- met in the
vestry or
sacristy of the
parish church, and
consequently became known colloquially as the "
vestry". At
their height, the
vestries were the only...
- A sacristy, also
known as a
vestry or
preparation room, is a room in
Christian churches for the
keeping of
vestments (such as the alb and chasuble) and...
- A bill for the
better regulating of
Select Vestries,
usually referred to as the
Select Vestries Bill, is
customarily the
first bill
introduced and debated...
- The
Hammersmith Vestry was the
vestry of
Hammersmith from c.1631 to 1900. The
vestry was
established following the
building of a
chapel of ease for the...
-
Plumstead is an area in
southeast London,
within the
Royal Borough of Greenwich, England. It is
located east of Woolwich.
Plumstead has been
settled since...
- The
Vestries Act 1831 (1 & 2 Will. 4. c. 60),
commonly known as Hobhouse's
Vestry Act (named
after the Whig
frontbencher Sir John Hobhouse,
later created...
- The
Clerkenwell Vestry was the
vestry of
Clerkenwell from c.16th
century until 1900. The
vestry had
growing secular authority over the
parish with the...
-
administration was in the
hands of a
select vestry until the
parish adopted the
Vestries Act 1831. The
vestry was
reformed again in 1855 by the Metropolis...
- 70
Vestry is a thirteen-story
residential building in the
Tribeca neighborhood of Manhattan, in New York City. The
building was
designed by the New classical...
- The St Luke's
Vestry was the
vestry of St Luke's, an
urbanised parish north of the City of London, from 1733
until 1900. The
vestry had
growing secular...