Plymouth

Plymouth, the largest town in Devonshire, stands on the N. shore of Plymouth Sound, 250 m. W. of London by rail; adjacent to it are the towns of Stonehouse and Devonport. Among the chief buildings are a Gothic town-hall, a 15th-century church, and a Roman Catholic cathedral. The chief industry is chemical manufactures. There is a large coasting and general trade, and important fisheries. Many sea-going steamship companies make it a place of call. The Sound is an important naval station, and historically famous as the sailing port of the fleet that vanquished the Armada.

Population (circa 1900) given as 87,000.

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

Plutus * Plymouth Brethren
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Pliny, the Elder
Pliny, the Younger
Plotinus
Plugston of Undershot
Plumptre, Edward Hayes
Plunket, Lord
Plutarch
Pluto
Plutonic Theory
Plutus
Plymouth
Plymouth Brethren
Pneumonia
Po
Pocahontas
Pocket Borough
Pocock, Edward
Pococke, Richard
Podesta
Podiebrad, George
Poe, Edgar Allan

Nearby

Links here from Chalmers

Ashton, Thomas [1716–1775]
Audley, Thomas
Ayscue, Sir George
Baker, Sir George
Barrington, Hon. Samuel
Barrington, John Shute
Benyowsky, Count Mauritius Augustus De
Blake, Robert
Booth, Henry
Borlase, William
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