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Aldenham Works
General information
TypeTransport
LocationAldenham, Hertfordshire, England
Completed1940s onwards
DemolishedOctober 1985

The Aldenham Works, or Aldenham Bus Overhaul Works, was the main London Transport Routemaster Bus overhaul works. It is located in the Hertfordshire village of Aldenham, and in its heyday, 50 buses a week were overhauled there.

History

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Opened as a underground train repair shop for the Northern Heights extension for the Northern Line. When it was converted to a bus works, it was immediately turned into a Spitfire repair works. Then the concept included the maintenance of the Routemaster at Aldenham Works (operated by London Transport). Here the buses could be completely stripped down and rebuilt, engines changed etc.[1] which was an important part of the original concept. However, as the number of Routemasters in London got smaller this concept was abandoned, and Aldenham Works closed in October 1985.

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Category:Bus transport in London

Try the text below. I got this text from a 1910 copy of National Dictionary of Biography. The advantage here is that we don'y have to write and research everything. All the research is there and we just need to clean it up. I always wikify it. Add some pictures. Add at least 3 or 4 extra refs.... after all the source may now be superced by recent evidence of Devil worship.

So try your hand at the text below. If you are happy to try this then I think you will learn a lot. It may not be your first choicwe of an article (isnt mine either), but it should help us to get moving.

see Francis Hutchinson - we need to increase by a factor of 5. Witchcraft is interesting though


HUTCHINSON, FRANCIS (1660-1739), bishop of Down and Connor, second son of Edward Hitchinson, was born on 2 January 1660 at Carsington, Derbyshire, according to the parish register, in which the family name is invariably spelled Hitchinson. His mother was Mary Tallents, sister of Francis Tallents [q. v.], the ejected divine. His brother Samuel (d. 1748) was the ancestor of Richard Hely-Hutchinson, first earl of Donoughrnore [q. v.] He matriculated as a pensioner on 4 July 1678 at Catherine Hall, Cambridge, and graduated B.A. 1680, and M.A. 1684 (Graduati Cantab. 1823, p. 254). Tallents directed his historical studies, and employed him (about 1680) in taking the manuscript of his ' View of Universal History ' to Stillingfleet, Beveridge, and Kidder for' their corrections before it was printed (Defence of Antient Historians, 1733, p. 33).

 
Title page of a book with Francis Hutcheson's essay dismissing charges against Jane Wenham.

His first preferment was the vicarage of Hoxne, Suffolk. Before 1692 he became perpetual curate of St. James's, Bury St. Edmund's, Suffolk. On 3 July 1698 he commenced D.D. at Cambridge. His residence in Suffolk turned his attention to the earlier proceedings against witches in that county [see HALE, SIR MATTHEW, and HOPKINS, MATTHEW] ; hence his treatise on the history of witchcraft (1718), which is full of valuable historical details, with many particulars collected by personal inquiry from survivors. He wasd interested in the Salem and Boston witchcraft trials, but also contemporary trials like those of Jane Wenham in 1712.[1]

In 1720, on the death of Edward Smith, Hutchinson was appointed bishop of Down and Connor, and consecrated on 22 January 1721. He took up his residence at Lisburn, co. Antrim, and at once threw himself into the work of his diocese. Hutchinson in 1721 issued proposals for building a church and settling a clergyman in Rathlin, and for teaching English to the Irish inhabitants of the island by means of bilingual primers and catechisms, the Irish being printed phonetically in the English character. Rathlin was made a separate parish by act of council on 20 April 1722, and a new church, dedicated to St. Thomas (in compliment to Thomas Lindsay, the primate of Armagh), was consecrated in 1723. Hutchinson's interest in the Irish language and history was considerable, as is shown by his work on Ancient Historians. He lived on good terms with Roman catholics and presbyterians. A squib on his versatility, published in Dublin in 1725-6 as a broadsheet, is attributed to Dean Swift. From a letter (4 Aug. 1726) of Francis Hutcheson [q. v.], the metaphysician, it appears that efforts were then made to get Hutcheson to conform; he had an interview with Hutchinson, and was a little pinched with argument. Hutchinson summed up the points at issue thus : '/We would not sweep the house clean, and you stumbled at straws.

Hutchinson removed to Portglenone, co. Antrim, purchasing the estate on 22 April 1729 for 8,200/. Here (not long before 1739) he built a chapel, mainly at his own expense (it was made a parish church in 1840). He died on Saturday, 23 June 1739, at Portglenone, and was buried on 25 June in the chapel, where there is a monument to his memory. His portrait is in the possession of the present Bishop of Down, Connor, and Dromore. By his wife Anne, who survived him nineteen years, he had a son, Thomas, who predeceased him, and a daughter, Frances, who married firstly, John Hamilton (d. 1729), dean of Dromore ; secondly, in 1732, Colonel O'Hara (d. 1745) of Crebilly, co. Antrim ; thirdly, in 1748, John Ryder, afterwards archbishop of Tuam. To her eldest son, the Rev. Hutchinson Hamilton (d. 2 July 1778), Hutchinson left the bulk of his estate. His library was sold by auction in Dublin on 26 April 1756.

Hutchinson published, besides single sermons, 1692, 1698, 1707, 1721 (his first visi- tation at Lisburn), and 1731 :

  1. ' A Short View of the Pretended Spirit of Prophecy,' &c., 1708, 8vo.
  2. ' A Compassionate Address to ... Papists,' &c., 1716,
  3. A Defence of the Compassionate Address,' &c., 1718
  4. ' Life of Archbishop Tillotson,' abridged in Wordsworth's ' Ecclesiastical Biography,' 1718,
  5. ' An Historical Essay concerning Witchcraft,' &c., 1718, 8vo ; 2nd edit., enlarged, 1720,
  6. 'A State of the Case of the Island of Raghlin,' &c., Dublin, 1721, (reprinted in Ewart).
  7. ' The Church Catechism in Irish. With the English . . . m the same Karakter,' &c., Belfast, 1722,

16mo (in this he was assisted by ' two clergymen ').

  1. ' A Defence of the Antient Historians : with . . . Application ... to the History of Ireland and Great Britain, and other Northern Nations,' &c., Dublin, 1734,
  2. The State of the Case of Lough j Neagh and the Bann,' &c., Dublin, 1738 (HARRIS).
  3. ' The Certainty of Protestants a Safer Foundation than the Infallibility of Papists,' &c., Dublin, 1738. The following are given by Harris from an j incomplete list of his writings furnished by

Hutchinson, without dates, and not arranged chronologically.

  1. ' An English Grammar.' ;
  2. ; A Defence of the Liberty of the Clergy j

in their choice of Proctors,' &c.

  1. * A Letter . . . concerning the Bank of Ireland,' j &c
  2. ' A Letter . . . concerning Imploy- ir ' . . . the Poor,'
  3. l A Second Letter I

. . . recommending the Improvement of the j ; h. Fishery,'

  1. ' An Irish Almanac.' j I . , ' The many Advantages of a Good Language to any Nation,'
  2. * Advices concerning . . . receiving Popish Converts,' &.c.
  3. 'A Defence of the Holy Bible, &c.

[Belfast News-Letter , 26 June 1739 (needs correction); Harris's Ware's Works, 1764, i. 215 sq.; Mant's Hist, of the Church of Ireland, 1840, I ii. 369 sq. ; Christian Moderator, 1828, p. 353 ; Ewart's Diocese of Down, Connor, and Dromore, 1886, pp. 103 sq. ; extract from parish register of Carsington, per Eev. F. H. Brett ; information kindly given by the Bishop of Down, Connor, and Dromore.] A. G-.

References

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Category:People from Derbyshire Category:1660 births