SAUNDERS, Thomas ‹ LBT 08121 ›: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| Line 92: | Line 92: | ||
[[Category:Apprentice]] | [[Category:Apprentice]] | ||
[[Category:Master]] | [[Category:Master]] | ||
[[Category:Stationers Company]] | [[Category:Stationers' Company]] | ||
Revision as of 00:01, 29 March 2026
Floruit 1612 (A) — 1613 (A); Male
Livery Companies
| Company | Source |
|---|---|
| Stationers' Company |
Occupations (1)
| Occupation | Comment |
|---|---|
| Bookseller | McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910) |
Was Apprentice to Master(s): (2)
| Name | Premium | Paid By | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| BUTTER, Joan (mar. NEWBERY) ‹ LBT 03214 › | |||
| REDMER, Richard ( - 1631) ‹ LBT 08256 › |
Had Apprentice(s): (1)
| Name | Premium | Paid By | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| SADLER, Laurence ‹ LBT 10760 › |
Addresses (1)
| Date | Address | Trade at Addr | Source | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1612, (1612-13) | Holborn, sign of the Mermaid | McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910) |
Events (3)
| Date | Event type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 11 Mar 1605 | Bound | to Joan Newbery (LBT/03214) |
| 23 Mar 1612 | Freed - Servitude | |
| 15 Dec 1613 | Appr - Binding | Laurence Sadler (LBT/10760) |
Sources and References
| Original Sources | Comments |
|---|---|
| St.Co. Archive - Binding and Freedom records - extracted by Prof. J.A. Lavin |
SOURCES & TRANSCRIPTIONS
Transcriptions
S.T.C., (1991), vol.3, p,149
McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910), p.235
SAUNDERS (THOMAS), bookseller in London, 1612-13; At his shop in Holborn at tbe sign of the Mermaid. Son of John Saunders of Cheddar, Somerset, yeoman. Apprentice to Joane Newbery { BUTTER, Joan (mar. NEWBERY) ‹ LBT 03214 › }, widow of John Newbery { NEWBERY, John ( - 1604) ‹ LBT 08131 › }, for seven years from March 11th, 1604/5 [Arber, ii. 290], and took up his freedom Marcb 23rd, 1611/2 [Arber, iii. 683]. Only two book entries occur under his name in the Registers, the first on April 20th, 1612, and the second on May 22nd, 1613 [Arber, iii. 481, 524]. His address appears in a work of Gervase Markham's called The second and last part of the First Book of the English Arcadia [Hazlitt, I. 276].