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law-stationer
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law-stationer
ˈlaw-ˈstationer [f. law n.1 + stationer.] A tradesman who keeps in stock stationery and other articles required by lawyers. In Great Britain and Ireland, the business includes the taking in of manuscripts and legal documents to be fairly copied or engrossed.1836 Sir H. Taylor Statesman xxiii. 169 Pa...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Andrew Wise
"No other London stationer invested in Shakespeare as assiduously as Wise did, at least while Shakespeare was still alive." On 25 June 1603, Andrew Wise transferred his copyrights to R2, R3, and 1H4 to fellow stationer Matthew Law, who issued subsequent quartos of all three
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stationer
▪ I. stationer1 (ˈsteɪʃənə(r)) Also 4 statiner, 5 stacyener, stacyonere, 5–6 stacioner, 6 stacyoner. [ad. L. statiōnārius (see stationary), in med.L. used subst. for a tradesman (chiefly, a bookseller) who has a station or shop, as distinguished from an itinerant vendor. Cf. early Sp. estacionario b...
Oxford English Dictionary
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John Callan
On 10 July 1913, at the North East Valley Roman Catholic Church, Dunedin, Callan married Margaret Elizabeth, daughter of James Dugald Mowat, a Dunedin stationer On his returned to Dunedin he continued his law practice.
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Henry Herringman
Herringman had a reputation as a rare stationer who actually profited from the Great Fire of London (1666), in which most of his compatriots lost their He also produced a wide variety of general-interest works, as well as law books.
Herringman became master of the Stationers Company in 1685.
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Maria Rye
In 1859, she undertook a private law-stationer's business at 12 Portugal Street, Lincoln's Inn, in order to give employment to middle-class girls. The law-stationer's business prospered, but the applications for employment were far in excess of the demands of the concern.
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Andrew Tooke
Life
He was second son of Benjamin Tooke, stationer of London, and received his education in the Charterhouse school. 'The Whole Duty of Man, according to the Law of Nature', translated from the Latin Samuel von Pufendorf, 4th edit. London, 1716.
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Sam Kelly
He played the law-stationer Mr. Snagsby in the 1985 BBC adaptation of Bleak House.
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Elizabeth Watts (printer)
Elizabeth Watts Lynch (died 1794), known as Mrs Lynch, was an Irish printer, stationer, and "bookseller to the courts of law". She focused on selling books regarding legal matters, including an edition of Blackstone's Law Tracts (1767), after which she sold a range of Irish and
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Augustus Applegath
He went to school at Alfred House Academy in London and apprenticed with Benjamin Lepard, a wholesale stationer, at Covent Garden. In collaboration with his brother-in-law Edward Cowper (1790–1852), he carried out most of his work in the Dartford and Crayford areas of Kent.
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James Webbe Tobin
to the pamphlet A plain statement of the motives which gave rise to the public punishment of several negroes'' (1811), by Thomas John Cottle, son-in-law She was the daughter of Thomas Mullett (1745–1814), a Bristol stationer connected by marriage to Caleb Evans, a Particular Baptist minister in Bristol.
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William Ponsonby (publisher)
Ponsonby completed his apprenticeship under stationer William Norton on 11 January 1571. On Ponsonby's death in 1604, many of his copyrights passed to his brother-in-law, stationer Simon Waterson.
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Richard Fuller (politician, died 1782)
This makes him the brother of the banker William Fuller and of Martha Fuller (1717–1805) who married the stationer George Flower (1715–1778), becoming the mother of Benjamin Flower and Richard Flower as well as mother-in-law of the Reverend John Clayton.
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Thomas Bond Sprague
Life
Sprague was born in London the son of Thomas Sprague, a wholesale stationer. He attended Tarvin Hall School near Chester. After serving as the actuary to the Equity and Law life insurance company (1861–1873), he became chief executive (1873–1900) of the Scottish Equitable
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William Churchill (Ipswich MP)
As a reward, he was appointed bookbinder, stationer to the king in 1689 and held the post for the rest of his life. 1715 general election, but was granted a patent for supplying stationery to the crown, and resigned his seat on 8 December 1717, in favour of his son-in-law
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