1911 – Exeter Pictorial Record Society active.[22]
1914 – 7 October: First of five war emergency hospitals in requisitioned buildings in the city opens to casualties, staffed by Voluntary Aid Detachment nurses.[23]
1916 – December: Deller's Café opens in Bedford Street.[23]
1949 – 21 October: Official inauguration of construction of Princesshay, Britain's first pedestrianised shopping precinct, as part of the postwar city centre reconstruction.[24]
^ abcdefgDevon Library and Information Services. "Devon Timeline". Devon County Council. Archived from the original on 5 May 2008. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
^ abShorter, A. H. (1954). "The Site, Situation and Functions of Exeter". Geography. 39 (4): 250–261. JSTOR40564988.
^ abLetters, Samantha (2005), "Devon", Gazetteer of Markets and Fairs in England and Wales to 1516, Institute of Historical Research, Centre for Metropolitan History
^Payton, Philip (1996). Cornwall: a history. Fowey: Alexander Associates. 'Exeter was cleansed of its defilement by wiping out that filthy race'... The area inside the city walls still known today as 'Little Britain' is the quarter where most of the Cornish Romano-British aristocracy had their town houses, from which the Cornish were expelled. Under Athelstan's statutes it eventually became unlawful for any Cornishman to own land, and lawful for any Englishman to kill any Cornishman (or woman or child).
^William Cotton (1873), An Elizabethan Guild of the city of Exeter, Exeter: Pollard, OL7153277M
^ abIan Maxted (2006), "Exeter", Devon book and paper trades: a biographical dictionary, Exeter Working Papers in British Book Trade History, retrieved 17 September 2013
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