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Edward Stone (clergyman) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Edward Stone (cleric) Edward Stone (1702–1768) was a Church of England rector who discovered the active ingredient of aspirin. == Life == Edward Stone was born in Princes Risborough, Buckinghamshire, England, in 1702 into a family that had been farming in Princes Risborough since 1580. His parents were Edward Stone (a "gentleman farmer") and Elizabeth Reynolds. Stone went to Wadham College, Oxford, in 1720 where he later became a fellow. From 1738 he held livings at Horsenden, Buckinghamshire and Drayton near Banbury, Oxfordshire. He married Elizabeth Grubbe at Mercers Hall Chapel, Cheapside (a non-parochial church), London, on 7 July 1741. In 1745 he became chaplain to Sir Jonathan Cope at Bruern Abbey and served various curacies around Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire. He was also a Justice of the Peace (JP) for Oxfordshire, actively enforcing the Poor Law. Stone once lived on the site of the Hitchman Brewery in West Street, Chipping Norton, where an Oxfordshire blue plaque has now been erected.〔(Blue plaque to Stone on Hitchman Brewery, Chipping Norton )〕 He was buried in Horsenden in 1768.
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