12 collocations for parish

The beauty of the steeple and its pre-eminence among those belonging to parish churches (even if such a reservation be necessary) sufficiently justifies the length of this description.

The Divine Office for Christmas adapted to parish participation.

Mary was born at Halesworth in Suffolk, of which parish her father was then the rector, on August 31, 1824.

What she would like would be to see him parish priest of Tinnick.

Also parish order in St. Martin's, Leicester, Acc'ts (ed. Thos.

Abbey Parish Church Estate Acc'ts, s. a. 1578 (20s. received for a "purgation" to go to parish poor and to church).

Also parish order in St. Martin's, Leicester, Acc'ts (ed. Thos.

In St. Helena parish the Baptists led with 2132 communicants; the Methodists followed with 314 to whom a missionary holding services on twenty plantations devoted the whole of his time; and the Episcopalians as usual brought up the rear with fifty-two negro members of the church at Beaufort and a solitary additional one in the chapel on St. Helena island.

Thus at Lapworth, Warwickshire, a trust of parish lands was re-created in 1563 with twenty-two feoffees; and one Collet in 1567 enfeoffed seventeen men of a field of only three acres, fourteen perches, to parish uses.

The young couple soon found the position intolerable, and after less than eighteen months Crabbe wisely accepted a vacant curacy in the neighbourhood, that of Stathern in Leicestershire, to the humble parsonage of which parish Crabbe and his wife removed in 1785.

For confiscation of parish gild property and parish lands on a large scale, see examples given in Cambridge and Hunts Arch.

I would not deign to write an answer; but sent down word by my footman, as I would have done to parish officers, with a brief, that I would not subscribe.'

12 collocations for  parish