The London Gazette, August 13, 1869. 4581

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The London Gazette, August 13, 1869. 4581 THE LONDON GAZETTE, AUGUST 13, 1869. 4581 Priors; William Fielding Harding, Esquire, Al-' kipsea; Mackturk, George Gladstone, Esquire, veston; Reverend Mordaunt Barnard, Preston- South Cave ; Telford, Charles, Esquire, Hotham ; Bagot. Tackson Hugh William, Esquire, Riston Grange ; Clubbe, the Reverend Charles Wishaw, Siggles- For the county of Westmoreland. horne ; Machell, the Reverend Richard Beverley, John Kitching, Milnthorpe ; Martin Whitaker, iooss j Smith, Frederick Lee, Seed Crusher, Sut- Milnthorpe ; Christopher Wilson Braithwaite, ; Walsham, the Reverend Charles, Sculcoates ; Plumtree Hall, Heversham ; George Pritt, the Daly, Owen, Esquire, Albion-street, Sculcoates ; Heline, Windermere; James Fleming Green, ling, William Robinson, Merchant, Beverley- Grasmere ; William Wakefield, Hyning, Esquire ; road, Sculcoates ; Walker, William, Merchant, William Longmire, Kendal, Esquire ; John Hud- Sculcoates; Brown, William, Shipowner, Scul- son, Larch How, Kendal, Esquire ; George Fos- coates ; Bryson, John, .Sculcoates; Loft, John, ter Braithwaite, Hawes Mead, Kendal, Esquire ; Shipowner, Sculcoates; Raymond, William Fre- Frank Maude Taylor Jones, Rydal, Gentleman ; derick, Merchant, Sculcoates ; Atkinson, Henry Reverend Thomas Staniforth, Storrs Hall, Win- John, Shipowner, Hessle j Castle Kelsey, Mer- dermere, Clerk j Dawson Cornelius Greene, ihant, Belle Vue Terrace, Hull; William Marsden, Whittington Hall, Kirkby Lonsdale; Edward Esquire, Dauthorpe; William Baxter,Esquire, Bur- Matthew Fenwiek, Kirkby Lonsdale. ton Pidsea ; James Holiday, Esquire, Owstwick ; the Honourable Alfred Stourton, Houghton; For the city of New Sarum, the close of the same* Philip Egerton, Esquire, Londesbrough, Reverend and Clarendon Park. Charles Slingsby Atkinson, Harswell; Thomas Charles Henry Radcliffe ; William Woodlands ; Burton, Esquire, Turnham Hall ; Edwin Storry, John Harding Jackson; Henry William Cobb ; Esquire, Howden ; Edward Stanley Scholfield, John Large ; Edmund Grove Bennett j Stephen Esquire, Sand Hall; John Hepton, Esquire, Bub- Eldridge j William Jonas Wilton. with ; Reverend Edward William Simpson, Lax- ton ; Reverend H W Wright, For the the county of Worcester. Hemingbrough ; Reverend G Goram Augustus Talbot Hancocks, Esquire, Wolverley ; Holmes, Holme-on-Spalding Moor; William Moses Knoules, George William Grosvenor, and Baines, Esquire, Bell Hall; Thomas Lumley Edward James Merton, Esquires, Kidderminster ; Dodsworth, Esquire, Wheldrake. John Mundy Dowdeswell, Bushley near Tewkes- bury ; Edward Richard Dowdeswell, Bushley near For the North Riding of the county of York. Tewkesbury ; Henry Francis Dowdeswell, Bush- The Reverend John Meredith, The Rectory, ley near Tewskesbury; Arthur Christopher Kirklington ; Henry Rob, Esquire, Catton Hall j Dowdeswell, Bushley near Tewkesbury; George the Reverend John Melville Guilding, The Vicar- Edward Dowdeswell, Bushley near Tewkesbury j age, Sowerby ; George Walker, Esquire, Ravens- Robert Lawson, Upton-upon-Severn, Clerk; thorpe Hall ; John Francis I'anson, Esquire, Anthony Cottrell Lefroy, Longdon, Clerk ; Henry Howe j the Reverend B. Lamb, The Vicarage, Edward Montague Stone, Holdfast 'near Upton- Thirsk ; Doctor John Taylerson, Whitby ; George upon-Severn, Clerk]; Robert Pilson, Birtsmorton, Smith, Esquire, Otterington House, Northallerton ; Clerk; Lionel Edward Brown, Welland, Clerk; Reverend William John Middleton, Brompton, Henry Lakin, Link End, Malvern; John Rayer Northallerton; Robert Hopkinson, Esquire, Thorn- Lane, Cutlers, Castlenorton; Joseph Hall, Ryall, ton-le-Moor, Tbirsk; Edward Frederick Dent, Ripple; Benjamin Hall, the Wood, Hanley Castle Esquire, Thornton Lodge, Northallerton ; Thomas Henry Jecks Dixon, Esquire, Kidderminster Garnett Horsfall, Esquire, Hornby Grange, North- Joseph Naylor, Esquire, Kidderminster 3 Henry allerton ; Michael Heineken Horsfall, Esquire, Toye Woodward, Esquire, Kidderminster j Dame" Little Smeaton, Northallerton ; Henry Robson, Wagstaff Goodwin, Esquire, Kidderminster Esquire, Londonderry, Bedale j Robert William William Henry Talbot, Esquire, Kidderminster. Hodgson, Esquire, Northallerton; Reverend Rich- ard Atkinson, Kirby Sigston, Northallerton ; Re- For the town and county of Kingston-upon-Hull verend William Rusbridge Holmes, Birkby, North- William Irving, Flax Merchant; Henry Fre- allerton ; the Reverend Edward Mordaunt Birch, derick Smith, Seed Crusher; John Francis Nor Kirkby Moorside ; Robert Ellerby, Esquire, Sat- wood, Steam Ship Owner ; William West, Stock ton ; Henry Monson de la Poer Beresford Peirse, and Share Broker; Thomas Stratten, Frui Esquire, Bedale Hall; Henry Mark Gale Coore, Merchant j Edward Robert Harrison, Corn Mer Esquire, Scruton Hall; Reverend William Thomas chant; Thomas Eley Sykes, Russia Merchant Garrett, Crakehall; Thomas Mosley Crowder, Henry Simpson, Iron and Copper Merchant Esquire, Thornton, Watlass Hall; Reverend Peter Joseph Lambert, Commission Agent; William Whitfield Brancker, Scruton ; Robert Russell, Wilbert Darling, Seed Crusher ; Benjamin Bur Esquire, Newton House, near Bedale; William nett Mason, Wine Merchant and Ship Owner Aitkinson, Esquire, Patrick Brompton ; Reverend Thomas Bolton, Hemp, Flax, and Seed Merchant John James Pulleine, Kirby Wiske; Reverend Con- George Buckton, Drysalter; Thomas Frederic] stantine Bernard Yeoman, Manfield ; Thomas Hewitt, Iron Merchant; Portas He wart Harker Richardson, Yarm j William Bainbridge, Yarrn ; Commission Agent; George Sykes, Commissior Crossley Dale, Yarm j Robert Calverley Bewicke Agent. Bewicke, Coally Manor ; John William Smith, Clerk, Dinsdale; William Whitwell, South Stock- For the East Riding of the county of York. ton ; Charles Arthur Head, South Stockton; Musgrave, the Reverend William Peete, Etton Joseph Richardson, South Stockton; Am- Harrison, John Bainton, Esquire, Hayholme brose Walker, South Stockton ; Joseph Laid- Layborn, Daniel, Esquire, Beverley; Stretton ler, South Stockton ; John Hodgson, Northaller- William Harris, Esquire, Beverley; Almack ton ; John Pattison, Brompton ; John Wilford, John, Esquire, Beverley ; Trollope, the Reveren Brompton ; Robert Akenhead, Otterington Hall;. Arthur Barnard, Beverley ; Wilkinson, William William Thrush Jefferson, Northallerton; Wil- Hall, Esquire, Cottingham; Sykes, Daniel liam Armitage, Ainderley Steeple ; Joseph Carter Esquire, Kirkella ; Denton, Samuel Best, Esquire. Raw, Clerk, Ainderley Steeple ; Francis Scott, Horusea; Thompson, the Reverend Robert Appleton Wiske; John Wind Coates, Pasture H2.
Recommended publications
  • Housing Land Supply Position Statement 2020/21 to 2024/25
    www.eastriding.gov.uk www.eastriding.gov.uk ff YouYouTubeTube East Riding Local Plan 2012 - 2029 Housing Land Supply Position Statement For the period 2020/21 to 2024/25 December 2020 Contents 1 Introduction ............................................................................................................ 1 Background ........................................................................................................................ 1 National Policy .................................................................................................................. 1 Performance ...................................................................................................................... 3 Residual housing requirement ......................................................................................... 5 2 Methodology ........................................................................................................... 7 Developing the Methodology ........................................................................................... 7 Covid-19 ............................................................................................................................. 8 Calculating the Potential Capacity of Sites .................................................................... 9 Pre-build lead-in times ................................................................................................... 10 Build rates for large sites ..............................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Rural Economy of Holderness Medieval
    !. ii' i ~ , ! The Rural Economy of Medieval i li i Holderness h i By D. J. SIDDLE HE student of the medieval landscape The plain of Holderness is the triangular is often confronted by apparently con- peninsula which forms the south-eastern ex- T flicting evidence. This fact is nowhere tremity of Yorkshire. The region is bounded better illustrated than in the plain of Holder- to the west and north by the dip slopes of the ness, one of England's smallest and most dis- Yorkshire Wolds, and to the south and east tinctive regions. The chronicler of the Cister- by the Humber estuary and the North Sea. cian monastery of Meaux (in the Hull valley), In the case of Holderness, the use of the word recording the partition of lands which fol- plain is deceptive. Within the limits of its lowed the Norman conquest, noted that the subdued relief, the region contains consider- new earle of Holderness inherited a land; able topographical variety. In the east are a "... which was exceedingly barren and in- series of arcuate moraines, extending from fertile at this time, so that it produced nothing north-east to south-east, representing various but oats. ''1 In his recent study of the Domes- stages in the glacial retreat. They often rise day material, Maxwell summarizes the Hol- to 25 ft, but are rarely above 5° ft. Much dis- derness returns in this way, "... in spite of its sected by post-glacial stream erosion, these marshy nature, Holderness was the most areas of boulder clay display little continuity, prosperous part of the East Riding in the especially in south Holderness.
    [Show full text]
  • Iron Age Features and Finds in Other Parishes And
    Thixendale Acklam Iron Age finds and sites within 10 miles of Pocklington Fimber Corrections, omissions and additions to Pocklington Heritage Partnership via www.pocklingtonhistory.com Wetwang Fridaythorpe Kirkby Underdale Buttercrambe Painsthorpe Middleham Bugthorpe Skirpenbeck Cot Nab/Callis Wold Cot Nab Greenwick Callis Wold Youlthorpe Stamford Bridge Tibthorpe Full Sutton Huggate Bishop Wilton Gowthorpe Low Catton Givendale High Catton Fangfoss Grimthorpe Spittal Meltonby Bainton North Dalton Millington/Warter Millington Ousethorpe Kexby Wilberfoss Yapham Warter Kilnwick Percy Middleton Newton-on-Derwent Barmby Moor Nunburnholme Elvington Pocklington Allerthorpe Middleton/Kiplingcotes Nunburnholme/Londesborough Sutton-on-Derwent Burnby Hayton Londesborough Thornton Melbourne Thorpe-le-Street Kiplingcotes Bielby Shiptonthorpe Goodmanham Everingham East Cottingwith Market Weighton Arras Thorganby Seaton Ross Harswell See insets below for Skipwith/North Duffield and Holme-on-Spalding-Moor and Foulness River Version 1.02 (22 Jan 2018) o o Skipwith Iron Age features and finds in other parishes and places (from Archi UK, Portable Antiquities and Archaeology Data Service websites plus other published data) Holme-on-Spalding-Moor Allerthorpe – Rectilinear enclosures, iron workings, Londesborough – See star box panel at bottom-left. North Duffield pendant, metal pin, strap fitting. Low Catton – Ditched enclosures, trackway, pottery. Arglam Bainton – Settlement, pits, rectilinear enclosure, Market Weighton – Hut circles, curvilinear encl- trackway, square barrows, coin, brooch, harness fitting. osures, coin, pottery, harness fittings. Key Barmby Moor – Settlement, square barrow cemetery, Melbourne – Artefact. enclosures, trackways, cropmarks, coins, jewellery, mount, Major sites/areas Meltonby – Site, rectilinear enclosure. chariot harness fittings. Bielby – Site, rectilinear enclosures, square barrow, Middleham – Linear boundary dyke. Other important sites/areas Welham Bridge trackway, cropmarks, pottery.
    [Show full text]
  • East Yorkshire Countryside Directory for People with Disabilities
    East Yorkshire Countryside Directory for People with Disabilities second edition Whatever your needs, access to and enjoyment of the countryside is rewarding, healthy and great fun. This directory can help you find out what opportunities are available to you in your area. Get yourself outdoors and enjoy all the benefits that come with it… With a foreword by The Hon. Mrs Susan Cunliffe-Lister, HM Lord-Lieutenant of the East Riding of Yorkshire This directory was put together by people with a disability for people with a disability, though the places and information included will be useful to anyone. With a wealth of hidden treasures, East Yorkshire is often referred to as ‘Britain’s best kept secret’. Savour its traditions, stately homes, stunning nature reserves and colourful seaside life. East Yorkshire has many claims to fame; did you know, for example, that Britain’s tallest man came from Market Weighton, and that Hull is home to England’s smallest window? For people interested in wildlife and conservation there is much that can be done from home or a local accessible area. Whatever your chosen form of countryside recreation, whether it’s joining a group, doing voluntary work, or getting yourself out into the countryside on your own, we hope you will get as much out of it as we do. There is still some way to go before we have a properly accessible countryside. By contacting Open Country or another of the organisations listed here, you can help to encourage better access for all in the future. Revised March 2015.
    [Show full text]
  • The Furrow Press Monthly Magazine Issue 3 October 2018
    THE FURROW PRESS MONTHLY MAGAZINE ISSUE 3 OCTOBER 2018 Boothferry Road Clackna Farm Owstwick Grange Howden East Street Owstwick Goole Kilham Roos, Hull East Yorkshire East Yorkshire East Yorkshire DN14 7DZ YO25 4RF HU12 0LH 01430 430624 01262 420226 01964 670224 Used Tractors: • New Holland T7.220 LWB Year 2011 - 3350 Hours • New Holland T7.200 Year 2012 - 62 - 2800 Hours COMBINES • New Holland T6080 Year 2011 - 61 - 2950 Hours • New Holland T6080 Year 2008 - 7000 Hours ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ ─ • Deutz Agrofarm 100 Year 2007 - 9000 Hours T7.200 Current Demonstrators: • T7.315 HD • T7.260 S/W • T7.260 Classic CX7.90 • T7.210 S/W • T6.175 DCT T5.120 E/C • T6.180 E/C New Holland New Excellent early order discounts on all combines: • Boomer 40 Syncro TC, CX and CR, with fantastic finanace packages Current New Stock & All units are now available available. LIMITED TIME ONLY. for pre-sale for end of Expected Deliveries: demonstration delivery. • T7.210 Classic Used: Ex-Demonstrators: • T7.190 Classic • CX8090 with 25ft Variable feed Header • CR8.90 with 30ft Variable feed Header • T7.190 Classic Year 2013 - 851 Hours Year 2018 - 20 Hours • T5.120 E/C T7.315 HD • CX8040 with 17ft Variable feed Header • CX7.90 with 22ft Variable feed Header • T4.55 2WD Year 2009 - 1467 hours Year 2018 - 33 Hours • Boomer 40 HST • Boomer 30 HST (SOLD) TRACTORS & BALERS More combines available soon! To ensure we can fulfil your needs please contact us with your requirements and we will let you know when suitable machines arrive. Balers: • BB1290 Plus • RB150
    [Show full text]
  • ! National Rivers Authority ! Information Centre '9Ad Office Jass N O
    NATIONAL RIVERS AUTHORITY YORKSHIRE REGION RIVER FLOW & RAINFALL STATISTICS UPDATED TO 31ST DECEMBER 1992 National Rivers Authority Northumbria & Yorkshire Region Olympia House Gelderd Lane Gelderd Road Leeds LS12 6DD August 1993 ! National Rivers Authority ! Information Centre '9ad Office Jass N o ................. | accession No NATIONAL RIVERS AUTHORITY YORKSHIRE REGION RIVER FLOW AND RAINFALL STATISTICS UPDATED TO 31ST DECEMBER 1992 This publication combines the 1992 annual reports on River Flow Statistics and on Rainfall. It is in two sections:- (i) River Flow Statistics updated to 31st December 1992. (ii) Annual Rainfall Report 1992. IMPORTANT NOTICE The published d^ta are the best available in August 1993. Please consult the Resource Planning and Hydrometry Section about the accuracy of the data, and the possibility of revision, before using these records for detailed investigations. The Section would also be pleased to be notified of any errors which may be discovered. Telephone: Leeds 440191 NRA Northumbria & Yorkshire Region August 1993 RIVER FLOW STATISTICS UPDATED TO 31ST DECEMBER 1992 Introduction This publication contains summary data for 1992 and analyses of long period river flow records. The data should be used with some caution. All the published river flows are "net" or "as measured". No adjustments have been made in respect of abstractions.from, or discharges to, the river upstream of the flow measuring station, or for changes in storage of reservoirs etc. Records allowing for such adjustments are usually available from the appropriate Division of Yorkshire Water pic or from NRA Northumbria and Yorkshire Region Resource Planning and Hydrometry Section. Records have been included for some stations which were designed primarily to measure low flows.
    [Show full text]
  • The Development and Role of Women's Meetings in the Early Quaker Movement
    Quaker Studies Volume 9 | Issue 2 Article 4 2005 'The nfeI rior Parts of the Body': The evelopmeD nt and Role of Women's Meetings in the Early Quaker Movement Gareth Shaw University of Hull, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/quakerstudies Part of the Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, and the History of Christianity Commons Recommended Citation Shaw, Gareth (2005) "'The nfeI rior Parts of the Body': The eD velopment and Role of Women's Meetings in the Early Quaker Movement," Quaker Studies: Vol. 9: Iss. 2, Article 4. Available at: http://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/quakerstudies/vol9/iss2/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ George Fox University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Quaker Studies by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ George Fox University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 190 QUAKER STUDIES QUAKER STUDIES 912 (2005) [191-203] ISSN 1363-013X texts and the expansion of the American literary canon. She is co-editor of 'A Centre <?[Wonders': the body in early America (Cornell University Press, 2001) and is currently working on a book manuscript titled The Body as Testimony: Quaker womens prophesyings in early American culture and text. Michele is a member of Haddonfield Monthly Meeting in New Jersey. ' Mailing address: Department of English, The College of New Jersey, PO Box 'THE INFERIOR PARTS OF THE BODY : THE DEVELOPMENT AND 7718, Ewing, NJ 08628, USA. E-mail: [email protected] ' ROLE OF WOMEN S MEE TINGS IN THE EARLY QUAKER MOVEMENT1 Gareth Shaw University of Hull,England ABSTRACT This article is a study of the development and role of early Quaker women's Meetings during the second half of the seventeenth century.
    [Show full text]
  • Brief History of the Selby & Driffield Railway
    BRIEF HISTORY OF THE SELBY & DRIFFIELD RAILWAY Prior to the building of railways, farmers in the East Riding of Yorkshire had to rely on water transport to get their produce to market. The rivers Humber and Ouse, linking York and Selby with the docks at Hull, had always been navigable, and the River Derwent was made navigable by an Act of 1701. The Market Weighton Canal, running south from Market Weighton to the Humber estuary, opened in 1778; the Pocklington Canal, running west from Pocklington to the River Derwent, opened in 1818. It was not long, however, before the arrival of railways would ensure the rapid decline in waterborne transport in the area. The Leeds & Hull Railway Company was formed in 1824 with George Stephenson appointed as engineer. He proposed three inclined planes to be worked by three stationary engines for the hilly route out of Leeds, but the remainder of the line was very nearly level. This L&HR was one of a number of contemporary projects aimed at linking the east and west sides of northern England. The Leeds & Hull scheme soon stagnated, due in part to the stock market crash of 1825. In the meantime the Knottingley & Goole Canal opened in 1826, turning Goole into a viable transhipment port for Europe. The growth of Goole as a port to rival Hull was sufficient to spur the Hull-based shareholders of the Leeds & Hull railway into action. At the end of 1828 they motioned that the railway should be built as far as Selby, with the remainder of the journey to Hull being made by steam packet, most importantly, bypassing Goole.
    [Show full text]
  • Otter and Water Vole Survey Report
    Environmental Statement Volume 6: Ch.9 Ecology and Nature Conservation p.1 Environmental Statement Document 6.9.6 DOCUMENT 6.9.7 Otter and Water Vole Survey Report The Yorkshire and Humber CCS (Cross Country Pipeline) Development Consent Order Under Regulation 5(2)(a) of the Infrastructure Planning (Applications: Prescribed Forms and Procedure) Regulations 2009 Application Reference: EN070001 June 2014 The Yorkshire and Humber CCS Cross Country Pipeline Environmental Statement Volume 6: Ch.9 Ecology and Nature Conservation p.i Environmental Statement Document 6.9.7 Table of Contents 1 Introduction 1 1.1 INTRODUCTION TO THE SCHEME 1 1.2 SUMMARY OF SCOPING: DEFINING THE STUDY AND SURVEY AREAS 1 1.4 SURVEY AIMS AND OBJECTIVES 2 2 Legislation and Policy 4 2.1 OTTER LEGISLATION 4 2.2 WATER VOLE LEGISLATION 4 2.3 NATIONAL POLICY 5 2.4 LOCAL POLICY 5 3 Methodology 7 3.1 DESK STUDY 7 3.2 FIELD SURVEY 8 3.3 EVALUATION METHODOLOGY 10 3.4 SURVEY LIMITATIONS 13 3.5 QUALITY ASSURANCE 14 4 Results 15 4.1 DESK STUDY 15 4.2 FIELD SURVEY 18 5 Evaluation 25 5.1 OTTER 25 5.2 WATER VOLE 26 References 27 Figures and Appendices 28 Appendix A: Data Request Records 29 Appendix B: Otter Survey Records 41 Appendix C: Water Vole Survey Records 43 The Yorkshire and Humber CCS Cross Country Pipeline Environmental Statement Volume 6: Ch.9 Ecology and Nature Conservation p.ii Environmental Statement Document 6.9.7 Appendix D: Survey Photographs 47 The Yorkshire and Humber CCS Cross Country Pipeline Environmental Statement Volume 6: Ch.9 Ecology and Nature Conservation p.1 Environmental Statement Document 6.9.7 1 Introduction 1.1 INTRODUCTION TO THE SCHEME 1.1.1 AECOM was commissioned by National Grid Carbon (NGC) in February 2012 to undertake European otter (Lutra lutra) and water vole (Arvicola amphibious) surveys to inform the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) of the Yorkshire and Humber Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) Cross Country Pipeline (Onshore Scheme).
    [Show full text]
  • Durham E-Theses
    Durham E-Theses The constitution and the clergy op Beverley minster in the middle ages McDermid, R. T. W. How to cite: McDermid, R. T. W. (1980) The constitution and the clergy op Beverley minster in the middle ages, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/7616/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk II BEVERIEY MINSTER FROM THE SOUTH Three main phases of building are visible: from the East End up to, and including, the main transepts, thirteenth century (commenced c.1230); the nave, fourteenth century (commenced 1308); the West Front, first half of the fifteenth century. The whole was thus complete by 1450. iPBE CONSTIOOTION AED THE CLERGY OP BEVERLEY MINSTER IN THE MIDDLE AGES. The copyright of this thesis rests with the author. No quotation from it should be pubHshed without his prior written consent and information derived from it should be acknowledged.
    [Show full text]
  • Principal Officers and ~1Agistrates of the East Riding
    PRINCIPAL OFFICERS AND MAGISTRATES. 93 Hotham, Howden, Kirk Ella-with-Anlaby, Laxton, North Cave-with-South Oliffe, Bowley, South Cave, Welton-with-Melton, Wressel. R~lral Deanery of H7lll, comprising all the parishes in the town of Hull, Drypool, Cottingham, Marfleet, Newington, N ewland, Sculcoates, Skidby, Sutton. Rural Deanery of Pocklington, comprising Acklam East, Barmby :Moor-with­ Fangfoss, Bishop Wilton, Brigthorpe, Catton-with-Btamford Bridge, Full Button, Kexby, Kilnwick Percy, Kirby Underdale, Millington, Pocklington-with-Meltonby and Yapham, Scrayingham-with-Howsham and Leppington, Skirpenbeck, Button­ on-Derwent, Thixendale, Thornton-with-Allerthorpe and Melbourne, Westow, Wilberfoss. Rural Deanery of Scarboro~lgh, comprising Burton Fleming with Fordon, .Filey, Folkton, Ganton, Hunmanby, Maston, Willerby, and some parishes in the North Riding. Rural Deanery of Settrington, comprising Birdsall, Burythorpe, Fridaythorpe, Heslerton East, Heslerton West, Knapton, Langton, North Grimston, Norton, Rillington, Scampston, Settrington, Sherburn, Thorpe Bassett, Wintringham, Yedingham. Rural Deanery of Weighton, comprising Aughton with East Cottingwith, Bubwith, Burnby, Ellerton Priory, Everingham, Goodmanham, Harswell, Hayton with Beilby, Holme-on-Spalding ~1oor, Londesborough, Market Weighton, North Newbald, Nunburnholme, Sancton, Seaton Ross, Shipton-Thorpe. THE ARCHDEACONRY OF CLEVELAND. The Rural Deanery of Bulmer in this Archdeaconry extends into the East Riding, and includes the following parishes in that division: Barlby, Dunnington, Elvington, Escrick, Hemingbrough, Heslington, Riccall, Skipwith, Stillingfleet, Thorganby, Wheldrake. Principal Officers and ~1agistrates of the East Riding. Lord Lieutenant and Oustos Rotulorum-The Right Hon. Lord Herries. Ohairman of Quarter Sessions and of Police Oommittee-Arthur Duncombe, Esq. Olerk of the Peace and of the Oounty Oouncil-John Bickersteth, Esq. Deputy Clerk oj the Peace-Joseph Wilkinson, Esq., York.
    [Show full text]
  • Hull Times Index 1917-27
    Table of Contents Agriculture ........................................................................................................................................................................... 1 Antiquities ............................................................................................................................................................................ 9 Army .................................................................................................................................................................................. 11 Art ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 13 Associations ....................................................................................................................................................................... 14 Banks & Finance ................................................................................................................................................................ 16 Books ................................................................................................................................................................................. 17 Bridges ............................................................................................................................................................................... 18 Buildings ...........................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]