| 1819 - 728 pages
...soil consists of a light sand i so light indeed is it in some of the adjoining parishes to the west, that it frequently drifts in the wind, and is bare of vegetation. THE CHURCH, which is dedicated to SI. Andrew, wai, in 1196, given by John le Strange, with the consent... | |
| Samuel Leigh (publisher.) - 1820 - 782 pages
...districts. The fourth district, lying south-west of Norwich, consists of a light sand, so light indeed, that it frequently drifts in the wind, and is bare of vegetation. Marsh land may be considered a fifth district by itself, consisting of ooze, formed by a deposition... | |
| John Chambers - Norfolk (England) - 1829 - 654 pages
...soil consists of a light sand, so light indeed is it in some .of the adjoining parishes to the west, that it frequently drifts in the wind, and is bare of vegetation. A Sunday school was opened in this village, October 5th, 1817, by the then curate. The following are... | |
| William White - Norfolk (England) - 1836 - 870 pages
...plantation) nearly all the property of Lord Walsingham. The soil in many places is of such a light sand, that it frequently drifts in the wind, and is bare of vegetation. The CHURCH, dedicated to St. Andrew, is a large fabric, with a square tower, supported at the corners... | |
| William White - Norfolk (England) - 1836 - 832 pages
...plantation) nearly all the property of Lord Walsingham. The soil in many places is of such a light sand, that it frequently drifts in the wind, and is bare of vegetation. The CHURCH, dedicated to St. Andrew, is a large fabric, with a square tower, supported at the corners... | |
| England - 1896 - 356 pages
...consists of a light sand — so light, indeed, is it in some of the adjoining parishes to the west, that it frequently drifts in the wind, and is bare of vegetation. The church, which is dedicated to St. Andrew, was, in 1196, given by John le Strange, with the consent... | |
| William George Clark, Alfred Heaton Cooper - Norfolk (England) - 1921 - 458 pages
...Wayland, South Greenhoe, and Grimshoe, " consist of a light sand, so light indeed in Grimshoe Hundred that it frequently drifts in the wind and is bare of vegetation," and in 1797, Mr. William Kirby, MA, FRS, the entomologist, said, " The country here affords few or... | |
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