Tewkesbury ........ 44-1/2
Thirsk ............ 151
Thrapstone ........ 75-1/2
Tipton ............ 8
Torquay .......... 195-1/2
Towcester ......... 54
Trefnant .......... 113
Trentham .......... 43
Trowbridge ........ 128
Truro ............. 275-1/2
Tunbridge Wells ... 165
Tunstall .......... 47
Tutbury ........... 37
Ulverstone ........ 152
Uppingham ......... 61-1/2
Upton-on-Severn ... 49
Uttoxeter ......... 45-1/4
Uxbridge .......... 118
Wakefield ........ 101-1/2
Wallingford ....... 84-1/4
Walsall ........... 8
Warminster ........ 120
Warrington ........ 78
Warwick ........... 21-1/2
Water Orton ....... 7-1/2
Wednesbury ....... 8
Wednesfield ....... 12
Weedon ............ 42
Welshpool ......... 61
Wellington ........ 32
Wells ............. 123
Wem ............... 52
West Bromwich ..... 4
Weston-supr-Mare .. 114
Weymouth .......... 191
Whitacre Junction . 10-1/2
Whitby ............ 187
Whitchurch ........ 51
Whitehaven ........ 193
Wigan ............. 91
Willenhall ........ 11
Willesden Junction 107
Wilnecote ......... 16-1/2
Wincanton ......... 130
Winchester ........ 127
Windermere ........ 156
Windsor ........... 113
Winson Green ...... 2-1/2
Wirksworth ........ 56
Witton ............ 3-1/2
Woburn Sands ...... 70
Wokingham ......... 100
Wolverhampton ..... 12
Wolverton ......... 60
Worcester ......... 27-1/2
Worthington ....... 50
Wrexham ........... 72
Wylde Green....... 6
Yarmouth .......... 201
Yeovil ............ 152
York .............. 130-1/2
Dogs.—A 5s. duty on dogs came into
force April 5, 1867; raised to 7s. 6d. in June, 1878;
This was not the first tax of the kind, for a local
note of the time says that in 1796 “the fields
and waters near the town were covered with the dead
carcases of dogs destroyed by their owners to avoid
payment of the tax.” The amount paid per
year at present for “dog licenses” in
Birmingham is about L1,800. The using of dogs
as beasts of burden (common enough now abroad) was
put a stop to in London at the end of Oct. 1840, though
it was not until 1854 that the prohibition became
general. Prior to the passing of the Act in that
year, dogs were utilised as draught animals to a very
great extent in this neighbourhood by the rag-and-bone
gatherers, pedlars, and little merchants, as many as
180 of the poor brutes once being counted in five hours
as passing a certain spot on the Westbromwich Road.
There have been one or two “homes” for
stray dogs opened, but it is best in case of a loss
of this kind to give early information at the nearest
police station, as the art of dog stealing has latterly
been much cultivated in this town, and it should be
considered a duty to one’s neighbour to aid in
putting a stop thereto.
Dog Shows.—The first local Dog Show
was held in 1860, but it was not until the opening
in Curzon Hall, December 4, 1865, that the Show took
rank as one of the “yearly institutions”
of the town.—See “Exhibitions.”