
Always CHECK to see if Monday holds and event because it usually does and check for Darkmoon so you can double dip into it. Sometimes the world events aren't really special, like Lunar Festival or Children's week but I waited on the Easter event and got an extra week in on that, which has boosted me a bit. My advice to every Party Herald is to WAIT on some weeks, check the calendar for Darkmoon or something else. I stopped caring about world events so long ago i never look at the calendar Comment by Renegade8995 on T16:50:27-05:00

Very nice a new event it's time to back wow after afew days rest! Comment by magus104 on T16:39:27-05:00 Comment by tmptfate on T16:31:00-05:00ĭid mine on Saturday >.< Oof, should have waited to see if the holiday affected it again. I did mine on Tuesday and didn't even think about the event starting and possible ember court buffs.

Fml lol Comment by hakwea on T16:29:05-05:00ĭang it. Robert Taylor of St Georges Square Hanover had married Margaret Ann Sleigh St George Hanworth.Comment by dokeefe1986 on T16:19:19-05:00 Robert Taylor Esq., of Ember Court, buried aged 71 years at St Mary Thames Ditton. The codicils refer inter alia to Robert Taylor's counting-house at Billiter Square, which he left to his second son Simon Taylor (q.v., under Simon Taylor of London). The second will for a Robert Taylor of Harley Street shown by TNA as proved refers to three codicils by Robert Taylor of Ember Court proved on that date. He left his coffee estates described as Lucky Valley and Mount Atlas in trust to his three children as tenants-in-common subject to the payment of his debts to Simon Taylor of Jamaica and of an annuity of £500 p.a. to his wife Margaret Ann, £10,000 to his son Robert, £20,000 to his son Simon he had settled £10,000 on his daughter Jean Ann on her marriage to Sir Charles Sullivan bart.

The will of Robert Taylor of Harley Street proved is the will of Robert Taylor of Ember Court, which alludes to his Harley Street dweliing house and his property in Jamaica. Renny, which became Simon Taylor’s main agents in London), December 1791-June 1813, dealing with the sugar plantations, commercial affairs, politics, health and family life, along with letters from the tutor, William McCulloch, concerning the studies and travels during the Grand Tour of Simon Richard Brissett Taylor in Europe correspondence between Simon Taylor and John Taylor (brother of Robert Taylor and second cousin to Simon, who after a period in New York, became Simon’s agent in Kingston, Jamaica), June 1781-February 1810, including material on shipping, Bristol and Liverpool merchants, the demand for sugar and rum, the state of the plantations, the Maroon War, family news, the threat of war, business transactions and the sale of slaves correspondence between William Sleigh (lawyer, whose daughter Margaret married Robert Taylor) and Simon Taylor, 1794-1796.īoyle's 1819 shows Robert Taylor of 61 Harley Street and Amber Court. 1752-1823) of Ember Court Surrey and the Robert Taylor of Robert Taylor & Co., in Kingston in the early 1800s, are implicitly identified as the same man by Higman and explicitly equated by the commentary in the Taylor papers: a significant body of correspondence between Simon Taylor of Jamaica and Robert Taylor (Simon’s second cousin, who after a period as a sailor in the East India Trade, set up a merchant house in London with A.
