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, JohnHull 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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