JACKESON, Rychard ‹ LBT 07595 ›
floruit (B) 1565 - 1565 ; Male
Introduction
Rychard Jackson was a bookseller active in London during the 1560s. He was bound as an apprentice to Henry Hammand on 27 June 1558 and gained his freedom from servitude on 26 September 1565. Jackson was a member of the Clothworkers' Company and is documented as having entered three ballads in the Stationers' Register during the year ending 22 July 1566.
Livery Companies
| Company | Source |
|---|---|
| Clothworkers' Company |
Occupations (1)
| Occupation | Comment |
|---|---|
| Bookseller | McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910) |
Was Apprentice to Master(s): (1)
| Name | Premium | Paid By | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| HAMMAND, Henry ‹ LBT 07593 › |
Events (2)
| Date | Event type | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 27 Jun 1558 | Bound | to Henry Hammande (LBT/07593) |
| 26 Sep 1565 | Freed - Servitude |
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.89
McKerrow, R.B. &c. (1910), pp.150-1
JACKSON (RICHARD), bookseller in London, 1565-6. Apprentice with Harry Hammande { HAMMAND, Henry ‹ LBT 07593 › }. The term is not stated, but the indentures were taken out on April 18th, 1558 [Arber, i. 74], and he took up his freedom on September 26th, 1565 [Arber, i. 317]. He is probably the same as the Richard Jackson who entered three ballads during the year ending July 22nd, 1566 [Arber, i. 314]. There was another Richard Jackson { JACKSON, Richard ‹ LBT 08585 › ], apprentice to Richard Tottell { TOTTELL, Richard ‹ LBT 08571 › }, who was admitted a freeman on March 26th, 1583 [Arber, ii. 687], and a third Richard Jackson { JACKSON, Richard ‹ LBT 08882 › } took up his freedom as a stationer on May 6th, 1613 [Arber, iii. 684].