444 ST.ALB.AM, . [KELLY'S . - Walker W. D. & A. E. maltsters, Way­ of births, deaths & marriages, & Woods Hannah (Mrs.), draper­ ford bridge collector to the guardians for the Woods Herbert Edward, butcher­ Watling Charles Frederic, relieving Rapping district of Smallburgh Wortley George, farmer officer, vaccination officer, registrar union, Florence villa STANFIELD is a parish, 3l miles west from North William Henry Hinder. A Primitive Methodist chape:t Elmham station on the and Wells section of the was built in 1879· There is a fuel allotment of 8 acre& Great Eastern railway and 6 north-west-by-north from for the poor, let for £7 15s. William Thomas Collison Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, Launditch esq. of Albemarle House, Great Yarmouth, and John hundred, petty sessional division William Davy esq. of Ingoldsthorpe Hall, are the chief and union, Dereham county court district, rural deanery landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, various. The of South , archdeaconry of Lynn and diocese of crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is 938' Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a structure of acres; rateable value, £778; the population in 190! :flint with stone dressings in the Perpendicular and Early was 146. English styles, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch Sexton, Edward Bird. and an embattled western tower with pinnacles, contain­ ing 4 bells: a new east window was erect-ed in 1864 : Letters through Dereham arrive at 7.40 a. m. TittishiU there are 100 sittings. The register dates from the year is the nearest money order office & the telegraph office 155 8. The living is a rectory, net yearly value £ 165, is at Brisley, I mile distant. Pillar Letter Box. with 20 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Rev. cleared at 5·5° p.m.; sundays, at I0.25 a.m Frederick William Bussell D.D. vice-principal of Brase- The children of this place attend the Council Schools a\ nose College, Oxford, and held since 1899 by the Rev. Mileham & Brisley Hinder Rev. William Henry, Rectory Cooper William, farmer, High green Keeley Robert, grocer & draper Cullyer William, farmer Kemp James Wm. farmer, Ling farm COMMERCIAL. Dady Austin, baker Melton Arthur Barnard, farmer, Wil- Chambers Robert, landowner Foulger Edward, farmer, Hig-h green low grange Case Mary Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Gaze Herbert, Maid's He.ad P.H Middleton Elijah, farmer & landowner Howlet Robert, pork butcher Naylor J.ames, farmer, Tuthill farm Case Thomas Henry, cattle salesman hbill Charles, farmer Walpole Robert, farmer STANFORD is a parish and village on the road from Ivalue £10o, including 16 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Brand~n to Watton and on the south bank of the river Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1898 by the Rev. Paul Wissey, 6 miles south-west from Watton station, Thet- Newbury Clark M.A. of King's College, Cambridge, ann ford and section, and 6 north-east from Bran- also rector of West Tofts, where he resides. Lord Walsing­ don station on the Ely and section of the Great ham is lord of the manor and principal landowner. The Eastern railway, and 9 south from Swaffham, in the soil is light and sandy; subsoil, marl and chalk, with South Western division of the county, hundred and petty clay i!'"• places. The chief crops are barley, oats, rye and sessional division of Grimshoe, union and county court turnips, and a little wheat. The area is 2,664 acres oi district of Swaffham, rural deanery of (South land (formerly a rabbit warren) and 32 of water; rate­ division), archdeaconry of Lynn and diocese of Norwich. able value, £83o; the population in 1901 was 106. The church of All Saints, a short distance east of the Parish Clerk, James Quadling. village, is a structure of flint in the Early English style, Letter Box cleared at 9 a.m. & 6 p.m.; no delivery 01 consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a west- dispatch on sundays. Letters through Brandon arrive ern tower, with a circular lower stage and octagonal belfry, at 7.30 a.m. is the nearest money order & and containing a clock and one bell : the church was en- telegraph office, 3! miles distant larged in 1852 at a cost of £7oo, when the north aisle Public Elementary School (mixed), erected by the late and chancel, then in ruins, were rebuilt and the interior & supported by the present Lord Walsingham, enlarged reseated: it now affords go sittings. The register dates in 1897: it will hold 39 children; average attendance~ from the year 1754. The living is a vicarage, net yearly 28; Miss Elizabeth Storey, mistress Oldfield Robert, Cock inn I Spinks Geo. farmer, Stanford Cock fm STANHOE is a parish and village, with a station 1! and Mrs. Hollway-Calthrop, in memory of his mother. miles north on the Lynn and Wells section of the Great Mr. John Wright left 3 acres of land, which the late rec­ Eastern railway, 4 south-south-west from Burnham Mar- tor exchanged fQr 4! acres of glebe, and the proceeds are ket and 120 by rail from , in the North Western applied to educational purposes. There are remains here division of the county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and of an ancient cross, and in Chapelfield are traces of th~ Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking union, buildings of a religious house. Stanhoe Hall, the pro­ Little Walsingham county court district, rural deanery perty of Henry Calthrop Hollway-Oalthrop esq. and of Heacham, archdeaconry of Lynn and diocese Qf Nor- erected about 1720 by Sir Robert Walpole, is a mansion of wich. The church of All Saints is a building of :flint in brick, enlarged in 1879, and sU'rrounded by well-wooded the Early English and Decorated styles, consisting of grounds, and is at present occupied by Neville Paul chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled tower Jodrell esq. Mrs. Seymour, of Barwick House, who is at the south-west angle, containing one bell: the entrance lady of the manQr, and Henry Calthrop Hollway-Calthrop is through the base of the tower: the stone font and oak esq. J.P. bursar Qf Eton College, who is lord of the manor altar-rail, pulpit and reading desk were erected in 1853, of Marches, are the principal landowners. The soil is &s a memorial to Daniel Everard, formerly rector of this good mixed; the subsoil is chalk and marl. The chief parish and of Burnham Thorpe, and his wife: the stained crops are wheat, barley, oats, turnips and mangolds. east window was erected in April, 1879, and one on the The area is 1,495 acres; rateable value, £1,665; the north side of the chancel in 1887: the church was re- population in 1901 was 368. atored in 1855 and is seated with open benches, afford- Parish Clerk, Waiter Bone. 1T'nhg 25.o .sitti!lgs. T~e regis~ethr dtahtes ~rom the fyeBar I5$8k Post, M. O. & T. O., T. M. O., E. D., P. P., s. B. &. e 11vmg 1s a rec ory, Wl e VIcarage 0 arwiC A. & I. Office.-Robert Allen, sub-postmaster. London annexed, joint net yearly value £3IO, including 19 acres & other letters received from Lynn at 6.30 a.m. ; dis- Qf glebe, with residence erected in 1861, in the gift of patched at .20 p.m. ; sunday, dispatched at 2. p.m Mrs. Seymour, and held since 1902 by the Rev. Raymond 5 25 Charles Black M.A. of Merton College, Oxford. There Stanhoe & Ba:rwick Public Elementary School (mixed),. is a Wesleyan chapel erected in 1827, and a Primitive erected in 1854, for 100 children; average attendance, Methodist chapel erected in 1892. The Reading Room 81; John Osborn, master here was erected in 1885 by H. C. Hollway-Calthrop esq. Railway Station, Thomas Hood, station master Black Rev. Raymond Charles M.A. Belton Ernest Samuel, farmer Palmer Zachariah, farmer Rectory Benne~t .A.rth. Thomas. grocer & drapr Reading Room (G. Newell, hon . .!lee-. Hollway-Calthrop Hy. Calthrop J.P. Calver Thomas, farmer, Station farm & treas) The Grange Cook Dennis, farmer Rowe John, farmer Jodrell Neville Paul, Stanhoe hall Goodman Albert E'. blacksmith Smith Henry Mourdaunt, carpenter,. COMMERCIAL. Linge John, The Crown P.H wheelwright & builder Alien Robert, boot maker & shopkpr :\fcConnell Francis, Norfolk Hero inn Wood Waiter Herbt. baker & groce:r STARSTON is a parish and small village pleasantly petty sessional division, Depwade union, Harleston aituated in a valley, Il miles north-by-west from Harles- county court district, rural deanery of Redenhall, arch­ ton station on the Waveney Valley branch of the Great deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich; a stream Eastern railway and I 8 south from Norwich, in the locally known as the " Beck," :flows through the pari&b Southern division of the county, Earsham hundred and 1md falls into the river Waveney. The church of S\.