. HOWARD,
-CARPENTER & BUILDER
-
-
- BISHOPGATE STREET,
-
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-W. S. HARVEY,
-PLUMBER, GLAZIER,
-HOUSE & DECORATIVE PAINTER,
-WILLIAM STREET.
-
-
- Residence—Wellington Street, St. Giles’, Norwich.
-
- * * * * *
-
- WATER CLOSETS & PUMPS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION FIXED & REPAIRED.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-NORFOLK AND NORWICH
-SEED, FLOWER, AND FRUIT
-ESTABLISHMENT,
-41, LONDON ST., NORWICH
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- DAVID BROWNE
-
-Begs to intimate that he has always in Stock, Choice Assortments of
-Agricultural, Vegetable, and Flower Seeds. Also a Selection of the best
-Dessert Fruits in the Season.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Desserts for the Country carefully selected, and
- packed to travel any distance.
-
- CHOICE BOUQUETS
-
- _Arranged and Packed for conveyance to any locality_.
-
- FRUIT AND FOREST TREES, GREENHOUSE PLANTS, &c.
-
- * * * * *
-
-D. B. begs to say that he has a large collection of Choice Fruit Trees
-and Shrubs, Greenhouse and Bedding Plants, &c., at his Nursery,
-Sprowston.
-
- _The following Catalogues are published by D. BROWNE_, _and will_
- _be forwarded on application_, _viz._—_A Catalogue of_
-
- TRANSPLANTED FOREST TREES,
- ORNAMENTAL TREES & SHRUBS, EVERGREENS,
- LARGE EVERGREENS & FLOWERING SHRUBS,
- HARDY CLIMBERS, FRUIT TREES, &c.,
- AGRICULTURAL, VEGETABLE, & FLOWER SEEDS,
- DUTCH BULBS, &c.
- SUMMER BEDDING PLANTS, WITH DAHLIAS,
- FUCHSIAS, GERANIUMS, HERBACEOUS PLANTS, &c.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-ESTABLISHED THIRTY YEARS.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- WILLIAM FULCHER,
-
- General Millwright and Engineer,
-
- MILL STONE BUILDER, ETC.,
- MOUSEHOLD, NEAR GAS WORKS,
- THORPE HAMLET, NORWICH,
-
-Begs to thank his Friends and the Public for the very liberal support
-they have so generously favoured him with, and to inform them that they
-can be supplied with every description of Mill Stones, etc.
-
- _Millwrights’ Work done on the most reasonable terms at the shortest
- notice_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-ROBERT TIDMAN,
-BOILER MAKER, MACHINIST,
-AND GENERAL SMITH,
-BISHOP BRIDGE, NORWICH,
-
-
-Desires to express his thanks for the patronage he has received in the
-various branches of his business, and begs to inform the public that his
-work continues to give the utmost satisfaction for price and quality to
-all his customers. He therefore confidently solicits a further extension
-of their favours.
-
- Threshing Machines made on the best and newest principles, and repaired
- at the lowest possible charges.
-
- _Iron Tanks_, _strong and durable_, _made on the shortest notice_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JOSEPH WRIGHT & SON,
-PLUMBERS, PAINTERS, GLAZIERS
-MISSION PLACE, KING STREET,
-SAINT JULIAN, NORWICH.
-
-
-JOSEPH WRIGHT begs to thank his Friends and the Public for the liberal
-support he has received for more than 30 years, and to inform them that
-the business is now conducted by himself and son, and he solicits a
-continuance of their patronage & support.
-
- WRITING GRAINING, &c. OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Picture: Drawing of steam train]
-
-
-
-HENRY JARVIS,
-GENERAL
-CARRIER & CARMAN,
-LUCAS’S WHARF,
-NEAR THORPE RAILWAY STATION, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- Goods Removed by Railway or Spring Vans to all
- parts of the Kingdom. GOODS STORED.
-
- TARPAULING LET ON HIRE.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JAMES SPALDING,
-FRENCH POLISHER,
-(ESTABLISHED FOURTEEN YEARS)
-(From Smees & Sons, Moorfields, Finsbury, London)
-
-
- SAINT ANDREW’S HILL,
- NORWICH,
-
-Begs to thank his Friends and the Public for the very liberal support
-conferred on him for the last fourteen years.
-
- French Cream, for restoring the Lustre of Furniture,
- 2s. 6d. per Bottle.
-
- _Superior Furniture Oil for Dining Table Tops_, _&c._
-
- POLISH AND VARNISH OF EVERY DESCRIPTION WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
-
- CONTRACTS TAKEN FOR BUILDERS’ & DECORATORS’ WORK, ETC.
-
- _Experienced Workmen sent to all parts of the Kingdom on the_
- _Shortest Notice_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT.
-
-
- [Picture: Sawing machine]
-
- Awarded the SILVER MEDAL at the NORFOLK AGRICULTURAL SHOW at Norwich.
-
-
-
-SPARKE AND CO., ENGINEERS,
-THORN LANE FOUNDRY, NORWICH,
-
-
- Invite the attention of Agriculturists, Shippers, Contractors, and
- others, to their
- PATENT SELF-ACTING CIRCULAR SAW BENCHES.
-
-These Benches are fitted with a New Apparatus for drawing timber to and
-from the Saw, so simple that it can be managed and the speed instantly
-regulated. They are also fitted with a draft chain, perfectly free in
-the delivery, which can only draw parallel to the saw. They are adapted
-to cut any description of wood; rough timber merely requiring to have
-each end chipped with an axe, to give it a steady bearing on the table
-and carriage. The carriages are fitted with a lever roll, to enable the
-man who works the bench to raise the timber on the carriages to carry it
-beyond the saw; they are also fitted with an improved gauge, to cut
-either parallel or feather edge boards; for deal cutting a spring roll is
-sent to press the deals against the gauge, so that a true cut is
-obtained, however uneven the surface and with as little waste as the
-common pit saw.
-
-Any of these benches may be worked by power from 4-horse upwards, as the
-speed for bringing the timber to and from the saw is regulated according
-to the power used, they are also fitted with a lever so as to stop or
-reverse the motion of the timber instantaneously (a necessary precaution
-in case of accident); they are suitable for cutting timber on estates,
-for timber merchants, contractors, or builders’ purposes, as timber of
-any length and depth, according to the diameter of the saw, may be cut
-perfectly true. (_See next Page_.)
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT
-
-
- [Picture: Sparke & Co.’s vertical saw mill]
-
- SPARKE & CO.’S VERTICAL SAW MILL.
-
-These Mills are very strong, fitted with 6 saws, and are made to cut two
-deals at one time; the Saws are worked by a simple motion which
-considerably lessens the working parts of the mill, and adds to its
-compactness; it can be readily fixed, as the mill is firmly bolted to a
-metal base plate. They are made in two sizes, for cutting 18 inches and
-12 inches deep. A smaller mill on the above principle, for cutting
-felloes and curves.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- _The following Noblemen and Gentlemen have been supplied with our Saw
- Machinery_, _where it may be seen_, _at work_, _by permission_.
-
-The Earl of Crawford & Balcarres, Wigan
-Lord Hastings, Melton Constable, Norfolk
-Lord Sondes, Elmham Hall, Norfolk
-Lord Portman, Blandford, Dorset
-H. K. Tompson, Witchingham Hall, Norfolk
-T. P. Beauchamp, Esq., Langley Park, Norfolk
-E. Bulwer, Esq., Heydon Hall, Norfolk
-T. Mott, Esq., Barningham Hall, Norfolk
-W. C. Hardy, Esq., Letheringsett Hall, Norfolk
-C. Newcome, Esq., Feltwell Hall, Norfolk
-H. L. Warner, Esq., Walsingham Abbey
-Messrs. Hornsby & Sons, Grantham, Lincoln
-Messrs. Clayton, Shuttleworth, & Co., Lincoln
-Mr. M. Penistan, Engineer, Lincoln
-Messrs. Garrett & Sons, Saxmundham, Suffolk
-Messrs. Dray & Co., Swan Lane, London
-Messrs. Ransomes & Sims, Engineers, Ipswich
-Count Edouard Karolyi, Pesth, Hungary
-Sir W. Trevalyan Bart., Taunton, Somerset
-Henry Hannam, Esq., Burcote Park, Abingdon
-J. T. Bouck, Esq., Manchester
-Messrs. Cooper & Wallis, Birchfield, Birmingham
-Mr. Stephen Leeds, Whitwell, Norfolk
-Mr. James Kett, Earlham, Norfolk
-Mr. George Salter, Attleborough, Norfolk
-Mr. John Martin, Barmer, Norfolk
-Mr. Wm. Hubbard, Contractor, East Dereham
-Mr. James Clarke, Felbrigg, Norfolk
-Mr. J. Bowles, Palgrave, Suffolk
-Mr. Samuel Darby, Merchant, Beccles, Suffolk
-Mr. Samuel Blaxhill, Walpole, Suffolk
-Mr. J. Howard, Saw Mills, Drayton, Norfolk
-Messrs. Rushton, Proctor, & Co., Lincoln
-Mr. Thomas Wells, Chatham
-
- _Illustrated Catalogues and List of Prices forwarded on application_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-CITY
-SAWING, PLANING,
-AND
-MOULDING MILLS,
-PALACE PLAIN, NORWICH
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- SAUL & FRAZER
-
-In returning thanks for the liberal patronage bestowed upon them during
-the past seven years, beg to say that at the request of a large number of
-their friends, they have added to their Machinery
-
- A MOULDING & PLANING MACHINE,
-
-With all the latest improvements, by which they are now enabled to supply
-Mouldings, &c. of superior quality to any pattern, at a very short
-notice, and on the most reasonable terms.
-
- A Large Stock of Mouldings & Skirtings always on hand.
-
- SAWING & PLANING DONE IN A SUPERIOR MANNER.
-
- STOVES. [Picture: Drawing of Fenders.
- fender]
- STOVES. Fireirons.
-
- STOVES. Fenders.
-
- Fireirons.
-
-And every article in Furnishing Ironmongery at a trifling per centage
-above cost price, in order to effect a clearance previous to alterations
-in premises.
-
- H. PINSON,
-
- OPPOSITE GURNEYS’ BANK, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-NORWICH FOUNDRY.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-J. M. TURNER,
-IRON AND FORGE WORKS,
-St. Martin’s Palace Plain, Norwich.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-W. PAYNE,
-WHOLESALE
-SHOE MANUFACTURER,
-SHORT STREET, CROOK’S PLACE,
-NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-WILLIAM SCOTT,
-PLUMBER, GLAZIER,
-House, Sign, and Ornamental Painter,
-Writer, Gilder, and Grainer,
-
-
- LEAD AND WINDOW GLASS MERCHANT,
-
- Bedford Street, St. Andrew’s,
-
- NORWICH.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-Water Closets, various descriptions of Pumps, Hot and Cold Water Baths,
-Fancy Fountains, Beer Engines Fixed and Repaired. Plumbers’ Brass Work,
-Sheet Lead, Lead Pipe, etc. Crown, Sheet, British Plate, Patent Plate,
-Coloured and Ornamental Glass, cut in squares to order.
-
- WHOLESALE AND RETAIL.
-
- * * * * *
-
- [Picture: C. G. Starling’s shop]
-
-
-
-CHARLES G. STARLING,
-
-
- GENERAL
-
- DRAPER,
-
- HOSIER & HABERDASHER,
-
- No. 2, White Lion Street,
-
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Two Doors from the Market-Place.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-NORWICH UNION
-LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY.
-
-
- A MUTUAL ASSOCIATION.
-
- INSTITUTED 1808.
-
- * * * * *
-
- CAPITAL, UPWARDS OF £2,000,000
-
- * * * * *
-
- PATRONS.
-
- His Grace the Duke of CLEVELAND, K. G.
- The Right Hon. the Earl of ROSEBERY, K. T.
-
- TRUSTEES.
-
-ROBT. JOHN HARVEY HARVEY, Esq.
-W. J. UTTEN BROWNE, Esq.
-JOHN SKIPPER, Esq.
-ROGER KERRISON, Esq.
- DIRECTORS.
-JOHN WRIGHT, Esq., President
-GEORGE DURRANT Esq., Vice-Pres.
-JOHN HILLING BARNARD, Esq.
-C. M. GIBSON, Esq., F.R.C.S.
-W. R. CLARKE, Esq.
-W. H. RANKING, Esq., M.D., Cantab.
-FRANK NOVERRE, Esq.
-RICHARD GRIFFIN, Esq.
-THOMAS BEEVOR, Esq., Vice-President
-R. BLAKE HUMFREY, Esq.
-DR. GOODWIN
-JOHN BARWELL, Esq.
-FRANCIS PARMETER, Esq.
-R. W. HAWKES, Esq.
-GEO. EDWARD FRERE, Esq., F.R.S.
-ROBERT JOHN WRIGHT, Esq.
-ROBERT FITCH, Esq.
-Rev. S. F. BIGNOLD
-W. H. CLABBURN, Esq.
-THOMAS LUCAS, Esq.
-REV. WILLIAM WAYMAN
-
- Secretary, SIR SAMUEL BIGNOLD, Surrey Street, Norwich.
-
- Solicitors, Messrs. FIELD & BIGNOLD.
- Auditors, Mr. A. BAILEY, Mr. JAMES R. HARDY, & Mr. J. J. WINTER.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This Society has been established FIFTY-ONE YEARS, during which period it
-has issued 31,500 Policies, and paid to the representatives of 6617
-deceased members £5,448,264 sterling.
-
-To meet existing engagements, the Society possesses funds amounting to
-upwards of Two MILLION POUNDS STERLING, almost wholly invested on Real
-and Government Securities.
-
-The Rates of Premium are lower than those of some offices by nearly 10
-per cent., a benefit in itself equivalent to an Annual Bonus.
-
-There is no Proprietary to divide with the Assured the profits of this
-Institution, which is one of the very few purely Mutual Insurance
-Offices. Persons, therefore, now effecting Insurances will receive the
-full benefit of the system, and will be entitled to participate in the
-large reserves of the Society, which are applicable for future Bonuses.
-
-One-half of the first five Annual Premiums may remain as a permanent
-charge upon the Policies granted for the whole duration of life.
-
- NO CHARGE IS MADE FOR POLICY STAMPS.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Chief Offices, Surrey Street, Norwich;
-
-6, _Crescent_, _Bridge Street_, _Blackfriars_, _London_; _College Green_,
- _Dublin_; _and Prince’s Street_, _Edinburgh_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-_The benefits to be derived by the Public from Insurance against Loss by
-Fire are so great and numerous_, _when compared with its trifling cost_,
-_as to render it an imperative duty on every one to avail themselves of
-the protection afforded by this Institution_, _against the destructive
-ravages of Fire_, _which in a few moments may lay waste the fruits of a
-whole life of industry_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-NORWICH UNION
-FIRE INSURANCE SOCIETY.
-
-
- Established 1821. Capital, £550,000.
-
- * * * * *
-
- PRINCIPAL OFFICES:
- SURREY STREET, NORWICH.
-
- London, 6, Crescent, New Bridge St., Blackfriars.
-
- DUBLIN, 2, COLLEGE GREEN. EDINBURGH, PRINCE’S STREET.
-
- LIVERPOOL—EXCHANGE STREET.
-
- _Birmingham_, _Bennett’s Hill_. _Bristol_, _Corn Street_, _Exchange_,
- _Exeter_, _High Street_.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- DIRECTORS.
-
- Lieut. Gen. SIR R. J. HARVEY, C.B., President.
-
-CHAS. EVANS, ESQ., Chancellor of JOHN WRIGHT, ESQ.
-the Diocese of Norwich,
-Vice-President HENRY BROWNE, ESQ.
-
-EDWARD STEWARD, ESQ. WALES C. HOTSON, ESQ.
-
-GEORGE DURRANT, ESQ. CHARLES EDWARD TUCK, ESQ.
-
-R. J. H. HARVEY, ESQ. DONALD DALRYMPLE, ESQ.
-
-H. S. PATTESON, ESQ. W. R. CLARKE, ESQ.
-
- Secretary, SIR SAMUEL BIGNOLD, Surrey Street, Norwich.
-
-Insurances are granted by this Society, at the same Rates as other
-Offices, on buildings, goods, merchandise, and effects, ships in port,
-harbour, or dock, from loss or damage by Fire, in any part of the United
-Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
-
-It is provided by the constitution of the Society, that the insured shall
-be free from all responsibility; and to guarantee the engagements of the
-Office, a fund of £550,000 has been subscribed by a numerous and opulent
-Proprietary. Returns of Profits are periodically made to parties
-insuring.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-CHEAP PRINTING.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- M. G. BARDWELL,
- LETTER-PRESS
- PRINTER & BOOK-BINDER
- PRINCE’S STREET, TOMBLAND,
- NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Circulars, Cards, Billheads & Handbills Executed with the
- utmost despatch, at the lowest charges,
-
- POSTING BILLS OF EVERY SIZE.
-
- _Contracts for Printing of every description_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-EDWARD BOARDMAN,
-CARPENTER
-AND
-GENERAL BUILDER,
-FOUNDRY BRIDGE, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-E. B. (Son of the late James Boardman, Wharfinger) begs to solicit from
-the gentry and public generally, orders for works in the ABOVE LINE, and
-undertakes
-
-Alterations of whatever kind,
-The Fittings and Finishings of Houses,
-Conservatories, complete
-Shop Fronts and Fittings, &c.
-General Repairs to Houses, Premises, Furniture, etc.
-
-And guarantees good material, workmanship, despatch, and moderate
-charges.
-
-E. B. can refer to many Public and Private Buildings he has erected, and
-others which he has superintended for an eminent London Building Firm,
-with whom he was many years engaged.
-
- Estimates given for any of the aforesaid Works.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-General Posting House,
-THE MAID’S HEAD HOTEL
-SAINT SIMON’S, NORWICH.
-W. WEBSTER, PROPRIETOR.
-
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-The “MAID’S HEAD,” an Old-Established Hotel, is the nearest to the
-Cathedral, and from its proximity to the Railway Station, offers special
-advantages to Commercial Gentlemen and Families visiting the City.
-
- Post Horses, Neat Carriages, Hearse and
- Mourning Coaches, etc.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-PRATT,
-IMPORTER OF
-American and other Clocks,
-OF THE BEST MAKERS,
-ST. BENEDICT’S STREET, NORWICH.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Oil Paintings in great variety_. _Papier Machie Goods_, _consisting of
- Ladies’ Work Boxes_, _Writing Desks_, _Tea Caddies_, _&c._
-
- A Well-assorted Stock of Looking-Glasses, Waiters, Trays, etc.
-
- CUTLERY OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
-
-Spectacles to suit all sights. Watches & Clocks repaired on the premises
-
- _Payments taken Weekly or Monthly_. _Country Orders will receive prompt
- attention_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-MR. FRANK NOVERRE,
-
-
- Has the honour of announcing his NORWICH ACADEMIES for
-
- DANCING & EXERCISES,
-
- In his NEW BALL and CONCERT ROOM, _at his Residence_, _Theatre Square_.
-
-_Young Ladies_ and _Little Boys_, Tuesdays, at _Eleven_.
-
-_Young Ladies_ and _Gentlemen_, Tuesdays and Thursdays, at _Four_.
-
- ATTENDANCE WEEKLY AT
-
-_Yarmouth_, Dene Side, Theatre Square; _Lynn_, Athenæum; _Lowestoft_,
-_Beccles_, _Dereham_, _Fakenham_, _North Walsham_, _Aylsham_, _Thetford_,
-_Wymondham_, _Pulham_, _Snettisham_, _Margate_, _&c._
-
- THEATRE SQUARE, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-A HOME FROM HOME.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-SUTTON’S
-
-
- Late BENNETT’S,
-
- COMMERCIAL HOTEL
-
- AND
-
- BOARDING HOUSE,
-
- Exchange Street, Norwich
-
- _Near the Post-Office and Market-Place_.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-The above Establishment has been recently enlarged, and is specially
-adapted for COMMERCIAL GENTLEMEN.
-
- Show Room, Bath Room
-
- Smoking Room, Luggage Room
-
- AND
-
- Private Rooms for Families.
-
- SERVANTS CHARGED IN THE BILL.
-
- Omnibus to and from every Train.
-
- * * * * *
-
- A VISIT IS RESPECTFULLY SOLICITED.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-HOUSEHOLD TRUTHS
-FOR THE PEOPLE.
-
-
- Designed as Gifts from Parents to their Children—Teachers to their
- Scholars—Mistresses to their Servants—and Masters to their Workpeople.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- “This is the best Series of Original Tracts for Working Men and their
- Families that has come under our notice for many years.”—_British
- Workman_, _Oct._ 1857.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- HOUSEHOLD TRACTS
- FOR THE PEOPLE.
-
- TWOPENCE EACH.
-
-* COTTAGE HOMES. _For Mothers_.
-* MOTHER’S TRIALS & TRIUMPHS. _For Mothers_.
-* THE STARTING IN LIFE. _For Boys_.
-* THE HAPPY LIFE. _For Girls_.
-* MY FIRST PLACE. _For Young Servants_.
-* HOW DO YOU MANAGE THE YOUNG ONES? _For Parents_.
-* HOW TO TAKE CARE OF NUMBER ONE. _For Young Men_.
-* Are YOU THINKING of GETTING MARRIED? _Words to the Thoughtless and the
-Thinking_.
-WORKING MEN’S HINDRANCES. _Set Forth by a Working Man_.
-* THE WORTH OF FRESH AIR. _For Everybody_.
-* THE USE OF PURE WATER. _For Everybody_.
-THE VALUE OF GOOD FOOD. _For Everybody_.
-INFLUENCE of WHOLESOME DRINK. _For Everybody_.
-ADVANTAGE OF WARM CLOTHING. _For Everybody_.
-GAIN OF A WELL-TRAINED MIND. _For Everybody_.
-A SHORT YARN. _For Sailors_.
-* DAUGHTERS FROM HOME.
-* HOUSEHOLD RHYMES for the CHILDREN.
-HOW TO MAKE THE MOST OF THINGS.
-THE YOUNG MAN IN THE GREAT CITY.
-
- _Just Ready_.
-
-Those with * are also issued in elegant Illuminated Covers, at 3d. each.
-
- SCIENCE
- FOR THE HOUSEHOLD.
-
- TWOPENCE EACH.
-
-THE GREAT ROUND WORLD.
-THE WIDE AND DEEP SEA.
-BUSY-BODY OXYGEN.
-THE INVISIBLE AIR.
-THE INCONSTANT WIND.
-THE RENOVATING RAIN.
-
- ATTRACTIVE VOLUMES
- FOR PRIZES OR PRESENTS,
- Handsomely bound in cloth, 1s. 6d. each.
-
-HOUSEHOLD TRUTHS FOR MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS.
-HOUSEHOLD TRUTHS FOR WORKING MEN.
-HEALTH FOR THE HOUSEHOLD.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-The Household Tracts in their various forms are peculiarly suitable to
-the Clergy, School Committees, Sunday School Teachers, and the public
-generally, as gifts for the Working Classes.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- THE PACKET OF
- 12 HOUSEHOLD GIFT BOOKS,
-
-Being the Twelve assorted Household Tracts, in elegant Illuminated
-Covers, and attractive Embossed Envelope, price 3s., is now ready, and
-should be on every Bookseller’s Counter.
-
- Six of the above, Assorted, in Embossed Envelope, 1s. 6d.
-
- * * * * *
-
- “It has often been lamented that ‘popular tracts,’ so called, are not
- really popular in their style, and in their manner of dealing with
- practical subjects. Our experience teaches us that the complaint is
- well founded, and we are happy to have it in our power to point out
- to our readers a very useful series of TRACTS FOR THE PEOPLE,
- published by Messrs. JARROLD AND SONS, of London and Norwich, which
- are more really ‘popular’ in their style, and more likely to interest
- and benefit the ‘working classes,’ and the class immediately above
- them, than any other tracts which we have met with on the same
- subject. There is a strong vein of common sense, and some humour
- running through them. The print and paper are very good—their
- appearance is attractive—and their price very low.”—_English
- Churchman_.
-
- Letters in high commendation of these original and popular Tracts
- have been received from LORD CHIEF JUSTICE CAMPBELL; the ARCHBISHOP
- OF DUBLIN; CHARLES BUXTON, ESQ., M.P.; CANON HUGH STOWELL,
- Manchester; the EARL OF RADNOR; the REV. JOHN ROBINSON, one of the
- Secretaries of the London City Mission; the REV. J. C. MILLER, Rector
- of St. Martin’s, Birmingham; the REV. SAMUEL MARTIN, Westminster; the
- REV. C. H. SPURGEON, London; the REV. A. ROBERTS, Rector of
- Woodrising, Norfolk; from SIR CULLING E. EARDLEY, BART.:
- Vice-Chancellor SIR W. PAGE WOOD, BART., &c. (_For a Selection see
- Prospectuses_.) They have also been favourably noticed in the
- “_British Mothers’ Magazine_,” “_Sunday School Teacher’s Magazine_,”
- and by the leading Periodical Press.
-
- LONDON: JARROLD & SONS, 47, ST. PAUL’S CHURCHYARD.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-JARROLD & SONS,
-
-
- (PRINTERS OF THIS DIRECTORY,)
-
- INVITE special attention to the following DEPARTMENTS of their Business.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- PRINTING.
-
-By the Introduction of STEAM POWER and a STEREOTYPE FOUNDRY into their
-Working Plant, J. & SONS are enabled to combine cheapness and expedition,
-without the slightest sacrifice of superior workmanship. They have now
-in operation Machinery suitable for the finest book work, as well as for
-the ordinary requirements of commercial enterprize, such as HANDBILLS,
-SHOP BILLHEADS, TEA WRAPPERS, &c.
-
-The very large number of Compositors and Pressmen engaged upon their
-Printing Staff, enables them to offer especial advantages to Solicitors,
-Auctioneers, Architects, &c., to whom _expedition_ is mainly essential.
-
- Manuscripts of every kind carefully prepared for the Press.
-
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
- BOOK-BINDING.
-
-In this department arrangements have recently been made for conducting
-the entire business on the Premises; from Folding and Sewing the sheets
-by female assistants, to the Gilding and Finishing by competent workmen.
-In
-
- ACCOUNT BOOK MANUFACTURE
-
-JARROLD & SONS are enabled to compete with the first London Houses, as
-the extensive patronage of the leading Merchants in the district
-satisfactorily attests.
-
- Books Ruled to any Pattern, & Type-paged by Superior Machines.
-
- * * * * *
-
- ESTIMATES FURNISHED IF REQUIRED.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Commercial, Family, and Law Stationery.
-
-From their extensive purchases for cash, and the peculiar Advantages of
-Machinery for Cutting, Stamping, &c., JARROLD & SONS supply their friends
-at prices much lower than the _pseudo_ cheap London advertising houses.
-
- LONDON & EXCHANGE STREETS, NORWICH.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES.
-
-
-{2} Hugh Bigod, the grandson, materially promoted the accession of
-Stephen to the throne, but afterwards espousing the cause of Matilda,
-gave utterance to the well-known triplet—
-
- “Were I in my castle of Bungay,
- Upon the river Waveney,
- I would na care for the king of Cockney.”
-
-Two of the family subscribed their names to Magna Charta; another was the
-spokesman of the barons combined against Henry the Third; while the last
-earl flatly refused to accompany Edward the First in his French campaign,
-that king having laid heavy and illegal tollages on the country.
-
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROGERS' DIRECTORY OF NORWICH AND
-NEIGHBOURHOOD***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 64006-0.txt or 64006-0.zip *******
-
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-http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/6/4/0/0/64006
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