450 Hutton Cranswick. East Riding Yorkshire. (Kelly 8

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450 Hutton Cranswick. East Riding Yorkshire. (Kelly 8 1 450 HUTTON CRANSWICK. EAST RIDING YORKSHIRE. (KELLY 8 Hutton, sat. ; John Puckering, from Cranswick, sat. ; thurs.; John Puckering, from Cranswick, thurs.: George William Hill, from Button, sat Wilson & William Hill, from Button, thurs DRIFFIELn-David Consitt & Alfred Craggie, mon. & Railway Station, Cranswick, William Gill, station mastet Hutton. I BothamJobn WilliamGranville,farmer, Potter Sarah (Mrs.), Cross Keys P.ll O'Callagba.n Rev. Robert Charles George W estfield. f~rm Puckering John, ~rrier M.A. [vicar], Vicarage Botha.m Will1am, foreman to F. Rey- Robson James, hau dre.~ser nard esq. Ea.stfield farm Sanderson Edmund, boot maker COMMERCIAL. Bowes Singleton, blacksmith Sanderson Johnson, tailor Barker J esse, shoe maker Bradshaw Sawdon, farmer Sanderson Wm. shopkeeper, Post oflice Clarke Francis, farmer, New Ga wdy hall Cat ton Diana. (Mrs.), farmer, Southall Sherman David, draper & boot dealer Dixon James, farmer, Slaper Leys Clapham John, beer retailer & joiner Sissons George, wheelwright &joiner [letters through Great Driffield J Consitt Thos. farmer, Hutton comman Sissons John William, joiner Dossor Arthur, grocer Cra.ggie Alfred, carrier • Sissons Thomas, blacksmith Fletcher Timothy, market gardener Dossor Robert, grocer Smith Henry, farmer HarTison Thomas, gamekeeper to F. Duke Willia.m, boot maker Smith Robert, bricklayer Reyna.rd esq Dunn Jonathan, farmer Spink William, blacksmith Hill William, carrier & farmer Fisher Samuel, farmer Stead Samuel, clerk to the school board Holmes John, Yeaping machine propr HardyMary Jane(Miss),farmr.Ganwick & attendance officer J ohnsonEdmond,fa.rmr. Old Gawdy hall Harvey John, market gardener Summerson Robs on, joiner Johnson Edmund, farmer, Manor ho Hobson Matthew, freeholder Triffitt Hy.Philip,farmer,Highgat.e hall Johnson Edwin, farmer Hobson Thomas, farmer Turner James, shoe maker Leppington Robert, miller (wind) Holtby Thomas (exors. of), farmer, Weatherill Robert. rope maker Moate Thomas, farmer Corps landing Weatherill Robert, jun. farmer Pearson William, blacksmith Jackson William, assistant overseer Westerdale Samuel Henry, poultry dlr Sanderson Samuel, grocer Jackson William, jun. grocer Welbourne Robert, shopkeeper Southcoat David, farmer Kirby Joyoe (Mrs.), farmer, Scurfdyke Wilson Coultas, farmer Stubbs Joseph, farmer Kirby Rd. farmer, Cranswick common Wilson Thos. farmer, Cranswick com Tindall John William, joiner Kitchen Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Watson Charles, bricklayer & farmer Miller Albert Lacey, tailor Rotsea.. Wilson Gearge, carrier Milner Henry Atkinson, draper Brnnson William, farmer Moore Henry, farmer, Burn butts Holtby Willia~ farmer Cranswick. Nicholson Henry, tea dealer Nicholson William, farmer Sunderla.ndwick, Heselton Alfred Norris John, White Horse P.ll [Letters through Great Driffielil.J Waller Thomas Nutbrown George, farmer, Corps Land- ReynardFredk.J.P.Sunderlandwick hall COMMERCIAL. ing Road farm Kirby Richard, farmer, Ear farm Barmby James, shopkeeper & shoe ma Pool John, Pack H;orse P.li Roy William, agent to Frederick Rey· Blythe Joseph, farmer Potter John, shoe maker nard esq. Old Sunderlandwick. LITTLE KELK is a parish; formerly extra-parochial, altogether 712 acres, 449 being the property of William 6 miles north-east from Driffield, and 1 mile ea.st from Low- llerbert St. Qnintin esq. J. P. of Scampston Hall, who is lord thorpe station on the Hull and Scarborough section of the of the manor; rateable value, £t, 126; the population in North E~:Uttern railway, in the Buckrose division of the xBgr was 70; the soil is chalk. The chief crops are wheat, Riding, petty sessional division and wapentake of Dicker- barley, oats and peas. ing and union and county C(l)urt district of Driffield. There Letters through Hull, via Lowthorpe, arrive- at 8 a.m. The is a Primitive Methodist chapel. The parish, situated to nearest money order & telegraph office is at Lowthorpe the north of Great Kelk, consists of two farms, containing The children of this place attend the school at Harpham Coultas Robert, farmer I Joh~on William, farmer I Layburn William, farmer KEXBY is a small village and township;forzned inta a and held since I868 by the Rev. Charles Oldham Yeo x.A., parish out of Catton, II Feb. r853, and is on the banks of LL.B. of Trinity College, Dublin. The tithe, amounting loo the navigable river Derwent, on the road from York to £4 ros. belongs to the rectory of Elvington. Lord Wen­ Market Weighton, 3 miles south from Stamford Bridge lock G.C.I.E. is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The station on the Yark, Market Weighton and Beverley section soU is clay, loam and sandy ; subsoil, clay and gravel. of the North Eastern rail way, and 6 east from York, in the The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and green crops of Bowdenshire division of the Riding, Ouse and Derwent all kinds. The acreage is r,823 ; rateable value, £z,6oo; wapentake and petty sessional division, York union and the population in x8gt was 132. county conrt district, 'rural deanery of Pocklington, arch- Parish Clerk George Thompson deaconry of the East Riding and diocese of York. The ' • · church of St. Paul is a building of stone in the Early Eng- PosT 0FFICB.-George Raper, receiver. Letters arrive lish style, erected in 1852 by Lord Wenlock, and consisting from York at 6.xs a.m.; dispatched at 7.15 p.m. The of chancel, nave and 11 small western spire, containing one nearest money order office is at Wilberfoss, & telegraph bell : the east window is stained: there a.re xoo sittings. office at Stamford Bridge · The regisfler dates from the year 1853· Trus liY"ing is a. National School (mixed), erected about 1858, for so chil· vicarage, yearly value £130, including 39· acres of gle'be, dren; average attendance, ~5; Miss Caroline X,.ister, with residence, built in 1853, in the gift. of Lord Wenlock, mistress . Yeo Rev. Charles Oldham M.A.. 1 :LL.B. Brown Ann (Mrs.), farmer, Common Lolley Arthu:r, farmeT Vicarage · Daniel John, farmer Palfreeman Thomas, farmer Acomb William, farmer, Common Gibson George, shopkeeper , Rounthwaite Jn.(Mrs.),farmer,Old hall Banks Joseph, farmer, Kexby bridge Horner Edward, farmer KEYINGHAM is a township, parish and pleasant vil· residence, in the gift of the Archbishop of York, and held lage with a station on the Hull and Withernsea. branch of since 1873 by the Rev. Jeremiah Sharp Thomlinson B.J.. of the North Eastern railway, 5 miles south-east from Hedon:, Queetl's College, Oxford. The vicarage house wa.s built in 5 north-west from Patrington and 9! east-by-south from 1879. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners are owners of the Hull, in the Holderness division of the Riding; south division great tithes, [407, and also of the Rectory farm. There is of the wapentake of Holderness, SouthHold~rness petty ses· a Wesleyan chapel built in 1848 and a Primiti'ole.Methodist sional divisian, Patrington union, county t:on.rt district of chapel built in x846. The Foresters' hall erected in x857, Hedon, rural deanery of Hedon, archdoacanry of the East is used for lectures and public meetings and will hold 300 Riding and diocese of York. The church of S~ Nicholas is persons. The local lodge of Foresters holds a court here a building of rubble in the Perpendicular style, consisting periodically. The Ombler and Marriott charity of abon~ of chancel, nave, aisles, with a chantry chapel, south porch [22 yearly, left for educational purposes, is now applied and a western tower with a broach spire containing 3 bells: to the augmentation of the school funds ganerally. Key· there are several mural tablets and two piscinae, and near the ingham Creek, which formerly extended nearly to Sal~ pulpit is an hour-glass frame supposed to date from the ha.ugh and once divided the parish of Keyingham from Sllili. Reformation: the chancel was restored in 1885, and the re- Island, is now partially warped up. On the Oldfield estate ma.inder of the church is now (1893) undergoing restoration: is the base of an ancient cross which formerly stood near there are about 200 sittings. In the churchyard is an the " Watt's Arms,'' Ottringham, and in the centre of the ancient cross, formerly standing on ths property of E .. T. village is the base of another cross: at Ebor House are re­ Oldfield esq. but removed here in .1888. The register dates mains of a fourth, said to have been brought from Sl from the year r6o4. The livin~ IS a discharged vicarage, Philip's Cross farm. There are two corn mills. Sir F. A. T&l· gross yearly value £3001 including 33 acres of glebe, with bot Clifford-Constable bart. who is lord of the manor, the .
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