Lloyds Security
Address
Unit 113bHaydon Bridge Industrial Estate
Church Street, Haydon Bridge
Hexham, Northumberland
NE47 6JG
Email: -
TELEPHONE NUMBERS
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Information about words in this company name or address
lloyds
This name derives from the Welsh "llwyd" meaning "grey", and was originally given as a nickname either to a grey haired person or to one who habitually wore grey garments. This is an example of that sizeable group of early European surnames that were gradually created from the habitual use of nicknames. The nicknames were given in the first instance with reference to occupation, or to a variety of characteristics, such as physical attributes or peculiarities, mental and moral characteristics, supposed resemblance to an animal''s or bird''s appearance or disposition, or to habits of dress. The surname is first recorded in the early half of the 14th Century (see below), and early recordings include: Ithell Lloit, who appears in the 1391 Records of Chirk, Wales, and Richard Lloyd, who was recorded in the 1524 Subsidy Rolls of Suffolk. Several namebearers, including: Jenkin Lloyd (County Montgomery), and Griffith Lloyd (County Radnor), were entered in the Oxford University Register during the period 1577 - 1585. Edward Lloyd, who flourished circa 1692, kept a coffee-house in Lombard Street, London, and it is from him that the great commercial corporation known as "Lloyd''s" derives its name. His premises was the centre of shipbroking and the marine insurance business in the late sixteen hundreds.
security
1. freedom from danger, risk, etc.; safety.
2. freedom from care, anxiety, or doubt; well-founded confidence.
3. something that secures or makes safe; protection; defense.
4. freedom from financial cares or from want: The insurance policy gave the family security.
5. precautions taken to guard against crime, attack, sabotage, espionage, etc.: The senator claimed security was lax.
1. security, safety
usage: the state of being free from danger or injury; "we support the armed services in the name of national security"
2. security, certificate, legal document, legal instrument, official document, instrument
usage: a formal declaration that documents a fact of relevance to finance and investment; the holder has a right to receive interest or dividends; "he held several valuable securities"
3. security, security department, department, section
usage: a department responsible for the security of the institution''''s property and workers; "the head of security was a former policeman"
4. security, security measures, precaution, safeguard, guard
usage: measures taken as a precaution against theft or espionage or sabotage etc.; "military security has been stepped up since the recent uprising"
5. security, protection, assets
usage: defense against financial failure; financial independence; "his pension gave him security in his old age"; "insurance provided protection against loss of wages due to illness"
6. security, fearlessness, bravery
usage: freedom from anxiety or fear; "the watch dog gave her a feeling of security"
7. security system, security measures, security, electrical device
usage: an electrical device that sets off an alarm when someone tries to break in
8. security, surety, transferred property, transferred possession
usage: property that your creditor can claim in case you default on your obligation; "bankers are reluctant to lend without good security"
church street
Church Street was originally named Church Lane and was referred to as this by John Harrison''s in his survey of the town centre streets for Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel in 1637. Ralph Gosling''s map of Sheffield of 1736 shows the area around Church Lane as "extraordinarily narrow". Joseph Mather , the local songwriter and file cutter described Church Lane in the 1780s in his song "The Black Resurrection":
Proceed then up Church Lane, that poor narrow place,
With wood buildings projecting, twas quite a disgrace,
The roofs nearly meeting, a dark dreary street,
Might justly be styled, the robbers retreat.
In 1785 Church Lane was widened by taking a section of the nearby churchyard which resulted in the exhumation of several bodies and coffins. This produced adverse reaction from local inhabitants who directed their wrath against the vicar, the Reverend James Wilkinson

