East Riding Yorkshire. Keying Ham
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DIRECTORY,] EAST RIDING YORKSHIRE. KEYING HAM. Jacks-on William, grocer, rate collec- Thompson George & Alfred, farmers, SUNDERLANDWICK. tor & clerk to Parish Council Cr,mswick Common farm (Letters thxou!;'h Driffiald.) Jennison Robert, carrier Thompson James, dairyman Reynard Frederick D.L., J.P. Stllldel" Nendick Alfred, Cross Keys P.H Train William, horMt breakex landwick hall; & Junior- Ca:rlton & - Newlove Richard, butcher Turner James, shoe maker Boodle's clubs, London SW Nicholson Thos. fried fish dealer Voase .Alfred & Waiter, farmers, Gregory William, stud groom tG Norris John, jobmaster Bustard Nest farm Frederick Reynard esq Sanderson Edmund, boot maker Watson Walker, beer retailer Laidlaw George Herrit, land ~teward Sanderson Johnson, tailor Weatherill Robert, rope maker to J<'rederick Reynard esq Sanderson Wm.shopkeeper,Post office Welbourne Richard, tailor Lyon Herbert, head gardener ~o Simpson Jsph. frmr. Scurfdyke farm Wilkinson Robert H. draper Frederick Reynard esq Sissons George, wheelwright & joiner I SEA Maidment Harry, gamekeepa-r to Sissons John, blacksmith I R 0 T · Frederick Reynard esq Sissons John William, joiner J Branson Wm. farmr.Rotsea Carr frm North George 0. farmer, Bar hrm. Smith George, bricklayer Catton Joseph Young, farmer, Manor Oxendale John, woodman to Fredk. Spink William, blacksmith House farm Reynard esq Summerson Robson, joiner Holtby Henry, farmer Rhodes William, estate carpen';e.,. KELFIELD, see Stillingfteet. LITTLE KELK is a township 1 mile east h'Olll Low- the soil is chalk. The chief crops are "heat, b1.rley. thorpe station on the Hull and Scarborough section of oats and peas. This township is reputed to bl' ex the North Eastern railway, and 6 east-north-east from parochial for ecclesiastical purposes. Driffield, in the Buckrose division of the Riding, petty Letters through Driffield, via Lowthorpe, arrive at 7 30 sessional division and wapentake of Dickering and union a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is and county court district of Driffield. There ie a Primi- at Lowthorpe, 1 ~ miles distant. Letter BD::t cle~red tive Methodist chapel. The township, situated to the at 5.50 p.m. daily except sundays n<Jrth of Great Kelk, consists of three farms, containing The children of this place attend the school at Harp~::~ ru altogether 724 acres of land and 3 of water, 449 of which are the property of William Herbert St. Quintin Carriers. esq. of Scampston Hall, who is lord of the manor ; Bridlington Mark Bell, fri. & sat rateable value, £1,408; the population in 19u was 58; Driffield Mark Bell & Harry Milson, thurs COMMERCIAL. j MilsDn Harry, grocer & carrier lWride Frank, farmer Bell Mark, carrier Robinson William, jun. farmer KEXBY is. a. small village and township, formed into since 1907 by the Rev. George Casswell Holmec;, of a parish out of Catton, II Feb. 1853, and is on the banks Durham University, who is also vicar of Wil0erfoss. of the navigable river Derwent, on the road from York The trustees of the 3rd Baron W e-nlock (d. 19 r 2) are to Market \Veighton, 2 miles east from Dunnington lords of the manor and sole landowners. The so1l is station on the Derwent Valley light railway, and 6 east clay, loam and sandy; sub"oil, clay and gravel The from York, in the Howdenshire division of the Ridin&", chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and green crop9 of all Ouse and Derwent wapentake and petty sessional diVl- kinds. '.rhe area is 1,88r acres of land and II of water~ sion, York union and county court district, rural deanery rateable value, £I,66o; the population in rgr r wM 130. of .Pocklington, archdeaconry of the East Riding and Parish Clerk, George Thompson. diocese of York. The church of St. Paul is a building o.f stone in the Early English style, erected in 1952 by Paul, Post Office.-Mrs. Elizabeth Hare, sub-postmir,trPss. 1st Baron Wenlock, and consisting of chancel, nave and a Letters arrive from York at 6.20 a.m.; dispatched ali small western spire, containing one bell: the east window 7· IO p.m.; sunday, arrive at 7 a.m.; dispatched at is stained: there are 100 sittings. 'I' he register dates 7· ro p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph. office from the year 1 35 3. The living is a vicarage, net yearly is at Wilberf<Jss, 3 miles distant value £r44, including 39 acres of glebe, with residence, The children of this place attend the school at W1lber· built in 1853• in the gift of Lord Wenlock, and held j foss (Marked thus t receive letters Buckton John, farmer Lotherington Thomas Bellerby, Son through Dunnington.) tCarr Richard, farmer, Common & Co. brick manufacturers Holmes Rev. George Casswell (vicar), Daniel John, farmer, Ivy house tPrecious Frederick, farmer Vicarage Fridlington Charles, frmr. Bridge frm Ronnthwaite Jn.(~Irs.),farmr.Old hall COMMERCIAL. Fridlington Dan, farmer tShaw James, farmer, Grey ~es Banks Joseph, farmer, Kexby bridge jGibson Emma (Miss), tQbacconist !Ward John, gamekeeper to v St. 1·Brown .Ann (Mrs.), farmer,Common timeson William. farmer, Common M. Palme~ esq. J.P KEYINGHAM is a parish, township and pleasant is now applied to the augmentation of the schcol funds village with a statlon on the Hull and Withernsea branch generally. Keyingham Creek, which formerly extended of the North Eastern railway, 5 miles south-east from nearly to Salthaugh and once divided the parish of Key Hedon. 5 north-west from Patrington and 9~ east-by- ingham from Sunk Island, is now partially warped up. south from Hull, in the Holderness division of the Riding, On the Oldfield estate is the base of an ancient cross south division of the wapentake of Holderness, South which formerly stood near the "Watt's .Arms," Ottnng Holde?ness petty sessional divisiQn, Patrington union, ham ; in the centre of the village is the base of another county court district of Hedon, rural deanery of Hedon, cross, and at Ebor house are remains of a third, said archdeaconry of the East Riding and diocese of York. to have been brought Jrom St. Philip's Cro!s farm. The church of St. Nicholas is a building of rubble in the Thera is one corn mill. Salthaugh Grange, formerly Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, used as a starehouse for ammunition when Ravenspurne, with a chantry chapel, south porch and a western tower one of the lost towns on the Humber, was in existence, with a broach spire containin~ 3 bells: there are several is now a farmhouse, occupied by Mr. Herbert A L. mural tablets and two piscinae, and near the pulpit i,s Francis. Major \Valter George Raleigh Chiehester an hour-glass frame, supposed to date from the Reforma- Constable D.L .• J.P. of Burton Constable, who is {ord of tion: the chancel was restored in I885, and the remainder the manor, the trnstees of the late Daniel Br?wn, the of the church in 1890-93• at a total cost of £1,500: there Trustees of the Charity f{)r the Sons of the Clergy, are about 200 sittings. In the churchyard is an ancient the Ecd"siastical Commissioners, Henry Broadley cross, formerly standing on the property of E. T. Oldfield Harrison-Broadley esq. M.P., J.P. of Welton, and Messrs. esq. but removed here in 1888. The register dates from G. and M. S. Meadley, of Sunk Island, are +h~ chief the year 1 604. The living is a discharg.ed vicarage, net landowners. The soil is marly ~lay. sand and gravel; yearly value £256, including 33 acres of glebe, with in the low ;marshes it is a deep warp clay; the subsoil residence, in the gift of the Archbishop of York, and held is clay and gravel. The chief crops are, on sand land, since 1873 by the Rev. Jeremiah Sharp Tbomlinson B.A. turnips, barley, mustard and wheat; on strong land, of Queen's College, Oxford. The vicarage house was built wheat, seeds,. clover, oats and beans. The area is 3·544 m 1879· The Eccle~iastical Commissioners a,re owners of acres JJf land and 5 of water; rateable value, £s,o60; the great tithes, £407, and also of t"Qe Recto.ry farm. the population in I9II was 547· There is a Wesleyan chapel, built in 1.848,. and a frimi- Sexton, Richard Blythe. tive Methodist chapel, built jn :J-846, and another, erected Post &- M.. 0. & Telephonic Express Delivery Office, in 1909, to seat 170 persons. The- Friendly Society'~ hall, , Jame~ Tarbotton, sub-postmaster~ Letters l'eCeivad erected {n 1857• is used fo~ lectures and public meetings through Hull arriv~ at. t)..2o a.m. week. days ~ lt.-45 and will bold 300 persons. The local lodge of Forester• iUD. sundaya; dispatched at 6.30 p..m. week days & hold a court here period,i~ally. Th~ Ombler and Marriott 5·I.'i P-ID, sundays. The nearest telegraph office is a' charity of about £22 yearly, left for educatitmal pnrpoaes, Ottringham, 2 miles distant • .