t>l'RECIORY •] . GEDNE¥. 211

[Yarked thus t postal address, , Lucas-Calcraft Neville J .P. (land Long Hy. jobbing gardener & carrier Hornca.stle.] agent to R. 0. De G. Vyner esq.), Ma.wer & Son, cottage farmers Moat house ti\-Iawer Wm. Fras. farmer, ho Dewhurst Rev. Lawrence M.A.(rector), Greenwood John Edward, blacksmith Rhodes William, farmer Rectory (attends tuesdays & fridars) tTodd Thomas, cottage farmer GAYTON-LE-:MARSH is a village and J:>arish, r894, in place of the former, erected in 1837. At the bounded on the east by the Eau, 2~ miles north- 1nclosure 32 acres were allotted to the poor, which have east from station, and about equi-distant, 2~ since been put into the hands of the Charity Commis­ miles from station on the East Lincolnshire sioners, by whom a scheme has been issued for the dis­ branch and and Theddlethorpe stations on the tribution of the rent, half of which, amounting to about Louth and East Coast branch of the Great Northem rail- £28, is applied to the support of the school and the way, 8 east-south-east from Louth, 6 north from Alford remaining half to the poor; the rent of 8 acres was at the &nd 138 from , in the division of the time of the award allotted for the repairs of the church. county, parts of Lindsey, Marsh division of the hundred A steam pumping engine for draining the land was erected of Calceworth, Alford petty sessional division, union and in r874· Lord Willoughby de Broke is lord of the county court district of Louth, rural deanery of Galee- manor and the chief landowner. The soil is fertile clay; waith No. I, and archdeaconry and . subsoil. clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats, The church of St. George is an edifice of brick and stone, beans and turnips. The area is 2 ,279 acres; rateable in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, value, £2 , 1 ~ 1 ; population in 1901, 2 og. with arcade of three bays, north aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower containing 3 bells : the font dates Deputy Parish Clerk, White Glentworth. from the time of Ed ward the Confessor : the body of the church was rebuilt and the tower restored in 1847, at a Post Office.-Thomas Hewson, sub-postmaster. Letters coat of about £670 : £70 was expended upon warming through .A.lford arrive nt 7·55 a.m. & are dispatched at. apparatus about 1879 and in 1873 a new organ was 4·3o p.m. in winter & 5-30 p.m. in summer. No de- erected; there are 201 sittings. The register dates from liverr on sunday. Withern, a miles distant, is the- the year r6B7. The living is a rectory, net yearly value nearest money order <& telegraph office £365, including 73 acres of glebe, with residence, in the Public Elemenrtary School (mixed), built in 1837, for- l!'ift of the Lord Chanceliol', and held since 1876 by the about 6o children; average attendance, 18; Miss Olara ReT. John Edward Alexander Inge B.A.. of Trinity Hall, Williams, mistres-s Cambridge. The Wesleyan chapel here was built in Carrier to Louth.-Edwin Pridgeon, wed. -& fri Inge Rev. John Edward Alexander Burman Samuel, farmer Holmes Th!imas, cottage farmer B.A. Rectory Olarke Edward, grocer Jackson Charles Jsph. cottage farmer- Inge Rev. Hugh Francis Neville L.Th. Cocking Thomas, farmer, Smith's frm Mason William John, farmer (curate) Cox John, farmer Pickard George, farmer Croft George, farmer, Glebe farm Pridgeon Edwin, farmer &; carrier COMMERCIAL. Enderby Fred, farmer Scargall Jesse, farmer Ball David Edwin, farmer,The Poplars Graves John, cottage farmer Simpson Thomas, farmer Ball Thomas Ernest, farmer Hews on .Anthony, farmer Smith Charles Edward, farmer & · Bond Thomas, farmer Hewson Thomas, farmer, Post office overseer, The Manor farm Burmau Harry, farmer Holloway George, farmer Webster Frederick, tailor • GA YTON -LE-WOLD is a parish and small village, I Herbert Cold well, of Exeter College, Oxford. who reside&· about 3 miles north from the Donington-upon-Bain sta- at Biscathorpe. There is a United Methodist chapel tion on the Louth and Lincoln branch of the Great built in r854, and a Wesleya.n chapel, erected in r86g. Northern railway, 6 west from Louth and 20 from Lincoln, Walsh"s charity, left by the late Rev. W. Walsh M.A.. in the East Lindsey division of the county, parts of Lind- rector of Great Tey, Essex, 1854-91, and owner ol ley, Wold division of the hundred of Louth Eske, Louth , brings in about £6 per annum, whicb petty sessional division, union and county court district, is distributed to the sick of Grimblethorpe and Gaytorr mral deanery of Louth Eske and No. 3, parishes. The trustees of the late William Whitlam archdeaconry of Stow and diocese of Lincoln. The church esq. who are lords of the manor, and Jabez H. Riggalt of St. Peter is nn edifice of brick in the Perpendicular esq. are the landowners. The soil is chalky; subsoil,. ltyle. consisting of chancel, nave and a small western chalk and. white clay. The chief crops are turnips and turret containing one bell: the church was restored in barley. The area is 1,161 acres; rateable value, £r,o35; '1888 at a cost of about £230, when a western porch was the population in rgor w·a.s 101. added, and in 1905 a new east window was erected 1 Sub-Surveyor of Highways, William Rainey Fieldsend

there are 70 11ittings. The register dates from the year j 1777. The living is a discharged rectory, consolidated Letters through Lincoln arrive at 10 a.m. Postman col- with the rectory of 1Biscathorpe, joint net yearly value lects letters en route a..lt 3 p.m. is the nearest £s30. with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chan- monev order &; telegraph office, about 3~ miles distant cellar, and held since 1894 by the Rev. George Henry The children of this parish attend Burgh-on-Bain gchool COMMERCIAL. Kettlewell William, farm bailiff tp Moseley Arthnr, Gayton manor Farmery J oseph, farm foreman to J. W. R, Fieldsend esq H. Riggall esq Thompson William, black;smith GEDNEY i8 a parish, with a station on the Midland 1 effigy of a knight of the 13th century, conjectured by and Great Northern joint railway, 2 miles north-west from Holles to represent Falco D'Oyry; there is also an Long Sutton and 3 east from , in the Holland ala.bastBT monument .Qf Jacobean date, with kneeling

division of the county, parts of Holland, Elloe wapen- effigies, to- Adlard Welby. ob. 15701 and Casa.ndra take and petty sessional division, Holbeach union and (Aprice) his wife, .ob. 1590, and other monnmenti- U1 conniy court district, rural deanery of E1ut Elloe. and five of their children : in the north aisle .ar~ .some archdeaconry and diocese bf Lincoln. The houses are rema.i.ns of 14th century stained glass: th& chancel leattered, some standing upon the high road, and was repaired and decorated by J. B. Mjllington esq. of many in the fen and in the marshes of t'his extensive Boston, sometime impropriator of the tithe: the pariSh, which reaches to the shore of the Wash. The church was new Toofed in rB6o by the Ecclesiastical chnreh of St. Mary Mag-dalen is a fine and ancient Commissioners. and separa;ted from the nave by a carved edifice of stone in the Early Englis>h, Late Decorat~d oak screen: the south aisle was rebuiltr in 1Bg1., at a and PerpendiculaT styles, consisting of chancel, cost of J.:Boo, by the ReV'. James Bellamy D.D. president ~lerettoried nave of six bayg, a.i.sles, south porch and of St. John's College, Oxford, when a very fine early a western tower 86 feet in height to the top of the 14th century brass with the effigy of 11 lady, probably parapet, with a 11hort octagonal spire. and containing a of the Roos family, was di!!lcovered under the pews~ clock. and 5 bells : the lower part of the tower is the the remaining- portwns of this bl"BSs, -consisting of an nnly existinl!" portion of the original church of the inscription and triple canopy and super canopy, adorned Lancet period: the !Wuth "POrch has a parvise, reached with shields of a.rms and figures of saints, is now lost; hr a turret stair, and in the chancel is a low-side win- the da.te is approximately 13.90; by the side of this is dOll" of Late PM"pendicular date: the south door is in- a. 1_r:;th century altar tomb: in 1896-8 the church was I'Cl'ibtd "Pax xti. sit hvic domvi et omnibvs habitantibvs furthBT restored, at a cost of £,2,fl00. of which £I,ooo in ea. hie reqvies nostra; " the double bronze lock has wa.s contributed by the. ReT_ JHme.!l Bellamy D.D.: the this inscription, cc Johannes Pete A.vysethe beware work was carried out under the direction of Mr. W. D. before:...,. in 'the south aisle is the broken cross-legged Caroe, architect, and included the repair of the nave LINCS. 14'*'