Ordered, 4 June 1692, that James Amos, the College gardener, grown old and infirm, be allowed a deputy (Chapter Book). See the burial, probably of his wife, 21 Sep. 1685. His will, dated 1 1 Mch. 1699-1700, was proved on the day of his burial, in the Court of the Dean and Chapter, by Mrs. Sarah Smith, of St. Andrew's, Holborn, spinster, to whom he gave twenty guineas, and he left legacies of £5 and £10 to his nephews Thomas Taylor, and James, John, and Michael Greene, his nieces Jane and Mary Greene, his niece Ewing, and his cousins Elizabeth and Mary King.
Source: The marriage, baptismal, and burial registers of the collegiate church or abbey of St. Peter, Westminster, edited by Joseph Lemuel Chester, London, 1876
Ordered, 4 June 1692, that James Amos, the College gardener, grown old and infirm, be allowed a deputy (Chapter Book). See the burial, probably of his wife, 21 Sep. 1685. His will, dated 1 1 Mch. 1699-1700, was proved on the day of his burial, in the Court of the Dean and Chapter, by Mrs. Sarah Smith, of St. Andrew's, Holborn, spinster, to whom he gave twenty guineas, and he left legacies of £5 and £10 to his nephews Thomas Taylor, and James, John, and Michael Greene, his nieces Jane and Mary Greene, his niece Ewing, and his cousins Elizabeth and Mary King.
Source: The marriage, baptismal, and burial registers of the collegiate church or abbey of St. Peter, Westminster, edited by Joseph Lemuel Chester, London, 1876
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