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Updated: June 11, 2025
In the obituary for 1792, we find the following paragraph: "Died at his house in Putney, aged seventy-three, Sir Nicholas Copperas, Knt., a gentleman well known on the Exchange for his facetious humour. Several of his bons-mots are still recorded in the Common Council.
Copperas, having swallowed in the roll, I will e'en roll in the Swallow! His whole property is left to Adolphus Copperas, Esq., banker." And in the next year we discover, "Died, on Wednesday last, at her jointure house, Putney, in her sixty- eighth year, the amiable and elegant Lady Copperas, relict of the late Sir Nicholas, Knt." Mr.
Montagu's leaving his things behind him. Fleetwood, Knt., General and Commander in Chief to the Protector Richard, whose sister, Bridget, widow of Ireton, he had married. 25th. At home and the office all the morning. I proposed Magdalene, but cannot name a tutor at present; but I shall think and write about it. Thence with him to the Trinity-house to dinner; where Sir Richd.
We will not refuse the Abbot Hobbes a brief record of his trial and passion. And although twelve generations of Russells all loyal to the Protestant ascendancy have swept Woburn clear of Catholic associations, they, too, in these later days, will not regret to see revived the authentic story of its last abbot. The Observations of Sir Richard Hawkins, Knt., in his Voyage in the South Sea in 1593.
Greene of Greensnorton. Sir Thomas Greene, of Greensnorton, Co. Northampton, Knt. died 30 Nov. 1506 22 Hen.
Sir Lyttleton died in 1732, and exactly ten years afterwards appeared the first edition of 'The Reports of Sir Edward Coke, Knt., in Verse' a work which its author may have been inspired to undertake by Philip Yorke's proposal to versify 'Coke on Littleton.
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"I, Clement Maldon, Abbot of Blossholme, having heard of the death of Sir John Foterell, Knt., at the cruel hands of the forest thieves and outlaws, sent last night to serve the declaration of my wardship, according to my prerogative established by law and custom, over the person and property of you, Cicely, his only child surviving.
Granted then to one Richard Snow, of whom the records are silent; by him sold, in Elizabeth's reign, to Sir John Osborne, Knt., thus becoming the ancestral home of our Dorothy. There is a crisp etching of the house in Fisher's Collections of Bedfordshire.
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