A Yorkshire Almanac Comprising 366 Historical Extracts, Red-letter Days and Customs, and Astronomical and Meteorological Data
Griffith Wright. 1895. Extracts from the Leedes Intelligencer. Publications of the Thoresby Society, Vol. 4. Ed. Charles S. Rooke. Leeds. Get it:
.On Tuesday last, betwixt the hours of five and six, as one Craven, a cloth maker, who lives at Horbury, was returning from Leeds market, he was stopped on Rothwell Hague by two men on horseback, one of which brandishing a sword before his face and demanding his money, took from him two guineas in gold and two shillings and sixpence in silver. About half an hour after, John Briggs, a gardener in Wakefield, was attacked upon the same common by the above two persons, etc.; and about seven o’clock on the same evening, Mr Pyeman, a tanner at Lofthouse, and Cheeseborough, a shoemaker of Oswald [Ouzelwell] Green, were attacked by the same two persons, who took from Mr Pyeman his watch and a sum of money, and from the shoemaker five shillings in silver. The day following, Jacques Saggarson, a French fencing master, was taken up on suspicion, and committed to York Castle by __ Smith, Esq. [Result?]
To facilitate reading, the spelling and punctuation of elderly excerpts have generally been modernised, and distracting excision scars concealed. My selections, translations, and editions are copyright.
Abbreviations:
Saggarson is not a very French name – does “French fencing master” mean someone who taught fencing in the French style?
Thoresby is my source for Oswald Green < Ouzelwell Green (Thoresby 1830).
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“On Thursday se’nnight was broke open the house of Samuel Waddington, an honest and industrious farmer in Bramhope, near Otley, and from thence was taken a box, the contents whereof were of £300 value.”
“On Tuesday last, betwixt the hours of five and six, as one Craven, a cloth maker, who lives at Horbury, was returning from Leedes market, he was stopp’d on Rothwell-Hague by two men on horseback, one of which brandishing a sword before his face and demanding his money, took from him two guineas in gold and two shillings and sixpence in silver.”
“About half an hour after, Jno. Briggs, a gardener in Wakefield, was attacked upon the same common by the above two persons, &c.; and about seven o’clock on the same evening, Mr. Pyeman, a tanner at Lofthouse, and Cheeseborough, a shoemaker of Oswald Green, were attacked by the same two persons, who took from Mr. Pyeman his watch and a sum of money, and from the shoemaker five shillings in silver.”
“The day following, Jaques Saggarson, a French fencing master, was taken up on suspicion, and committed to York Castle by __. Smith, Esq.”
196 words.
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