4 & 5 Eliz. 2
Continuing the first session of the
41st Parliament of the United Kingdom, which met from 7 June 1955 until 5 November 1956.
Public general acts Local acts The Charity for a Manse for the Minister of the said Baptist Chapel, at Totnes, which Charity is comprised in a declaration of trust dated the 11th July 1921; The Charity consisting of a Manse and of the net proceeds of sale of the Congregational Chapel, Schoolroom and Trust Property, at Totnes, comprised in the following instruments or some of them:— Conveyance dated the 19th February 1835; Conveyance dated the 11th June 1841; Conveyance dated the 30th November 1882; Conveyance dated the 22nd December 1917; Scheme of the Charity Commissioners of the 25th November 1927; Scheme of the said Charity Commissioners of the 24th November 1953; The Charity of Barbara Jetsome for the Minister of the said Congregational Chapel, at Totnes, which Charity was founded by will dated the 14th March 1734 and is comprised in an indenture dated the 20th December 1792; The Charity of Barbara Jetsome for the benefit of Poor Members attending the said Congregational Chapel, at Totnes, which Charity was founded by the said will dated the 14th March 1734 and comprised in the said indenture dated 20th December 1792; The Charity of Harriet Southcott for the upkeep and repair of the said Congregational Chapel, at Totnes, which Charity was founded by will proved at Exeter on the 31st July 1944; The Charity known as the Baptist Mission Chapel, at Tuckenhay, comprised in a conveyance dated the 10th December 1906 to which Charity by an Order of the Charity Commissioners of the 16th November 1954 the Charitable Trusts Acts 1853 to 1939, were extended in so far as might be necessary to enable the Commissioners to approve and certify to Parliament a Scheme for the application and management of the Charity.|po1short=n}} The Almshouse of Thomas Leigh, knight, and of Alice, his wife, comprised in the following instruments:— Letters Patent of Grant of 28th June 1577. Deed Poll dated the 1st March 1579; The Almshouses for Poor Widows, founded by Deed of Gift dated 9th May 1855; The Share of the net yearly income of Alicia Duchess of Dudley's Charity which is applicable under the provisions of a Scheme of the Charity Commissioners of the 13th June 1879 as amended by a Scheme of the said Commissioners of the 6th January 1885 for the benefit of the Almspeople of the Charity numbered 1 above and the Poor of Stoneleigh.|po1short=n}} The Charity of Frances Barker for Non-Educational Purposes; The Charity of Sir Martin Bowes; The Charity of George Buck; The Charity known as St. Catherine's Hospital (including the subsidiary Charities of John Hartley, James Luntley, Henry Myers, Green Simpson and Charles Yates); Clifton Parish Land Charity; Cordwainers' Pension Charity (including the subsidiary Charity of Mark Buller); The Charity of James Cotterill; The Charity Known as the Cremitt Money; The Charity of Fabian Farley; The Charity of Lancelot Foster; The Charity called The Thomas Fothergill Home for Working Men; The Charity called The Thomas Fothergill Home for Working Women; The Charity of Rawlins Gould; The Charity of John Hartley; The Charity of Landy Sarah Hewley; The Charity of Christopher Hutton for Non-Educational Purposes; The Charity known as Sir Arthur Ingram's Hospital (including the subsidiary Charity of Eve Atkinson); The Charity of the Reverend Charles Jackson; The Charity of Peter Johnson; The Charity of Bridget Lawrence; The Charity of Arthur Lawson; The Charity of Doctor Joseph Loveland; The Charity consisting of the three gifts of James Melrose; The Charity called Mrs. Ann Middleton's Hospital (including the subsidiary Charities of Stephen Beckwith, John Richard and Edward Hill, Mary Winfield Lambert, William Monckton, Thomas Norfolk, Frances Pool, Green Simpson and George Townend); The Charity of Mary Musgrave; The Charity of Henry Myers; The Charity of Richard North; The Charity of Richard Pickard; The Charity of Catherine Ramsden for Non-Educational purposes; The Charity of Thomas Rogerson; The Charity known as the York Soup Kitchen; The Charity known as the Terry Memorial Homes; The Charity known as St. Thomas' Hospital (including the subsidiary Charities of Stephen Beckwith, John Hartley, James Luntley, Green Simpson and George Townend); Sir Henry Thompson's Pension Charity (including the subsidiary Charities of John Girdler and Thomas Norfolk); The Charity known as Turners Gift; The Charity of John Vaux; The Charity of Thomas Harry Walker; The Charity of Ann Watson; The Charity known as Sir Robert Watter's Hospital (including the subsidiary Charity of Marion Bellerby); The Charity known as Sir Robert Watter's Gift; The Charity of William Weddall; The Charity of Sir Thomas White; The Charity known as Whiteheads Gift; The Charity called the Sisters Wilson's Home; The Charity of James Woodhouse; The Charity of William Wright. |po1short=n}} The Consolidated Municipal Charity (including the Charities of Margaret Philips, Thomas Botfield, Emily Felton, Maria Alicia Johanna Nightingale and William Page), regulated by a Scheme of the Charity Commissioners of the 20th March 1914, as varied by Schemes of the said Commissioners of the 1st April 1921 and the 5th October 1937; The Minor Charities, regulated by a Scheme of the Charity Commissioners of the 28th June 1918 and comprising— The Charity of Thomas Hollingsworth; The Charity of Edmund Jones; The Charity of Eleanor Handford; The Charity of John Long; The Charity of Evan Phillips; The Charity of Mrs. Robinson; The Charity of Richard Nash; The Charity of Janns Brettell Vaughan; The Charity of Sarah Owen; The Charity of William Archer; The Charity of Mary Betenson; The Charity of Thomas Candland; The Charity of Susan Gay (commonly called Plummer's Money); The Charity of Morgan Lloyd; The Charity of Ann Smith; The Charity of James Walter; The Charity of Alderman Richard Davies; The Charity of Thomas Lane; The Charity of Doctor Charles Sonnibank; The Charity of Sir Timothy Tourneur; The Charity of Alderman Thomas Meyricke; The Charity of Alfred Lloyd, founded by will proved at Oxford on the 20th January 1951 and administered in connexion with the above-mentioned Minor Charities.|po1short=n}} Act of Parliament 13 Eliz. 1 c. XVII; Deed dated the 21st November 1585; Ordinances, Statutes and Rules made by Robert Earl of Leicester on the 26th November 1585; Deed dated the 30th November 1585; Two Deeds both dated the 6th June 1589; Act of Parliament 39 Eliz. I c. 5 (private); Act of Parliament 53 Geo. III c. 213 (Local and Personal); The Robert Earl of Leicester's Hospital Charity Scheme Confirmation Act 1926; including the Subsidiary Endowment thereof known as the Louisa Helen Trollope Gift, comprised in a Deed of Gift dated the 16th December 1901.|po1short=n}} }}
Private and personal acts Sources • • • • • • • ==5 & 6 Eliz. 2==