| John Timbs - 1839 - 446 pages
...roach, is in an excellent state throughout, even to the preservation of the marks of the chisel. " Many buildings constructed of a material similar to the oolite of Ancaster, snch as Newark and Grantham Churches, and other edifices in various parts of Lincolnshire, have scarcely... | |
| 1839 - 724 pages
...roach, is in an excellent state throughout, even to the preservation of the marks of the chisel. " Many buildings constructed of a material similar to the oolite of Ancaster, »uch as Newark and Grautham churches, and other edifices in various parts of Lincolnshire, have scarcely... | |
| John Wesley Judd - 1875 - 370 pages
...of some of the building stones quarried within the limits of Sheet 64. In the introduction to this report it is stated that " many buildings constructed of a material similar to the Oolite of Ancastcr, such as Newark and Grantham churches and other edifices in various parts of Lincolnshire,... | |
| William Jerome Harrison - 1882 - 406 pages
...report on the building stones of England for the construction of the new Houses of Parliament, state that "many buildings constructed of a material similar to the Oolite of Ancaster, such as Newark and Grantham churches, and other edifices in various parts of Lincolnshire, have scarcely yielded to the... | |
| Kelly's directories, ltd - 1885 - 968 pages
...appointed in 1839 to report on the building stones of England for the new Houses of Parliament, state that " many buildings constructed of a material similar to the Oolite of Ancaster, such as Newark and Grantham Churches, and other edifices in various parts of Lincolnshire have scarcely yieldedto the... | |
| George Henry Burton - 1885 - 290 pages
...report on the building stones of England for the construction of the new Houses of Parliament state that ' many buildings constructed of a material similar to the Oolite of Ancaster. such as Newark and Grantham churches, and other edifices in various parts of Lincolnshire, have scarcely yielded to the... | |
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