HULL NEIGHBOURHOOD. 5R3 FLINTON. Crawforth Benjamin, farmer Thurlow Matthew, shoe maker Caley Mary(Mrs.),farmer,Pasture ho Johnson Henry, blacksmith Wilson John, farmer • Connor William Gibson, farmer ~ orth Frank, farmer Wright Charles, farmer HUNSLEY, see RowLEY. is a parish, township and pleasant extended nearly to Salthaugh and once divided the village with a station on the Hull and . parish of Keyingham from , is now bran<:h of the North Eastern railway, 5 miles south- partially warped up. On the Oldfield estate is the east from , 5 north-west from and base of an ancient cross which fonnerly stood near the 9~ east-by-south from Hull, in the division "Watt's Arms," , a.nd in the centre of the of the Riding, Eouth division of the wapentake of village is the base of another cross ; at Ebor Home Holderness, South Holderness petty sessional division, are remains of a fourth, said to have been brought Patrington union, county court district of Hedon, rural from St. Philip's Cross farm. There are two corn deanery of Hedon, archdeaconry of the East Riding mills. Major Walter George Raleigh Chichester­ and diocese of York. The church of St. Nicholas is a Constable J.P. of , who is lord of building of rubble in the Perpendicular style, consisting the manor, the Trustees of the Charity for the Sons of chancel, nave, a.isles, with a chantry chapel, south of the Clergy, the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and porch and a. western tower with a broach spire con- Henry Broadley Harrison-Broadley esq. J.P. of Tick­ taining 3 bells : there are several mural tablets and ton Grange and. Welton, are the chief landowners. two piscinre, and near the pulpit is an hour-glass frame, The soil is marly clay, sand and gravel; in the low supposed to date from the Reformation: the chancel marshes it is a. deep warp clay; the subsoil is clay and was restored in 1885 and the remainder of the church gravel. The chief crops are, on sand land, turnips, in. 1890-93 at a t-Otal cost of £1,500: there are about barley, seeds and wheat; on strong land, wheat, seeds, 200 sittings. In the churchyard is an ancient cross, clover, oats and beans. The acreage is 3,414; rateable formerly standing on the property of E. T. Oldfield value, £5,066; the population in 1891 was 587. esq. but removed here in 1888. The register dates Parish Clerk, James Tarbotton. from the year 1604. The living is a discharged vicar- Post & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. age, gross yearly value £'676, including 33 acres of .-Jas. Tarbotton, sub-postmaster. Letters received glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Archbishop of through Hull, arrive at 7.30 a.m. week days & 8.30 York, and held since 1873 by the Rev. Jeremiah Sharp a.m. sundays; dispatched at 6.25 p.m. week days & Thomlinson B.A. of Queen's College, OxfOTd. The 5.5 p.m. sundays. The nearest telegraph offices are vicarage house was built in 1879. The Ecclesiastical Hedon & Patrington · Commissioners are owners of the great tithes, £407, Police Station, William Savage, constable in charge and also of the R.€ctory fann. There is a Wesleyan A School Board of 5 members was formed 7 Jan. 1873; chapel, built in 1848, and a Primitive Methodist chapel, George Kendall, clerk to the board built in 1846. The Foresters' hall, erected in 1857, Board School (mixed), erectOO in 1875, with master's- is used for lectures and public meetings and will hold house & a. clock, the gift of William Carlin & G. C. 300 persons. The local lodge of Foresters holds a Francis esqrs. for 116 children; average attendance, court here periodically. The Ombler and Marriott 106; Thomas At lay, master; Mrs. Atlay, infants~ charity of about £22 yearly, left for educational pur- mistress poses, is now applied to the augmentation of the school Railway Station, Thomas Dawson, station master funds generally. Keyingham Creek, which formerly Carriers to Hull. Hy. Brown & Jn. Gibson, tues.& fri Chesman Mrs. Sunthorpe Foresters' Hall & Court (Frederick Mackreth John Frederic L.R.C.P. Coupland Mrs Ford, sec) Edin. surgeon, & medical officer & Gibson George, West veiw Francis Herbert A. L. farmer & public vaccinator part of west dis- ::\Iackreth John Frederic grazier, Salthaugh grange trict, Patrington union Mundell Benjamin, Mount Pleasant Robert, surveyor of Keying- Meadley Robert, farmer Suddaby Mrs ham level drainage Mook Richard, farmer, Ebor house Thomlinson Rev. Jeremiah Sharp Gibson John, carrier Ness John George, shopkeeper B. A. (vicar), The Vicarage Guy Thomas, wheelwright & joiner Oddfellows' Lodge, M. U. (Robert Harrison J oseph, farmer Langdale, sec) COMMERCIAL. Harrison Watson, joiner Roydhouse William, wheelwright & Allison Mary (Mrs.), gardener Holtby Thomas, farmer, Keying- shopkeeper Beal Isa.ac, farmer & grazier, The ham Marsh Tarbotton James, grocer, tea dealer l\farsh Jackson Ann (Mrs.), cowkeeper & tailor, Post office Beal Sarah (Mrs.), farmer Jackson James, brewer & farmer Tarbotton Robt.Mea.dley,blacksmith Brown Henry, carrier Johnson Christopher Moore, :O.our dlr Tong Joseph, tailor Brown Thomas, Ship inn Kendall George, assistant overseer, Towse John, Blue Bell P.H Calvert Francis, blacksmith assessor of taxes, clerk of school Tuton Henry Thomas, farmer & Cautley Edwd. farmer, Marsh cot board for Keyingham grazier, The Mars~ Ch3rlton Locking, druggist & draper Kirkwood Waiter Coupland, butcher Tuton Wreathall, bncklayer Clark Henry, shopkeeper Langdale Joseph, farmer Walker Robert, tailor & draper Eyre Thomas Stephen, miller (steam Langdale Richard, farmer W~stmoreland Richard, shoe maker & wind) Langdale William, saddler Williams Arthur, farmer Ford Fr~derick, shoe maker Langthorp John, plumber & glazier and HEAD-the former 8! Hedon, a.rchdeaconry of the EMt Riding and diocel!le miles a.nd the latter 12 miles south-east from Patting- of York. Kilnsea occupies the narrow projecting ton station on the Hull and Withernsea branch of the point of land between the Getman Ocean and the North EMtern railway constitute a. township and , forming the south-eastern extremity of York­ parish in the Holderness division of the Riding, south shire; the land is about a. mile in breadth in the widest division of the wapentake of Holderness, South Hol- part. The old church of St. Helen, which formerly derness petty sessiona.l division, Patrington union, stood on the brink of the cllif, was undermined by the county court dislirict of Hedon, rural deanery of sea, and its nave and chancel, with the greater part of