<<

86 EASINGTON. NORTH RIDING . [KELLY's orders, and a. tower containing 2 bells, presented in Wall Letter Box, Grinkle, cleared n.3o a.m. !; 3·45 1903 when the church was thoroughly restored at a p.m. No collection on sundays cost <>f £r,6oo, including an east window: there Wall Letter Box, Scaling, cleared at IO a.m. & 3 p.m are two ether stainad windows : the old bells have Shipwrecked Fishermen &, Mariners' Royal Benevvlenb been carefully preserved in the ''estry: there are Society, William Bulson, hon. representative 100 sittings. The tithe, amounting to £2oo, net yenly value £133, and 35 acres of glebe, belong to the Public Elementary Schools. rector. ~here is a Wesleyan Methodist chapel at Liver­ Ea,ington (boys & girls), erected in I868 by the Ltte ton Mines. Viscount Downe K.C.V.O., C.B., C.I.E. is Sir Charles Mark Palmer hart. M.P. & enlarged lll lord of the manor and principal landowner. The area 19II, for 140 children; average attendance, 125; is 2,457 acres; rateable value, £6,978; the population George Million, ma«ter in I9II was 1, I47• which is included in the Loftus Scaling (mixed & infants), erected in 1901, for 35 chil­ Urban District. dren; average attendance, 20; Miss E. Harrison, mistress Post Office, Mines.-!Jexander Mackenzie, sub­ Liverton (mixed), for 30 children; average attendanc~. postmaster. Letters arriYe from Loftus at 8.30 a.m. q; Mi~s Blanche Preston, mistress & 7.15 p.m. Box cleared at 5 & 7.50 p.m.; no (mixed), erected in r874, for r8o children; sunday delivery. Loftus, I mile distant, is the average attendance, 190; Samuel Lundy ~Iumford, nearest telegraph & money order office master Wall Letter Box, Livei"ton, cleared at 4.30 p.m. No R::tilway Station. Grii.J,le, 'Ihompsvn Horsley, statiou collection on sundays master E.A.SINGTOX *Hutchin«on John, farmer, Scaling Cargo Fleet Iron Co. Ltd. (.A.rmstro1g (Marked thus * :r6ceive their letters *Hntchinson Thomas, farmer, Scaling V arty, manager), Li,•erton min ~ through Loftus; marked thus t *Hutchinson Thos.jun. farmer,Scaling Dale Thomas, farmer through .) *Jackson Joseph, blacl:smith, Scaling Dobson Robf:'rt, farmer, GoldPn H'll tBurness Charles, Ridge house tKnag-.::;s D£n·id, farmer, Ridge lane (letters through ~Ioorsholm J enkins Rev. John (rector), Rectory Lo" ther Thomas, farmer, Town farm Dowey DaYid ( exor<:. of), cowl,ee:', •s Palmer Gertrude Lady,Grinkle pari.; Pe1rson Joseph, farmer Do\Yey Jame•, CO\dtceper &:; 23 Hertford street, London W Pybus Jonathan, farmer Hart David, blaeksmith Palmer Godfrey Mark M.P. Grinkle *Ram,haw Robert, farmer, Howe Hewison George, Downe .A.rms P.H parli; & 5 Beaufort gardens, farm, Grinlde J ohnson Robert ( exors. oi), farmers Lo::1don S W Rowland Lawson, frmr. grange (letters through ) COMMERCIAL. Sedman Josepb, farmer, Glebe farm Johnson James, farmer tBumess Charles, agent to Gertrude Severs Jas. threshing machine owner Judson Cornelius,frmr.Park Ho.fal'1Il Lady Palmer, Ridge hous€' Skinningrm-e Iron Co. Ltd. (T. C. ~Iackenzie Bros. grocer~, Live ton Cook Joseph, shopkeeper, Post ofl'lce Hutchinson, managing director) :Mine~, Post office Cowan Frank & William, farmers. *Storey "\'Villiam, farm bailiff to Ger- :'.'larley .A.nn (~Irs. ), cowkeeper Ingshouse farm trude Lady Palmer, Scaling mill, .Nicholson Isaac, cowlieeper *Crozier Frank, gamekeeper to Ger- Scaling · Petch Thomas, farm~.>r trude Lady Palmer Taylor Thomas, farmer Petch Thomas Stonehouse, farmer & Cunningham James, shopkpr. Boulby Thnrlow John Wm.farmer, Barns frm auctioneer & valuer, Lodge farm *Davison 'l'hos. Grapes inn, Scaling Wilkin Jacob, farmer, Twizzigill Pybus Francis, jun. cowkeeper Dawson George, farmer & assistant Willis Ralph Chas. farmer, Rawcliff Richardson Robert, tailor overseer, Hall farm Willis Thomas, farmer, Cowbar farm Robinson James Clark, farmer Dowey Dayid, Tiger inn Willis Wm. Hy. frmr. Red House frm Shaw Martin R. miller (water) i"Dowey James, farmer, Ridge lane vYil~on Martin, carpenter Shaw Robert, cowkeeper *Dowey Robert, farmer, Scaling Simpson Thomas, cowkeeper *Featherstone 'Ihos. farmer,Doddercar LIYERTO:N. Welford Thos. farmer, Tickhill hot1SS *Green William, gardener to Ger- Varty Armstrong, The Grange Yorkshire Penny Bank Ltd. (S. IJ. trude Lady Palmer Bonas JLob, farmer Mumford, actuary; open monday *Hutchinson Hick Thos. frmr. Scaling 1Bradbury John, farmer,Church Ho.fm 6 to 7 p.m), Liverton Mines scho 1 EASINGWOLD is a market and union town and dows, including one to Mrs. Eleanor Westerman, founder head of a <:onnty <:ourt district, and a parish, having a of the Free school of the town, d. 1783, and some to terminal station of the Easingwold Railway Co. (opened the Clough, J ohnson, Driffield and Robin son families: in 1B9I), 3 miles east from Alne station on the main in the church is preserved an old coffin, very black line of the North Eastern railway, 13- north-north-west with age, but in remarkablv good condition: the church from York, IO west-north-west from Boroughbridge, xo was restored in 1858, and affords about 6oo sittings. south-east from Thirsk, 12 south-west from Helmsley The register commences in the year 1599. The living and 209 from London; it is in the Thirsk and Malton is a Yicarage, net yearly value £275, including 32 acres division of the Riding, wapentake of Bulmer, petty of glebe, with re<:iden!!e, in the gift of the Bishop of sessional division of Bulmer West, rural deanery of Chester, and held since 1910 by the Rev. Halsall Segar Easingwold, archdeaconry of and diocese of M. .A.. of Exeter College, Oxford. Tithe, amounting to York. The town is pleasantly seated in the vale of £636, is appropriated to the Ecclesiastical Commu· York, on the western side of the Howardian hills, at the sioners. The parish room was erected in 19II, at a foot of the terminating point of Hambleton, and towards cost of £6oo, on a site given by Mrs. Love, of "the verge of the great Forest of Galtres. The buildings Ha~khills, as a memorial to the Rev. Nathan Jackson -are mostly of brick, a few being constructed of timber 1\I . .A.. vicar I877-I9IO. The Catholic church, dedicated and plaster, and one of these, still existing in Spring to St. John, was erected in x83o and opened 21 Nov. street, bears the inscription, "God with us, 1664." The 1833. and is a tuildin~ in the Early English stylt>; town is supplied with water from works at Hanover, it contains a stone altar, the gift in x87o of Mrs. about 2 miles north of the town, under the control of Stapylton, of Myton Hall. Attached is a burial ground. the Rural District Council. The town is lighted with gas The mission formerly at Crayke and Oulston represent.B from works in Lon~ street, erecterl in 1857, and beloneing the old Catholic chaplaincy of the Viscounts Fauconberg, to a company. The church of .All Saints and St. John of Newburgh Priory, and still possesses some pre-Re· the Baptist occupies a pleasant site at the top of a ~entle formation vestments. There are also Wesleyan Methodist; ascent on the north side of the town, an avenue of trees and Primitive MPthodist chapels. The Victoria Institute, leading to the g-ates of the churchyard: it is a building ere-cted in 1897 to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of stone in the Decorated style of the early 14th century, of the late Queen Victoria, is a structure of brick, and and consists of chancel, nave with clerestory, aisles, cost, together with four almshouses, £4oo; it contains south porch and an embattled western tower containing- a reading- room and a well furnished recreation room: a clock and 6 bells, the 6th having been hung in the P~tri5h Council are the trustees. The TO\m Hall, commemoration of the Jubilee of H.M. Qneen Victoria which occupies the centre of the Market place, is a (I887): a new organ and org-an chamber were g-iven in plain structure of brick, erected by a joint stock com­ I90:I by Mrs. Love, of Hawkhills: a new pulpit and pany in r864, at a co5t of nearly £2,ooo, and capable of choir stalls were presented in 1906 in memory of :\liss seating 6oo persons; the petty sessions for West Eulmer A:cmie Constance lli:lbinson and some of her relatins : division and county court are held here, and it is also the stained east window is a memorial to the Revs. J. used fo~ meetings, lectures and other public purpQses . .Armitstead, vicar 1771-I8I2, Edmund Paley, v-icar Here is an extensiYe steam· corn and flour mill, a tan• l8I2-J9• and Samuel James Allen, vicar from 1839 to nery and brick kilns. The market place is a NJUare of x!l56, and also to Ge:~rge Armitstead, merchant, who about two acres, and near its centre stands the market died in t848 ; ~here are also five other memorial win- cross, a covered structure supported by four metal