- D29/13/11-51.
- Is-gyfres
- 1725-1856.
Part of Garbetts Hall purchased by John Amler from Richard Colley in 1763 and subsequently purchased by Valentine Vickers in 1856.
Part of Garbetts Hall purchased by John Amler from Richard Colley in 1763 and subsequently purchased by Valentine Vickers in 1856.
As to the shares of Mary Morris and Sarah Rylance of the four dwelling houses,
Lots 6 and 10 of the lands in p. Buttington,
Sale of several m's in Oswestry to John Jones,
Conveyance of fee farm or chief rents issuing out of the settled estates of David Pugh,
Release of a garden in New Street, Pool, to Edward Pugh,
Release of parcels of land at Canybwch in p. Oswestry, to E. D. Bennion,
Part of the tenement in t. Dyserth, p. Pool,
Part of Fronlas, Vronlas Vawr, Pant Du and Yr Efel in p's Garthbeibio and Llangadfan,
Exchange with Rev. Maurice Edward Lloyd of lands in the town of Montgomery,
Exchange with Rev. Maurice Edward Lloyd of lands in the town of Montgomery, 1815.
Thirty acres of the Sutton estate purchased from Rev. Edward Powys
The whole of the tenement in t. Dyserth, p. Pool,
Exchange with Maurice Jones, of lands in p. Llandysul, 1814,
Sale of land in Pool, to C. W. W. Wynn and others, 1810,
Quarter session files and papers
The quarter session files (some tolerably complete, others imperfect) include various warrants and precepts; lists of the officials in the town and liberty, names of the grand jurors, and their presentments; return of bills, bonds, recognisances, and bail pieces; some depositions in cases of theft and assault before the borough magistrates; presentment of defective highways (pursuant to Act 3 and 4 William III); infringements of the assize of bread and ale, and 'the blowing of meat'; defective stocks, etc.; local nuisances, 'shaving on the Saboth day', and occasional contraventions of the then existing Poor Law. Seemingly, the local quarter sessions (as from about 1615, the date of Pool's charter) tended to absorb the bulk of the 'statutory offences' which for some generations after the Act of Union (1536) were presented by both the urban and rural petty constables in the leets of their respective manors. Doubtless the court leet of the manor of the borough of Pool lost much of its significance as an organ of borough government during the seventeenth century, but from about 1750 to 1846 it continued to be an active organisation for the supervision of the commons, the reparation of the common highways, and particularly the collection of alienation fees accruing from the transfer and sale of property within the town and liberty.
Llanfyllin sacrament certificates
The other moiety of Maeslymisten estate,
A m. and land in t. Nant-fforch, p. Castell Caereinion,
As to all four dwelling houses,