Hull

Hull, or Kingston-Upon-Hull (260), a flourishing river-port in the E. Riding of Yorkshire, at the junction of the Hull with the Humber, 42 m. SE. of York; is an old town, and has many interesting churches, statues, and public buildings; is the third port of the kingdom; has immense docks, is the principal outlet for the woollen and cotton goods of the Midlands, and does a great trade with the Baltic and Germany; has flourishing shipbuilding yards, rope and canvas factories, sugar refineries, oil-mills, etc., and is an important centre of the east coast fisheries.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

Huguenots * Hullah, John
[wait for the fun]
Huelva
Huerta, Garcia de la
Huesca
Huet, Pierre Daniel
Hug, Leonhard
Hugh Capet
Hughenden
Hughes, Thomas
Hugo, Victor-Marie
Huguenots
Hull
Hullah, John
Hulsean Lectures
Humanist
Humanitarians
Humbert I.
Humboldt, Friedrich Heinrich Alex., Baron von
Humboldt, Karl Wilhelm von
Hume, David
Hume, Joseph
Humour

Nearby

Hull in Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable

Links here from Chalmers

Alcock, John
Amory, Thomas
Baker, Thomas [No. 3]
Brindley, James
Calvert, James
Cavendish, William [1592–1691]
Digby, Lord George
Dodsley, Robert
Fairfax, Thomas, Lord
Fiddes, Richard
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