Sheppard, Frome
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The Sheppard family dominated cloth manufacture in
Frome Frome ( ) is a town and civil parish in Somerset, England, on uneven high ground at the eastern end of the Mendip Hills and on the River Frome, south of Bath. The population of the parish was 28,559 in 2021. Frome was one of the largest tow ...
,
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, England. They were the first to introduce machinery into the area and in the first quarter of the 19th century were the largest employers. First names of the Sheppard family occur again and again down the centuries: John, Edward, William, Thomas, Eleanor, Walter, George. In the town their name is attached to three places: the Emma Sheppard Centre for dementia day care, Sheppards Barton where there is a plaque at the south end of the barton and
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's Sheppards Overbridge on the lane leading to Garston Farm once owned by them.


John Sheppard (c1614-1675) ''founder of the family''

John was the first of his surname to be directly associated with the cloth industry in Frome. There were earlier Sheppards in Frome, renting land in the 16th century on Rodden Down, but no pedigree can be established. His trade was as a cardboard maker - making boards for
carding In Textile manufacturing, textile production, carding is a mechanical process that disentangles, cleans and intermixes fibres to produce a continuous web or sliver (textiles), sliver suitable for subsequent processing. This is achieved by passi ...
wool. Spinners prepared the wool by combing it. Wire drawers were needed to make the pins which formed the comb. Until the eighteenth century this was done by hand, combing the raw unwashed wool with a card in each hand at right angles to one another. The business was not just local; the cards were sold across the country. John leased property on Catherine Hill from Champneys of Orchardleigh; this relationship with the Orchardleigh squires continued for two hundred years; this was probably 13 Catherine Hill and included houses, buildings, stables, orchards and a meadows nearby. Later he bought land directly from Champneys' widow; this is now part of Wine Street. He built what is now 21 Wine Street in 1650; it remained in the Sheppard family until 1847 when John, his grandson four times removed gave it to the Sheppards Barton Baptist Church. He purchased land in
Nunney Nunney is a village and civil parish in the English county of Somerset. It is located south-west of Frome and the parish includes the hamlet of Holwell. The name of the village comes from Old English and means ''Nunna's island''. Today, th ...
. These substantial leases and purchases suggest his business was flourishing. The Sheppards were Baptists. Yet in 1675, just before his death, he leased some of his land on a 1,000 years lease to the
Quakers Quakers are people who belong to the Religious Society of Friends, a historically Protestantism, Protestant Christian set of Christian denomination, denominations. Members refer to each other as Friends after in the Bible, and originally ...
for their first meeting house in Frome. One of his sons, Benjamin continued in the carding trade. His eldest, John is described as a clothier, a merchant in his own right. John's second son, Edward (1649-1686) was a maltster. He had three children by his second wife, who had three children of her own; they died within a month of each other in 1686. His brothers became responsible for bringing up the orphans.


John Sheppard (c1680-1720) ''clothier''

Edward's eldest son, John, who as a minor inherited most of his father's property, became a cloth merchant in turn. In 1705 he married Philippa Humphrey of Berkley by whom he had six children. He renewed the lease on the Catherine Hill properties. He purchased more land at Critchill and leased further land to the Quakers. He built tenements on his land as well as being a substantial subscriber to the costs of building Sheppards Barton Baptist Church of 1707. There is a tradition that before the completion Baptists met in his house at No 13 Catherine Hill (beside the steps coming down from Sheppards Barton). He was a signatory to the successful Petition of 1713, in which Frome and other cloth towns protested about changes in duty brought about by the
Peace of Utrecht The Peace of Utrecht was a series of peace treaty, peace treaties signed by the belligerents in the War of the Spanish Succession, in the Dutch city of Utrecht between April 1713 and February 1715. The war involved three contenders for the vac ...
that would have given French clothiers the edge. He died in 1720, leaving the greatest part of his property to his wife and four trustees to manage in trust for his eldest son, William. £700 was given to his eldest, then aged 11, provided the freehold of Sheppards Barton Church was handed over to trustees. His widow effectively managed the family's business. She purchased what is now 30 Catherine Hill, next to the Baptist Burial Ground and lived there. She bought land and a dyehouse. She died in 1750, distributing through her will money and effects among her children and grandchildren.


William Sheppard (1709-1759)

John's eldest son, William was a clothier like his father. He was born in Catherine's Hill. With his wife, Eleanor, he had ten children. half of whom who survived into the 19th century at the height of their family's prosperity. These were William (1735-1814), Walter (1739-1810), Henry (1744-1811), John (1747-1806) and Edward (1741-1808). Of these only William and Edward had children. On his death he was buried in Sheppard's Barton. By 1785 Eleanor was living with her son Walter at Iron Gates in King Street. She died 33 years after her husband in 1792. William continued to expand the family's properties: building plots in what became High Street, Wine Street and South Parade, and land in Dyers Close. In the 1730s he built houses in High Street and Wine Street (note: High Street was named as it lay on the high ground next to Catherine Hill, not to be confused with a street of shops in modern usage); these were all built on land purchased by John Shepherd in 1650. By 1755 he had built 19 houses in High Street, bequeathing the eastern side to his son Henry and the western side to his son Edward. His sons established factories at Rodden, Willow Vale and Spring Gardens.


Sheppard's Barton

By the 1760s, a number of cottages had been built to house weavers on land first leased to John Sheppard (c1614-1675) by the Champneys, part of his Catherine Hill complex. The word Barton derives from
Old English Old English ( or , or ), or Anglo-Saxon, is the earliest recorded form of the English language, spoken in England and southern and eastern Scotland in the Early Middle Ages. It developed from the languages brought to Great Britain by Anglo-S ...
''bere'' (barley) and ''ton'' (enclosure) and is connected to
Demesne A demesne ( ) or domain was all the land retained and managed by a lord of the manor under the feudal system for his own use, occupation, or support. This distinguished it from land subinfeudation, sub-enfeoffed by him to others as sub-tenants. ...
, land belonging to the
Lord of the manor Lord of the manor is a title that, in Anglo-Saxon England and Norman England, referred to the landholder of a historical rural estate. The titles date to the English Feudalism, feudal (specifically English feudal barony, baronial) system. The ...
. In the
West Country The West Country is a loosely defined area within southwest England, usually taken to include the counties of Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Somerset and Bristol, with some considering it to extend to all or parts of Wiltshire, Gloucestershire and ...
, Bartons are frequently found, associated with farms in the main. In towns they may refer to small thoroughfares, often not wide enough to allow carts to pass through, a narrow lane. In Frome there are many examples: Plumbers Barton, Clavey's Barton (now Blindhouse Lane), Humphries Barton (now South Parade); the name has been applied to modern streets: Foundry Barton, Leonards Barton. Nearby Mells is transversed across its centre by a number of similar bartons.


William Sheppard (1735-1814)

The first son of William and Eleanor, He was married to Anne Hulbert (1737-1820) in 1762. They had eight children: William Hulbert (1762-1804), Edward (1764-1849), Thomas (1766-1858), Anne (1768-1861), Elizabeth (1769-1841), Henry (1770-1854), George (1773-1855) and Eleanor (1777-1862). The Sheppards Barton Meeting House of the Quakers was replaced by a new building in 1783, the quit rent still being paid to the Sheppards. His brother Edward, the last son of William and Eleanor, married Elizabeth Harmer in 1777, by whom he had two children: Thomas Harmer (1778-1860) and Mary Harmer (1790-1840).


Frome's first MP

Thomas Sheppard (1766-1858) was the third son of William Sheppard. In 1800 in Friern Barnet, London he married Sarah Down (1775-1844). They had six children: Thomas (1802–51), Charles Down (1805–61), Walter Cope (1806–61), Sarah Frances (1808-post-1882), Susan (1810–96) and Frederick (1812–75). Politically he was a radical and a Whig who was elected as Frome's first MP in 1832. The story of that riotous election may be found
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. He was the only representative in the House of Commons who had a pigtail. Like his election nominator, Thomas Bunn, Sheppard supported the Anti-Slavery movement and was a delegate for Frome at the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Convention, at the Freemason's Hall, London, on 12 June 1834. Once elected, he spent much of his time in London, living in either The Lawn,
Hampstead Hampstead () is an area in London, England, which lies northwest of Charing Cross, located mainly in the London Borough of Camden, with a small part in the London Borough of Barnet. It borders Highgate and Golders Green to the north, Belsiz ...
or in the city at
Basinghall Street Basinghall Street (sometimes written as "Bassinghall") is a street in the City of London, England. It lies chiefly in the ward of Bassishaw (originally the street and the courts and passages leading off from it) with the southern end in Cheap ( ...
. In 1838 Thomas bought the Folkington and Wootton manors in the
South Downs The South Downs are a range of chalk hills in the south-eastern coastal counties of England that extends for about across the south-eastern coastal counties of England from the Itchen valley of Hampshire in the west to Beachy Head, in the ...
and built for himself a new Folkington Manor, designed by the architect
William Donthorn William John Donthorn (Donthorne in some sources) (1799 – 18 May 1859) was an English architect, and one of the founders of what became the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). He was born in Swaffham, Norfolk. He was a pupil of Sir ...
. After the death of his son Frederick in 1875, it was sold to another family.


George Sheppard (1773-1855) ''captain of industry''

George was the youngest son of William Sheppard and became the major clothier in Frome. He married Mary Ann Stuart Byard (1777-1838), daughter of Captain Sir
Thomas Byard Captain Sir Thomas Byard (bapt. 25 September 1743 – 30 October 1798) was an officer of the British Royal Navy during the French Revolutionary Wars. He is best known for his service in two significant battles, fighting at the Battle of Camperdo ...
. They had four sons: Thomas Byard, George Wood (1807-1894), Walter (1809-1852) and Alfred Byard (1810-post-1871). and two daughters: Emma Martha (1813-?) and Jane Bunn (1814-?). When George took over the family business, its only buildings were in Willow Vale: a warehouse and a fulling mill. They used the Town Mill, behind the
Blue House Cheong Wa Dae (), also known as the Blue House in English, is a public park that was the former Office of the President of South Korea, executive office and residence of the president of South Korea. Located in Seoul's Jongno District, directl ...
. He bought a mill at Rodden, converting it from a flour mill. In 1795 he expanded the factory at
Rodden Rodden is a village and a former municipality in the district Saalekreis, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany. Since 31 December 2009, it is part of the town Leuna Leuna () is a town in Saxony-Anhalt, eastern Germany, south of Merseburg and Halle, Saxo ...
, introducing scribbling engines; these replaced the first process of hand-carding in sorting out wool fibres. He worked with his brother Henry until Henry retired; then he went into a long partnership with his cousin William Hulbert Sheppard of Keyford House. In 1803 William complained to government commissioners of the difficulty of introducing a gig mill for treating the
nap A nap is a short period of sleep, typically taken during daytime hours as an adjunct to the usual nocturnal sleep period. Naps are most often taken as a response to Somnolence, drowsiness during waking hours or as a means to supplement before ...
of cloth. At a time of rising unemployment, in part because of the increasing mechanisation of cloth production, the price of potatoes provoked a riot in Frome in 1816. Magistrates read the Riot Act and suppressed the trouble with local militia and dragoons, preventing an attack on a Sheppard factory. At Spring Gardens the Sheppard partnership had established a factory and three mills. He built two dozen cottages on Innox Hill for his workers, close enough for them to work irregular hours when required. The Spring Gardens works were later to enlarged and operated with steam engines by 1824. In full production they were producing broadcloths, kersey, doeskins and other cloths every week, 5000 yards of cloth. He had Fromefield House built for himself and family in 1797. The early 19th-century extension of the garden of Fromefield House involved the levelling of a barrow, which was partly dug out in 1819-20 before the garden was landscaped. These diggings (which were not well recorded) apparently discovered five human skeletons, sherds of
Neolithic The Neolithic or New Stone Age (from Ancient Greek, Greek 'new' and 'stone') is an archaeological period, the final division of the Stone Age in Mesopotamia, Asia, Europe and Africa (c. 10,000 BCE to c. 2,000 BCE). It saw the Neolithic Revo ...
pottery and limestone slabs apparently forming walled chambers. The house received its water supply from a nearby spring - hence Spring Road on the corner of which the house stands. There were two 'modern' amenities installed, now both gone: an ice house and a bath house (which had two rooms, the cold stream-fed pool and a changing room with a fireplace. In 1803 he became a trustee of the Almhouses, Blue School, and Keyford Asylum. His son Thomas Byard joined him as a trustee in 1832. In the same year he was one of those, alongside Thomas Bunn, who supported financially the emigration of Frome inhabitants to Canada as part of the work of a 'Committee for the Relief and Employment of the Poor'. His youngest sons, Walter and Alfred Byard never entered the family trade, the latter becoming an attorney and solicitor in
Lincoln's Inn Fields Lincoln's Inn Fields is located in Holborn and is the List of city squares by size, largest public square in London. It was laid out in the 1630s under the initiative of the speculative builder and contractor William Newton, "the first in a ...
. Thomas Bunn was a frequent visitor to Fromefield House. He was friendly with Mary, George's wife. At her death in 1838, he commented: "At our visit she received us in her garden with such kindness sweetness and affability that a friendship commenced without the shadow of a cloud from thence to the day. When I have been ill she visited me consoled me and talked and conversed with me. .... I was affected as we passed through the town at seeing so unexpectedly the shops closed." Before his death in 1855, George had handed over the management of the cloth business to the two eldest sons, Thomas Byard and George Wood. Their partnership lasted until the firm closed. Changes in fashion in part had caused the decline: the black shiny broadcloth which was their speciality was replaced by checked and patterned cloths. Their conservatism killed the trade. In 1875, George Wood became a founder member of the Frome Cottage Hospital. This small eleven-bed unit was on the corner of Castle Street and Trinity Street and was a precursor of the Frome Victoria Hospital of 1901; unusually for the town, it was a Georgian brick building.


John Sheppard (1785–1879) ''writer''

The youngest son of John Shepherd (c1680-1720) was another John (c1710-1795) who had four children, Sophie, John, Joseph and Sarah. Of these John (c1748-92) had a son also named
John John is a common English name and surname: * John (given name) * John (surname) John may also refer to: New Testament Works * Gospel of John, a title often shortened to John * First Epistle of John, often shortened to 1 John * Second E ...
. After his father's death, this John and his mother joined the Baptists, to which most of his relatives belonged. His uncle Walter (1735-1814) bequeathed him his share of the cloth business (£30,000) and he was able to become a man of independent means, finishing his education at Edinburgh University and taking up life as a writer and unpaid preacher. He published a book of verse in 1837: "An Autumn Dream"., "in which he discusses the affairs of heaven in verse," a Calvinistic version of Dante's ''Paradiso''. In 1871 John Sheppard made an address at the installation of the fountain in the Market Place, along with the donor Rev Boyle. He had courage in his opinions. After one lecture, he spoke out against its 'nonsense, infidelity and paganism', offering to fight the lecturer like a man. Frome was well-known for its Sunday School processions on Whitsun Monday, Anglicans marching to their churches, non-conformists marching to theirs. In 1874 ''
The Times ''The Times'' is a British Newspaper#Daily, daily Newspaper#National, national newspaper based in London. It began in 1785 under the title ''The Daily Universal Register'', adopting its modern name on 1 January 1788. ''The Times'' and its si ...
'' recorded that Mr Sheppard asked who one small crowd was as the children marched by. The leader replied, 'We be a split from the Primitives'. Mr Shepard commented, 'Ah, my good man, that's what we all are.' He died in 1879 in Frome and was buried in the dissenter's cemetery.


Emma Sheppard (1813-1871) ''writer and workhouse reformer''

Emma Brown from Bath married George Wood Sheppard in 1834; they had a daughter, Mary Stuart in 1841. They first lived in Berkley House. In 1848, by which time she had seven children, they moved into Fromefield House with George Sheppard senior, some ten years after the death of his wife, Mary Ann Stuart Byard. Emma's husband was a pillar of local society: a JP, chair of the
Board of Guardians Boards of guardians were ''ad hoc'' authorities that administered Poor Law in the United Kingdom from 1835 to 1930. England and Wales Boards of guardians were created by the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, replacing the parish overseers of the po ...
which ran the workhouse as part of the
Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 The Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 (4 & 5 Will. 4. c. 76) (PLAA) known widely as the New Poor Law, was an Act of Parliament (United Kingdom), act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom passed by the British Whig Party, Whig government of Charles ...
, vice-president of the Frome Literary and Scientific Institution (now the Frome Museum), trustee of Frome charities, supporter of the Frome School of Art (founded by
Singer Singing is the art of creating music with the voice. It is the oldest form of musical expression, and the human voice can be considered the first musical instrument. The definition of singing varies across sources. Some sources define singi ...
) and of the Church Missionary Society. The Frome Times documented his public life. He addressed Queen Victoria at a
levee A levee ( or ), dike (American English), dyke (British English; see American and British English spelling differences#Miscellaneous spelling differences, spelling differences), embankment, floodbank, or stop bank is an elevated ridge, natural ...
in 1842. In this milieu, his wife had opportunities to examine the lives of less fortunate members of society. In 1833, a cottage was built on the corner of Bath and Rodden Roads. This was built as a
Dame school Dame schools were small, privately run schools for children aged two to five. They emerged in Great Britain and its colonies during the Early modern Britain, early modern period. These schools were taught by a “school dame,” a local woman ...
on her behest, before their marriage, as a school for the domestic servants and estate workers of Fromefield House. Emma became interested in the workhouse and its inhabitants. She was initially taken aback by the empty life of the hospital wards and the lack of simple everyday comforts. Her own children prompted her to provide gifts to the pauper children. The Temperance Hotel in the Market Place agreed to supply twopence of hot drink and bread and butter for a ticket-card given to local beggars; Emma reimbursed the costs. Quite quickly she adopted the position of a workhouse reformer. She wrote a pamphlet in 1857: 'Experiences of a Workhouse Visitor'. This was circulated privately and gained so much attention that in 1859 as Mrs George Wood Sheppard, she expanded it into a book, "Sunshine in the Workhouse". There she gives examples "she has successfully arranged, by the aid of private assistance, to keep aged persons from the workhouse, and this seems to be a very legitimate mode of applying charity, and a likely means of encouraging persons to exert themselves in maintaining, at least partly, their aged relations. One shilling a week added to the 2s.6d. allowed by the parish is found to be sufficient to keep them at home." She noted the extreme cleanliness of existing workhouses, but astutely commented that they were ‘painfully spotless, making one almost shudder to think of daily scouring under the beds and feet of the sick and rheumatic’. She was distressed by "the monotonous rituals of cleaning.... which both disturb the bedridden inmates and potentially increase their rheumatic pain." She wrote to
The Times ''The Times'' is a British Newspaper#Daily, daily Newspaper#National, national newspaper based in London. It began in 1785 under the title ''The Daily Universal Register'', adopting its modern name on 1 January 1788. ''The Times'' and its si ...
of her concern for paupers with venereal disease: "Once they have recovered from the disease that brought them into the workhouse, they are ‘driven from the “foul ward,” (properly so called,) into the “wide, wide, world,” to inevitable iniquity’." She proposed that a simple thing, such as replacing the tin mug used for drinking tea with a cup and saucer, would improve the comfort and dignity of the aged. In 1860 she wrote another book: "An Outstretched Hand to the Fallen". In this she wrote: "the purer, the more ignorant of vice the lady is who seeks them, the greater the influence she has."
At Emma Sheppard's Home in Frome, inmates were free to leave the home during the day, and sometimes worked outside the home, coming back at night. She disapproved of institutions which took away the freedom of their inmates, arguing that they were, "I think, misnamed, being more a system for criminals than for penitents."
In 1871 she died of a stroke while visiting her brother, a vicar in
Wokingham Wokingham ( ) is a market town and civil parish in Berkshire, England. It is the main administrative centre of the wider Borough of Wokingham. At the 2021 census the parish had a population of 38,284 and the wider built-up area had a populati ...
. When her funeral took place in Frome, hundreds of people attended, including children from the workhouse. In 1882 evidence from her writings were given before a Select Committee of the House of Lords on the law relating to the Protection of Young Girls. A dementia day care centre opened in Rowden House, 2 Vallis Road, Frome in 2013. It is named the Emma Sheppard Centre.


In dispute with the vicar

Thomas Byard Sheppard (1805–1886) was a son of George Sheppard and of Mary Ann Stuart Byard, He lived in Frome throughout his life. He and his wife were frequently visited by Thomas Bunn, who was a fellow trustee of the Almhouses, Blue School, and Keyford Asylum. In 1852 the Reverend Wiliam James Early Bennett was installed as the vicar of St John's Church, Frome. He was an Anglo-Catholic. He had previously had to resign a post in Knightsbridge and Plimlico, being accused of
Ritualism A ritual is a repeated, structured sequence of actions or behaviors that alters the internal or external state of an individual, group, or environment, regardless of conscious understanding, emotional context, or symbolic meaning. Traditionally ...
in a dispute with his bishop. He soon upset many of his new congregation with the vehemence of his views, provoking many led by
Edward Cockey Edward Cockey (1781–1860) was an industrial entrepreneur in Frome, Somerset, England, descended from a local family of metalworkers. Background The early part of the nineteenth century was a hard time for Frome, industry declining over the y ...
, a local industrialist, to attend the Trinity Church instead. In 1870 Thomas Byard Sheppard accused the vicar of heresy, charging him for maintaining and publishing doctrines contrary to the Articles and Formularies of the Church, regarding the presence of Christ in the Eucharist and other elements of Anglican theology, again in conflict with his bishop. The case was eventually heard in appeal to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in 1872 and was found to be not proven.


Sheppards in modern times

Two prominent men of the 20th century are Sheppards by descent.
Tubby Clayton Philip Thomas Byard Clayton (12 December 1885 – 16 December 1972), known as "Tubby" Clayton, was an Anglican clergyman and the founder of Toc H. Life and career Philip Clayton was born in Maryborough, Queensland, Australia, to English pa ...
(1885-1972) was an
Anglican Anglicanism, also known as Episcopalianism in some countries, is a Western Christianity, Western Christian tradition which developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the ...
clergyman and the founder of
Toc H Toc H (also TH) is a registered charity and an international Christian movement. The name is an abbreviation for Talbot House, "Toc" signifying the letter T in the Royal Corps of Signals#History, signals spelling alphabet#History, spelling alpha ...
, a descendant of George Sheppard. His father was Reginald Byard Buchanan Clayton (1845-) His mother was Isabel Clayton, née Byard Sheppard (1848-1919), a daughter of George Wood Sheppard of Berkley. His grandfather was the son of Rev John Henry Clayton (born in Ashbourne, Derbyshire in 1809/10) and Jane Bunn Sheppard who was the youngest daughter of George Sheppard's youngest son, Alfred Byard.
David Sheppard David Stuart Sheppard, Baron Sheppard of Liverpool (6 March 1929 – 5 March 2005) was a Church of England bishop who played cricket for Sussex and England in his youth, before serving as Bishop of Liverpool from 1975 to 1997. Sheppard remains ...
(1929-2005), Baron Sheppard of Liverpool was the high-profile
Bishop of Liverpool The Bishop of Liverpool is the ordinary of the Church of England Diocese of Liverpool in the Province of York.''Crockford's Clerical Directory'', 100th edition, (2007), Church House Publishing. . The diocese stretches from Southport in the n ...
in the
Church of England The Church of England (C of E) is the State religion#State churches, established List of Christian denominations, Christian church in England and the Crown Dependencies. It is the mother church of the Anglicanism, Anglican Christian tradition, ...
who played
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for
Sussex Sussex (Help:IPA/English, /ˈsʌsɪks/; from the Old English ''Sūþseaxe''; lit. 'South Saxons'; 'Sussex') is an area within South East England that was historically a kingdom of Sussex, kingdom and, later, a Historic counties of England, ...
and
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in his youth. His father was Stuart Morton Winter Sheppard (1895-1937) and Barbara Sheppard (née Shepherd). He is a direct descendant of William Shepherd (1735-1814), his grandfather four times removed.


References

Multiple references are taken from one book: Gill, Derek J (1982), ''The Sheppards and 18th Century Frome'', Frome Society for Local Study. At the end of each individual section, there is a single citation which includes in sequence the pages cited. {{reflist People from Frome People from Somerset Wool trade Woven fabrics Business families of the United Kingdom