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~Interesting Odds and Ends.~
A fair was held here on Good Friday, 1793.
A fight of lion with dogs took place at Warwick, September 4, 1824.
The Orsim bombs used in Paris, January 15, 1858, were made here.
In 1771 meetings of the inhabitants, were called by the tolling of a
bell.
A large assembly of Radicals visited Christ Church, November 21, 1819,
but _not_ for prayer.
A "flying railway" (the Centrifugal) was exhibited at the Circus in
Bradford Street, October 31, 1842.
The doors of Moor Street prison were thrown open, September 3, 1842,
there, not being then one person in confinement.
March 2, 1877, a bull got loose in New Street Station, and ran through
the tunnel to Banbury Street, where he leaped over the parapet and was
made into beef.
William Godfrey, who died in Ruston-street, October 27, 1863, was a
native of this town, who, enlisting at eighteen, was sent out to China,
where he accumulated a fortune of more than L1,000,000. So said the
_Birmingham Journal_, November 7, 1863.
The De Berminghams had no blankets before the fourteenth century, when
they were brought from Bristol.
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