Page:Plomer Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers 1907.djvu/165

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NEALAND—NEVILL.
135

concerning Gods election … which had been issued by Samuel Nealand in 1631 and called in at that time by order of the Archbishop of Canterbury, as containing "divers dangerous opinions." [E. 21 (10).] She is only known from the imprint to this book.

NEALAND (WILLIAM), bookseller in Cambridge, 1655-60. Several entries with his imprint occur in Bowes' Cambridge Books between these years. There was also a bookseller of the same name in London during the same period, who may be identical.

NEALAND (WILLIAM), bookseller in London; Crown in Duck Lane, 1649-62. Probably the same as the preceding.

NEDHAM, see Needham.

NEEDHAM, or NEDHAM (RALPH), bookseller in London; Bell, Little Britain, 1665-72. Mentioned in the Hearth Tax Roll for the half-year ending Lady Day, 1666. [P.R.O. Lay Subsidy 252/32]. He died in July, 1672. [Smyth's Obituary, p. 96.]

NEILE (FRANCIS), printer in London; Aldersgate Street, 1644-54. Took up his freedom September 4th, 1626. [Arber, iii. 686.] Printer of The Weekly Intelligencer [1651-55]. In partnership with Matthew Simmons.

NEILL (JOHN), bookseller in Glasgow, 1642-5. Named as a debtor in inventories of J. Bryson (1642), and R. Bryson (1645). The David Neill in Glasgow mentioned in Lithgow's Inventory (1662) may be a successor. [H. G. Aldis, List of Books, p. 118.]

NEVILL (JOSEPH), bookseller in London; Plough, St. Pauls Church Yard, 1660-64. Publisher of R. Baxter's Treatise of self denial, 1660.

NEVILL (PHILIP), bookseller in London; Ivy Lane, 1638-42. Son of Philip Nevill, of Smalpace, co. Chester, yeoman. Apprentice to John Grismond I. for eight years from Midsummer, 1630, who at his death in 1638 left him a bequest. [P.C.C. 169, Lee.]