582 SUTTERBY. . (KELLY'S 'the year IS95· The living is a rectory, net yearly value -seeds and turnips. The area is 477 acres ; assessable £93, including. 17 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Lord value, £279; -the population in "1911 was 28. Chancellor, and held since 1905 by the Rev. .A.lgernon Parish Clerk, Thomas Haw. Charles Mainwaring Langton B.A. of Pembroke College, Cambridge, who is also rector of and resides at Langton. Letters through arrive & are called for at 9 On the Downs to the east are barrows. Bennett Rothes a.m. Hagworthingham is the nearest money order Langton esq. of Langton Hall, Spilsby, is lord of the office, & the telegraph offices are a.t Alford & Spilsby, manor and sole landowner. The soil is mostly chalky 5 miles distant loam; subsoil, chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley, The children of this place attend the school at Brinkhill

Chambers Bradley, farm bailiff to Mr. John Salisbury Bond, of Lusby

SUTTERTON is a parish and village on the road residence, in the gift of the Crown, and held since l9M from Spalding to Bost<>n, half a mile north from the by the Rev. John Smith. The lay rectorship is in the and Sutterton station on the East Lincolnshire hands of the trustees of the late Ernest Richard Charles .section of the Great Northern railway and 6 south from Oust esq. of Arthingworth, Northamptonshire (d. 9 May, Boston, iiJ the Holland division of the cou.nty, parts of 1893). There is a Baptist chapel, ~ected in 1803, with Holland, wapent.ake of Kirton, petty sessional division oJ sittings for 340 persons; also a Wesleyan chapel, and Kirton and Skirbeck, Boston union and county court a United Free chapel, erected in 1854. A cemetery district, and in West Holland rural deanery, and arc·h­ was formed in 1878, at a. cost of £7~ and is und11r ·deaconry and : a portion of the village the control of the. Burial Board of nine members is around ·an open ·green. The church of St. Mary, · The ancestors of ,Archbishop Cranmer resided for founded in the nth or 12th century, is a cruciform some time in this parish and the name and arms of building of stone, in the Late Norman, Early English, Hugh de Cranmere formerly appeared in a stained .I>ecor:ated and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, window at the east end of the church. There are a dt>restoried nave of five bays, aisles, transepts with number of ~;mall plots of land containing in all II3a. :aisles, south p<>roh and a central embattled tower with 2r. up. part of which was left by many individuals, 'Crocketed spire, admirably rebuilt in 1787 and contain­ the other being inclosed land under the Parishes In­ ing a clock and 8 bells, da.t.ing from 1720 to 1797 : there closure Act of 1772: 43 acres, let in small allotments, is also a "Priest's Bell" of the 13th century, inscribed now produce £284 yearly, which sum is applied under in Longobardic lettering "Symon de Hatfelde me fecit : " the scheme of the Charity Commissioners dated Aug. the oldest portion of the existing structure consists of 23rd, 1887, one fourth of the net amount being assigned the tower piers and arches, the north and south door­ to scholastic purposes and the remainder to the relief ways and nave arcades; of the Early English period are of the poor. There are also 12 parish council allotments the transept arcades and clerestory of the transept ; the of r acre each. Arthur John Thornhill esq. of Didding­ nave clerestory is Decorated: the chancel retains a ton Hall, Hunts, is lord of the manor of Dowdyke Hall. double piscina and locker : in the s·outh transept are The Dennis Estates Limited, of Kirton, are the principal three stone monuments, formerly in the churchyard ; landowners, but there are also a great many small­ these consist in each case of a coped tomb, the first of holders and small freeholders. The soil is a rich loam ; which bears the rMumbent effigy of a man in gown and subsoil, clay and loam. , The ·chief crops are wheat, hood, and on the margin is an inscription to John, son beans and potatoes, ·with some market garden produce ; s Hill, 1 mhe north; Dowdyke, ~l miles south­ rebuilt, the arcades repaired, an aisle, now called "the west; Fishmere End, about 1 mile north~ by-west and Massingberd aisle," rebuilt on the east side of the !outh Sutterton Marsh, ~ miles south, are hamlets. transept, at the cost of a member of that family, once P·>st, M. T. Office.-George Henry Barber, sub­ resident here, the floor lowered, and the interior re­ 0. & postmaster. Letters through Bost{)n arrive at 5:45 fitted : the chancel was also entirely rebuilt at the. sole -cost of the Hon. Charl-es Oust: the communion table a.m. & 5.20 p.m. ; dispatched at 7.40 p.m. week dars -cover, exquisitely wrought, was presented by Mrs. & 6.50 p.m. o~ sundays Eoothby, widow of. the' late incumbent: in 1879 the Wall Letter Box, Railway station, cleared at 6.45 p.m. chancel was restored and the church reseated at a cost & ro.2o a.m. sundays odson, sergt. in charge memorial to his mother, Anna Maria Eliza Rowley, -Fire Engine' Home,. on t~e· Green, George Mould & daughter of Dr. Adam Clark LL.D. the commentator: J. R. Muse, superintendents a handsome font was presented in 1881 by the Rev. Public Elementary School (mixed), with master's house, Thomas Henry Clark M.A. and Mrs. Clark, of Weston~ super~Mare : the church was thoroughly restored . erected in x865 & enlarged in 18(}4, for 145 children; 1903-8 at a cost of about £2,ooo, when a new organ was average attendance, 135 ; Henry R. Despicht, master ; erected at a cost of [450: there are 452 sittings. The John Henry Tooley, Boston, correspondent to managers register of baptisms and burials dates from the year Railway Station, Arthur Watson, station master 1538 ; marriages, I539- The living is a vicarage, net yearly, value £goo, including 510 acres of glebe, with Carrier to Boston.-Walter Marshall, on wed: & sat

Birkett Charles William, Angel inn Orunkhorn James, market gardener PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Blackwell Herbert James, farmer . Crunkhorn Mark, cottage fanner Gwynne-Jones J ames Thomas Broughton Christophel', farmer & Cutforth Charles, farmer, Dowdyke Langley Mrs. Sutterton house landowner, Fisbmere end Daughton Chas. cottager, Spalding rd Lawrence Thomas, Mayfield Cartwright George, poulterer Dawson Samuel, farmer, Dowdyke Smith Rev. John, Vicarage Caswell William R. market gardener Delamore George, saddler, harness k CemeteJ"y (G. Vinter, supt) collar maker; dealer in whips, COMMERCIAL. Chapman Richard, farmer sponges, brushes, compos. & oils; Alcock Frederick, blacksmith Cowling William, 'bakel' opposite the church Alien Edward, market gardener Craven Brewster, farmer Dov~ George, cottage farmer Alien John, farmer Craven Frank,.. miller (wind} Dove John George, baker Annison Robert, farmer, The Limes Craven Thomas Ledger C.C. overseer Fairweather William, grazier Barber Waiter, builder & Black Sluice commissioner a Fixter William, farmer Bates Charles, cottage frmr.Dowdyke Craven Thomas L. jun. income tax Franks Ezra, farmer, Dowdyke Baxte.l') Edward, ~ottage farmer collector, asses-sor & assist. overseer GarweU Benjamin, Cross Keys P ll Beridge Arma (J. W. Hardy. pro- & clerk to parish council & to burial Goodacre Edward, baker prietor)~ every accommodati<>n for board Goodacre Henr.y. cottage farmer eyclists & travellers ; full size bil- Cropley Montague, farmer Goose William, f~rm.er lial'd table; good stabling; horses & Cr