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<!-- pencil addition --> <p> 2<lb/> <note> <sic>Lett.</sic> 3.</note> J.B. to <sic>L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> Spencer Sheet omitted</p> <p> these houses the Penitentiary House <del>will</del> <add> would</add> be distant the whole<lb/> length of the <del> land in question which is at leas</del> <add> being upwards of</add> half a<lb/> mile.  Over this pat of the road is thrown the scarce<lb/> perceptibly <add>-rising</add> bridge called <add> in the Maps</add> <hi rend="underline">York Bridge</hi>, under which<lb/> runs the brook which <del> in part</del> <add> after at first</add> bending, <del> and in other<lb/> part</del> <add> but in its <del>latter</del> lower part of its course</add> <hi rend="underline">passing through</hi> the premises, empties itself into<lb/> the Thames, washing after it has passed under the<lb/> bridge a <del>wall h</del> range of building belonging to the<lb/> Distillery and reaching to the River.  On the <hi rend="underline">East</hi><lb/> side <del><gap/></del> <add>the</add> premises are bounded <add> (setting aside the Public House at the South East corner <del>the <gap/><lb/> kept by Death</del> for about half their<lb/> length by the brook above mentioned which <add> after</add> crossing<lb/> the great road under a bridge as <del> little <gap/> <add> <sic>unconspicuous</sic></add><lb/> as York Bridge <del> and skir</del> come out by the side<lb/> of the Public House and forms a boundary to the<lb/> road, <del>with</del> <add> under</add> the appearance of a ditch, <sic>till</sic> that<lb/> <add> Eastern </add> road, as you pass along it from the Public House<lb/> takes a pretty sudden turn to the right: at which place<lb/> the watercourse, or at least <del> the <gap/></del> a branch of<lb/> <del> it <gap/> leaving the road to turn and <gap/> <gap/></del> <lb/> it, quits the road to enter the grounds (which <del>is</del> <add> are</add> here<lb/> meadow land) through which it runs <sic>till</sic> it meets<lb/> with the great Northern Road <add> from Battersea to Wandsworth</add> at York Bridge.<lb/> It is to be observed that this Watercourse where it enters<lb/> the <del>fields</del> <add> grounds</add> does not form the boundary of the premises:<lb/> the land <del>of</del> <add>on</add> both sides being (with the apparent view<lb/> of meeting the Canal spoken of in the <del>Ni</del> <add> H. of</add> Commons Report<lb/> of 1784) included in the purchase.</p>  


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Revision as of 15:42, 19 January 2018

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2
Lett. 3. J.B. to Ld Spencer Sheet omitted

these houses the Penitentiary House will would be distant the whole
length of the land in question which is at leas being upwards of half a
mile. Over this pat of the road is thrown the scarce
perceptibly -rising bridge called in the Maps York Bridge, under which
runs the brook which in part after at first bending, and in other
part
but in its latter lower part of its course passing through the premises, empties itself into
the Thames, washing after it has passed under the
bridge a wall h range of building belonging to the
Distillery and reaching to the River. On the East
side the premises are bounded (setting aside the Public House at the South East corner the
kept by Death
for about half their
length by the brook above mentioned which <add> after
crossing
the great road under a bridge as little unconspicuous
as York Bridge and skir
come out by the side
of the Public House and forms a boundary to the
road, with under the appearance of a ditch, till that
Eastern road, as you pass along it from the Public House
takes a pretty sudden turn to the right: at which place
the watercourse, or at least the a branch of
it leaving the road to turn and
it, quits the road to enter the grounds (which is are here
meadow land) through which it runs till it meets
with the great Northern Road from Battersea to Wandsworth at York Bridge.
It is to be observed that this Watercourse where it enters
the fields grounds does not form the boundary of the premises:
the land of on both sides being (with the apparent view
of meeting the Canal spoken of in the Ni H. of Commons Report
of 1784) included in the purchase.




Identifier: | JB/541/444/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 541.

Date_1

1793-08-16

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

541

Main Headings

Folio number

444

Info in main headings field

Image

002

Titles

Category

Correspondence

Number of Pages

Recto/Verso

Page Numbering

Penner

Jeremy Bentham

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

Box Contents

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