An Authentic Historical Racing Calendar of all the Plates, Sweepstakes, Matches,&c. run for at York, from ... 1709, to ... 1785 inclusive ... With an account of the cock-matches fought at York in each race-week ... To which is added an account of the races for the Royal Plates ... at Hambleton, York and Richmond; and of the races ... at Hambleton from ... 1748 to ... 1757, also of the races since the first commencement of the Gold Cups at Richmond and Doncaster; likewise for the Gold Cups at Beverley. In which is also given pedigrees and performances of the most celebrated race-horses, that have appeared on the English turf, etc


Book Description




Whistlejacket & Scrub


Book Description




General Catalogue of Printed Books


Book Description







The Middling Sort of People


Book Description

This volume of essays seeks to offer a radical re-evaluation of most of our preconceptions about the early-modern English social order. This book attempts to define the term "middle classes" and treat them as active participants of history, rather than as a simple by-product.







Sport and Society


Book Description

This study departs from the standard picture of English sporting activities as one of Renaissance Glory and exuberance being snuffed out by Puritan strictures, and then reviving lustily with the Restoration.







Maryland Historical Magazine


Book Description

Includes the proceedings of the Society.




Yorkshire


Book Description

This volume sheds light on the pride of the region - the great medieval churches of York Minster, the Minster and St Mary at Beverley, and Holy Trinity, Hull but also on less well known architectural pleasures of town and county. Outstanding Victorian village churches, including masterpieces by Street & Pearson, are as rewarding as the major country houses of Burton Agnes, Burton Constable and Sledmere. The countryside offes a wide range of monuments, from the beautifully sited ruins of Kirkham Priory to the spectacular Humber Bridge. Farmhouses and cottages of the Wolds, picturesque estate villages and chapels, and industrial structures are all brought into focus. A large section is devoted to York and includes a survey of the historic buildings of the city centre from the Roman period onwards. This is complemented by a detailed exploration of York's eighteenth and nineteenth-century suburbs. Equal care has been applied to the descriptions of Beverley, with its attractive townscape, and the port of Hull, where unexpected highlights include seventeenth-century merchant houses, Georgian almshouses, ornate Victorian pubs, and grand Edwardian public buildings.