152 KYLOE. . [KELLY'S Maloomb James, fannr. Berrington law Air William, carrier & shopkeeper Lowlin. Rand Charles, farmer Brigham John, joiner Bill Lieut.~Co1. Rowley Richard Con- Taylor William, miller (water) Chrisbohn Mal'garet (Mrs.), farmer, wa.y .l.P. Lowlin house Buckton. Fenwick stead I Fenham. Hall In. gamekeeper to C.J.Leyland esg Armstrong Geo.farmer,FenhamHillfrm ForsterJn. &Andrew, farmers, Smeafld Hogg A.ndrew, fal"mer,Fenwick granary Best John, farmer lIogg James, farmer Mills John, tailor Curry Isabel (Mrs.), miller (water), Fenwick. Moody John, stone mason Fenham mill Air Robert, blacksmith Rule Thoma.s, slaterer & plasterer Guthrie Robert, farmer, Low moor LAMBLEY is a small parish, 41 miles south-by-south- dale; at the Dissolution there were six nuns, and revenues west from and 8~ north·by-west ftom Alston, in valued at £5. The principal landowners are the Rev..Tames Cumberland, comprising the joint townshIps or manors of Allgood M.A. of Nunwick Hall, Simonbul"ll, who is lord of LAMBLEyand ASHOLME, and several scattered farms lying on the manor, J. G. F. Hope-Wallace esq. J.P. of Featherstone bothsides of the SouthTyne,which passes through the parish: Castle; Haltwhistle, T. and H. Whitfield and John Dickinf!lon within a short distance are Lambley and Coanwood stations esq. The soil is sandy and clay; subsoil, mixed. The chief on the .Alston and Haltwhistle bmnch of the North Eastern crops are oats and turnips. The area is 3,001 acres of land railway, which here crosses the river by a viaduct, upwards and 39 of water; rateable value, £3,781; the population in of 100 feet in height, with nine main arches of 66 feet span, 1891 was 692. and seven of 20 feet 'Span each: the parish is in the Hexham ASllOLME forms a joint township with Lambley, but is a division of the county, west division of Tindale ward and separate manor, on the east bank of the Tyne, opposite Haltwhistle petty sessional division, union and county court LambLey. J. G. 1<'. Hope-Wallace esq. .l.F. is lord of the district,rnral deanery of Hexham, archdeaconry of North- manor and principal landowner. umberland and diocese of Newcastle. The church of St. HARPER TOWN is a small hamlet, consisting of two farms Mary and Patrick, standing on an emiuence, was rebuilt in and some cottages, neal" the church. Here is a Wesleyan :1885, on the site of an older-structure, at a cost of £1,600, chapel, erected in 1871, at a cost of £270, and affording 120 and is an edifice of stone in the Early English style, con- llittings. sisting of chancel, nave, south porch, north vestry and a Sexton, William Bell. western turret, containing one bell, presented by Miss All- POST OFFICE, Railway station, Lambley.-Henry Laing, good, of Hexham: the old sanctus bell which formerly be- sub-postmaster. Letters through Carlisle, arrive at 8.30 longed to the Benedictine convent, suppressed at the Dis- a.m.; dispatched, 6.45 p.m. The nearest money order & solution, has been removed to the east end of the nave: in telegraph office is Haltwhistle. Postal orders are issued the porch is a stoup: there are 140 sittings. The register here, but not paid dates from the year 1744. The living is a vicarage, average POST OFFICE, Coanwood.-Mrs. Margaret Forster, sub.post- tithe rent-charg-e £21; net yearly value £31, with resi- mistress. Letters through Carlisle, arrive at 8.28 a.m.; denoo, in the gift of the RevJames Allgood M.A. of Nunwick dispatched at 6.47 p.m. Haltwhistle is the nearest money Hall, and held since 1866 by the Rev ArthUt' Chichele order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, Chambre Vaughan M.A. of Worcester College, Oxford, who but not paid also perpetual curate {If Greenhead. Divino service is Colliery School, Herdley Bank, Coanwood (mixed), for the conducted fortnightly in the Collieryschool at Herdley bank, parish of Lambley, built in 1863 by the Coanwood Coal Coanwood, by the Rev. A. C. C. Vaughan :a1.A. There is a Co. by whom it is principally supported, for 160 children; reading room supplied with the local papers and magazines, average attendance, 125; Edmund H. Rooke, master and containing a library of about 500 volumes. Here was RAILWA.Y STATIONS:- formerly a Benedictine nunnery, dedicated to St. Patrick, Coanwood, Rayson Cockton, station master , and founded in the time of King John, by Adam de Tyne- Lambley, Henry Laing, station master Lambley. Wilmehurst JohnW.surgeon's assistant, Hetherington Robert, colliery manager, Dickin'wn Mrs.Hannah,Waugh old holm Harper town HerdLey bank Rodham Mrs Hutcbinson Joseph, shoe ma. Lane head Vaughal Rev. Arthur Chichele Cham. Coanwood. Hutchinson Thomas, farmer. Towsbank bre M.A. [vicar] BowmanJohn, yeoman, Mount Pleasant Leath Wm.cokemauager,Herdleylbanll Whitfield Mrs. Mary, Harper town Coanwood CoaICo.(John Whaley,Bgent; Moore William, farmer, Whithwham William Walton, sec) Nixon Thos.under manager,Herdleyier COMMERCIAL. Coanwood Industrial Co-operative Pattinsou Thomas, farmer, W'oodhouse Birkett Wm. farmer &; assist. overseer SocietyLimited (WilliamWalton,sec.; Pearson John, boot &shoe ma. Woodho Brown John, farmer, Greenriggs Wm.Lowry, managr.), Herdley bank Reading Room (John Nixon, hon. 5ec.), DickinsonJoseph,farmr.Waughold holm CreightonJane(Miss), dress maker, Low Coanwood colliery Laing Henry, station master & post- Herdley Stobart Geo. farmer, High Asholme master; Lambley statiou Edgar Thomas, farmer, Shaft hill Tallington Robt. beer retailer,Chapel hn Mitchell Fras. grocer & farmer, Harper Featherstone Colliery (Thompson & Telford William, engineer at Coanwood flown Sons, owners) colliery Richardson In. shoe ma. Harper town GrantJas.farmr.&landowner,Towsbank Varty Emily (Miss); dress maker Robinson Christr. joiner. Harper town HendersonJn,Martin,shoe ma.Lanehea.d Walton William, accountant at Coan- Toad Wi]]jam, farmer, Harper town Henderson Matthew, farm bailiff to wood colliery, Herdley Bank house Whitfield John, farmer, Harper town I Coanwood CoalCo. Woodhouse LEE ST. JOHN, commonly called ST. JOHN LEE, ls r West Acomb township is on the north bank of the a parish, comprising WEST ACOMB, ANICK, ANICK GRANGE Tyne, x\miles north from Hexham. There is a Wesleyan and SANDROE, It miles north-west from Hexham station on chapel, uilt in 1861, and a Primitive Methodist chapel, the North Eastern railway, and half a mile from the river erected in 187I. Wentworth B. Beaumont esq. D.L., I.P. of Tyne, in the HexhBm division of the county, southern divi- Bretton Hall, Wakefield, is lord of the manor. Simon Mew­ siou of Tindale ward, petty sessional division, bum esq. the trustees of the late Sir John Massey Errington union and county court district of Hexham, rural deanery bart. (d. 1893), Charles William C. Henderson esq. Miss All· of Hexham, archdeaconry of Northumberland and diocese good and Nathaniel George Clayton esq. D.L., I.P• .,f of Newcastle. The church of St. John of Beverley, finely Chesters, Hexham, are chief landowners. The soil is a rich situated on the northern bank of the Tyne, is an ancient loam; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are oats, lltmcture, consisting of chancel and nave and a western bel- barley and turnips. The area is 2,837 acres of land and 60 fry, containing one bel1: in 1886 the church was entirely of water; rateable value, £4,775; the population in 1891 restored by the parishioners at a cost 0' about £3,000, and was 900. affords 300 sittings. The register dates from the year 1664. Parish Clerk, Robel"t Renderson. The living is a. rectory, average tithe rent-charge ,£'158. net POST OFFICE.-George Hutehinson; sub-postmaster. Let· yearly value £160, including 2 acres of glebe, with house, ters from Hexham, arrive at 9.10 a.m. ; depart at 3.45 in the gift of W.B. Beaumont esq. I.P. and held since 1890 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at by the Rev. Christian Paul Sherman T.A.K.C.L. The Hexham chapel of St. Aidan, standing in the private grounds WALL LETTER Box, cleared at 3.30 p.m I of Stagshaw House, and erected by the late John Straker National School (mixed), built in 1860, for 180 children', eag. in 1885, is an edifice in the Decorated style, consi~ting average attendance, 140; John Hood, master; Miss Mary of chancel, nave and south porch, and will seat ISO persons. Curry, assistant mistress By permission of Mrs. Straker the chapel is open to the in- CARRIERs.-Thomas Hut('hinson & Sons, to Hexham on habitants of Stagshaw, Sandhoe, Beaufront and Portgate. tues. to Newcastle on wed. ; & WaIter Ridley to Hexham, The Rev. Alfred Hemstead M.A. of Durham University and tues curate of Lee St, John since 1885, is chaplain. The soil is Anick, formerly a township, was by a Local Government various; subsoil, clay and gravel The chief crops are oats, Order, aated March 25, 1887, amalgamated with Sandhoe; barley and turnips. it is on the north bank of the . Wentworth