Stokes records; notes regarding the ancestry and lives of Anson Phelps Stokes and Helen Louisa (Phelps) Stokes . ly the essential doctrines and practices of all. I *The ruins of Stanshawes Court were nine miles from Bristol. The present housewas not built until after 1871. Mother visited Bristol in 1833, as is shown by entryin her diary July 15: Rode to Bristol, and took rooms on Clifton Heights, verj- near where Hannah More was thenresiding, and where she soon breathed her last. There were Stokeses in Tokenhouse Yard before father had his office there. A reportof the Church Missionary Society


Stokes records; notes regarding the ancestry and lives of Anson Phelps Stokes and Helen Louisa (Phelps) Stokes . ly the essential doctrines and practices of all. I *The ruins of Stanshawes Court were nine miles from Bristol. The present housewas not built until after 1871. Mother visited Bristol in 1833, as is shown by entryin her diary July 15: Rode to Bristol, and took rooms on Clifton Heights, verj- near where Hannah More was thenresiding, and where she soon breathed her last. There were Stokeses in Tokenhouse Yard before father had his office there. A reportof the Church Missionary Society for 1823 (the Society was founded in 1820) gives inlist of collections: W. Stokes, Esq., Tokenhouse Yard, 1812-15, £21 H. Stokes, Esq., Tokenhouse Yard, £ annual subscription T. Stokes, Esq., Blackheath, £ and annual subscription £ These subscriptions are taken from the book which was in my fathers library and whichbelonged to his father, having the signature Thomas Stokes on title-page. 1:126: PLAN OF CLIFTON COTTAGE Residence of James Stokes Showing rear of residence of Anson Greene Phelps.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1910