[.] HOLLESLEY. 810 [POST OFFICE HOLLESLEY is a parish and village, n miles south­ M.A., and John Barthorpe, Esq. The soil is light; subsoil, east from W oodbridge, 10 from Wickham, and I mile from crag and loam. The chief crops are wheat, barley, &c. '!'he the sea, in the Eastern division of the county, Wilford population in 1861 was 603; area, 4,026 acres. hundred, Woodbridge union and county court district, Wil­ Parish Clerk, Thomas Broom. ford rural deanery, archdeaconry of Suffolk, ami diocese of Norwich. Tlw church of All Saints is a stone building, PosT 0FFICE.-Edward Lennard, sub-postmaster. Letters having a nave, chancel, south porch and lofty flint tower, arrive from Woodbridge at 8 a.m.; box closes at 6 p.m, with 3 bells. 'l'he register dates from the year 1623. The The nearest money order office is at W oodbridgc living is a rectory, commuted at £943 yearly, in the gift of, Parochial School, Miss Annie Beeton, mistress and held by, the Rev. Richard Wilkie Waller Cob bold, M.A., INsu RANCH AGENT.- Li11erpool ~ London ~ Globe, of Caius College, Cambridge. There is a charity of £.5, Thomas F. Beadnell, Alderton given to the poor of the parish in coals. There is a school CARRIERS TO:- for boys and girls, supported by the Recto~. John Last, ll'SWICH-Robert Birch, saturday Esq., is lord of the manor. The principal landowners are WoonBRIDGE-Benjamin Kemp, th~rsday; Clark, man- Lord , the Rev. Richard Wilkie Wailer Cobbold, day, thursday & saturday; Birch, monday & thnrsday Barthorpe John, esq. Red house Dosser Thomas M. shopkeeper i Lincoln Kemuel, carpenter & wblwright Cobbold Rev. Richard Wilkie Waller, Folke William, cooper & basket maker Page Miles, farmer 1 M.A. [rector], Rectory Fuller George, miller 1 Sharman John, shoe maker Kett William Kell, esq Gobbitt John, farmer 8keat William, carpenter

COMMERCIAL. Goodwin James, farmer 1 Stebbing Thomas, farmer Beeton Waiter, plumber Kemp Benjamin, carrier i 'l'hreadkell John, Old Fox Birch Robert, carter Kett Willmm Kell, surgeon I Walker Charles, farmer Cadman Samuel, miller Lennard Edward, builder & P.hopkeeper Wasc Francis, farmer, Church farm Capon Samuel, farmer Levett Charles, blacksmith ! Wright Wm. Balls, veterinary surgeon

HOLTON is a parish and village, a mile east from the is the residence of Major-General 'l'urner, but is the pro­ Blyth navigation and , i!l tha Eastern division perty of Andrew Johnston, Esq., who is lord of the manor, of the county, Blything hundred and union, Halesworth and principal landowner. The soil is clay, and in some parts county court district, rural deanery of , arch- a mixture of clay and loam; subsoil, principally clay. The deaconry of Suffolk, and Norwich diocese. The church of chief crops are wheat, barley, beans and oats. The popula­ St. Peter is an old building, with a round Norman tower, tion in 1861 was 470; the area is 1,130 acres; the gross value nave, chancel, north aisle, and south porch. The register is £2,907 l5s., and the rateable value £2,476. dates from the year 1538. The living is a rectory, yearly Parish Cle1·k, William Churchyard. value £310, with modern residence, in the gift of the J.ord -- Chancellor, and held by the Rf!v. Robert Seppings Beloe, Letters through Halesworth, which is the nearest muney M .A., of Corpus Christi Collegr, Cambridge. TheNationat order office school has an endowment of £20 from Mrs. Wilkinsou. The National School, Miss Elizabeth Chaplin, mistress Primitive Methodists have a chapel, also the Baptists, which CARRIERS TO llECCLEB, , & is situated near Halesworth. Bolton Hall, pleasantly situated YARMOUTH pass through; see HALESWORTHCARRIERS PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Avey Charles Frederick, manufactur€r Foreman James, farmer Avey Mr. Charles l<'rederick of railway, mill, cart & carriage Billing Ephraim, Duke Beloe Rev. Robert Seppings, M.A. grease, sacks & waterproof tilts, Howlett George, commercial traveller [rectorJ, Rectory sheep netting, horse rugs & driving J illings Robert, farmer Butcher Mr. John aprons, oil merchant & calor factor, Larter Henry, farmer l~reeman Mrs. Holton terrace tar, pitch & rosin, & rope, cord & Mayes Edward, farmer Goading Rev. William John [Baptist] twine spinner(SamuelCornaby, fore- Newson John, carpenter .Tackson Rev. Abraham [Independentj, man) Prime William, farmer Bolton terrace Bacon Samuel, shopkeeper Raper Waiter, farmer Lay Mr. James, Holton terrace Balls Robert James, farmer Self William, carpenter Rose Mrs Beckett Henry, wheelwright Smith George, Cherry T1·ee Stanford Mr. John Catchpole Boon Ezekiel, brick maker & farmer Smith Martha (Mrs.), shopkeept'r Turner Major-Gen. Holton hall Butcher Isaac, farmer Tilney Henry, blacksmith · 'l'uthill Mr. William Chappell J arnes, inland revenue officer, Wade \Yilliam, cooper Upton Mr. 'Villiam, Holton terrace Holton terrace White John, farmer COMMERCIAL. Driver Harriet (Mrs.), Lord Nelson Woolnough George, f.·umer Atkins Benjamin, maltster Driver Henry, shopkeeper Youngs Edward, miller

HOLTON ST. MARY is a parish and village, 5 miles Pembroke College, Cambridge. The Master and Fellows of north-west from Manningtree station, 4~ miles south-south­ Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, are lords of the manor, east from Hadleigh, and 9 miles south-west from , and, with Mrs. Lawson, principal landowners. The soil is in the Eastern division of the county, Samford hundred and loam; subsoil, gravel and sand. The chief crops are wheat, union, Hadleigh county court district, Samford rural barley and oats. The population in 1861 was 167; area, deanery, arch deaconry of Suffolk, and diocese of Norwich. 8:37 acres. The church of St. Mary is a plain edifice, in the Early Parish Clerk, James Hammond. English style, with a square tower: it contains a tablet in memory ofthe Rev. Stephen White, formerly rector of this parish, who bequeathed property of the annual amount of about Letters from Colchester, via Stratford St. Mary, arrive at £30 for the support of a Charity school. The register dates 8 a.m. by hand, & dispatched at 6. Hadleigh is the lrom the year 1568. The living is a rectory, yearly value nearest money order office £257, with residence, in the gift of Sir Charles Howley, Rev. Step hen White's Charity School (boys & girls), Bart., and held by the Rev. J obn Gale Dobree, M.A., of J ames Hammond, master; Miss Ann Hammond, mistress Dobree Rev. John Gale, M.A. [rector], Cooper Heury, farmer, Holtou hall Rolfe Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper Rectory Hill .John, boot & shoe maker Rumsey James, farmer J essup Mr Rogers William, thrashing machinist

HOMERSFIELD (or ST. MARY SouTH ELMHAM) style, and an ivy-clad tower, which contains 3 bells. The is a parish and village on the bank of the Waveney, parish register dates from the year 1558. The living is a 3~ miles north-east from Harleston, and 5 south-west from rectory, consolidated with that of South Elmham St. Cross, Dungay, in the Eastern division of the county, in the patronage of Sir R. A. Shafto Adair, Bart., and held hundred and union, Harleston county court district, south by the Rev. George Smith, B.D., of Corpus Christi College, Elm ham rural deanery, Suffolk archdeaconry, and Norwich Cambridge; the tithes of the two parishes have been corn~ diocese. The Waveney Valley line of railway to muted for £330 a year, with 25 acres of glebe, and a neat and passes here on the border of the counties of Rectory House at South Elmham St. Cross, The poor's Norfolk and 8uffolk, and has a station for . land, 2~ acres, now let for £2 10s. per annum, was the gift The church of St. Mary, which has undergone repair, is a of Sir Nicbolas Howe. Sir R. Alexander Shafto Adair, small building, with nave and chancel in the Early English Bart., is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The soil ill