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#1
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Bullock Estate
The Taylor Estate in Amble included Amble House and the Link House Farm. The farmhouse for Link House Farm was the Wellwood Arms.
The Taylors came into the estate via some marriages but originally it came from the Bullock family. According to McAndrew, "The old grey slated cottage at the west end of the town, adjoining what is known as the Green Field was the farm house of the Bullocks and was not sold with the land." (Green Field is Greenfield Terrace?) According to the Proceedings of the Berwickshire Naturalists' Club in 1893, "Their house still stands at the west end of the town, massively built, covered with heavy grey slates....Taylor of Alnwick laid out the garden etc for the site of Greenfield Terrace. Miss Taylor devised the old grey slated mansion house to Mr Hall of Bewick, its present owner. The house was used as the Poor House for the township before the formation of the Poor Law Union." |
#2
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Robert Bullock:
He seems to take over as copyholder from William Browell on the 15th March 1586/87 - this is recorded in the 1608 survey of Amble in Hodgson's history. He's dead by 1630 as the land is tennated by his widow then, the whole parcel being in the process of being sold to Henry Lawson. (edit: Lawson and another chap, Henry Horsley of Milburn Grange) Would the cottage McAndrews mentions have been a dwelling surviving from 1630? |
#3
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Reading Hodgson's, at this time, when the lands at Amble taken by the crown way back at the dissolution were finally starting to be sold, he states the value* of the salt pans at 4s, - yet the coal mines of Amble are worth over 10 times that sum at 41s.
(*yearly rents I should note.) |
#4
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There is a Robert Bullock stone in Warkworth churchyard:
Here lyeth the body of Robert Bullock, who departed this life the 17th day of December, anno domini 1698, freehold of Amble. Phillice his wife, who departed January 12th, 1717. Son I assume, and a proud freeholder. |
#5
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I would like to see a map of the Amble coal mines, as per 1630. Or perhaps I wouldn't, there'd be a shaft under my living room knowing my luck.
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#6
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Could go the same way as Swarland Terrace
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#7
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Yeah, precisely. Surprised we've not had some 'incident' here in Amble.
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#8
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Quote:
The text refers to an old manor house on the street in Amble in 1629 owned by Robert Bullock it then talks about 1722 and George Bullock before launching straight into the quote about the house. |
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