DERBYSHIRE. [K6LLY'8 £R,8G6; the Population in Rgor Was 76 in the Civil and Wall Letter Box Cleared at 6.30 P.M

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DERBYSHIRE. [K6LLY'8 £R,8G6; the Population in Rgor Was 76 in the Civil and Wall Letter Box Cleared at 6.30 P.M 428 TRUSLEY. DERBYSHIRE. [K6LLY'8 £r,8g6; the population in rgor was 76 in the civil and Wall Letter Box cleared at 6.30 p.m. Letters through 40 in the ecclesiastical parish. Derby arrive at 8 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. The nearest money order &; telegraph office is at Etwall Long Lane, a parish formed partly out of Trusley, 'Willj The children of this parish attend the schools of Sntton be found 'With Sutton-on-the-Hill. & Long Lane PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Foster James, farmer Stretton Alfred, farmer Johnson Rev . .Alfd. Hy. Saml. Rectory Frost Mrs. farmer Wainwright Henry, farmer Hunt Herbert, farmer Warlow William, farmer COMMERCIAL. Salt William, wheelwright Wood ward Roland,frmr. Goldhurst fm Else Charles, farmer, Nunsfield Smith Lucy (Mrs.), farmer TUPTON, se{, North Wingfi.eld. TURNDITCH (or Turndich) is a chapelry and parish erected in 1863, on a site given by Lord Scarsdale, one mile west from Shottle station on the Derby and commanding a fine view of the Ecclesbourne valley. Wirksworth branch of the Midland railway, and 3! There is a Congregational chapel with Sunday school, miles "West from Belper, in the Mid division of the erected in 1818 by the late Mr. William Statham, of county, hundred of .Appletree, Belper union and petty this place, and Mr. A. Harrison, of Belper, and en· sessional division, Belper and llkeston county court dis­ dowed by Mr. W. Statham. The Primitive .Methodists trict, rural deanery of Wirksworth, archdeaconry of have also a place of worship here. .A charity of about Derby and diocese of Southwell. The village is £7 yearly, left in rB17 by the Rev. Francis Gisborne,. pleasantly situated on a bold acclivity at the base of sometime rector of Staveley, is for clothing. The prin· which rulliS the river Ecclesbourne. By Local Govern­ cipal landowners are the Rev. Lord Scarsdale and Mrs. ment Board Order detached parts of Turnditch township H. E. Ourrey. '!'he soil is principally clay; subsoil, were tmn.ferred in r886 to Hull and Ward township. The clay, gravel and limestone. The chief crops are wheat, ecclesiastical parish was formed in r847 from Duffi.eld. oats and barley, and about two-thirds pasture. The The chapel of .All Saints is a building apparently of the acreage is 812' rateable value, £1,779; the population Early English period, consisting of chancel, nave, south in rgor was 237 in the civil and 263 in the ecclesiastical porch and a turret containing one bell : the windows are parish. of post Reformation date : in 1903 a staint>d east window Greenbank is a place in this parish. was presented by J. G. Crompton esq. of Windley: the ancient octagonal font is 25 inches in diameter and rests Post Office. John Holbrook, sub-postmaster. Letters on a square chambered base : the church was restored in from Derby arrive at 6.30 a..m. Box cleared at 6.55 1883 at a cost of [7oo, and affords rso sittings. '!'he p.m.; no sunday delivery. '!'he nearest money order register of baptisms dates from 1780, of marriages from office is at ldridgehay & telegraph office at Shottle r845, and of burials from 1848 ~ the earlier registers Railway station, I mile distant, which is open on al'e at Duffield. The living is a vicarage, net yearly week days only from 8 a.m. to 7·30 p.m value £II2, including 31! acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the vicar of Duffield, and held since Public Elementary School (mixed), erected in 1846, for 1874 by the Rev. Francis Lambert Cursham B..A. of IIO children; average attendance, gr children; Edgar Christ's College, Cambridge. A vicarage house was H. Worthy, master; Miss Ida Gregory, mistress COMMERCIAL. Ho1broo], John, shopkeeper, Post off PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Abell Ellen (Mrs.), shopkeeper Lamas Samuel, farmer Cursham Rev. Francis Lambert B.A. Alton Thomas, boot maker Mart George Thomas, dairyman,Twy- (vicar), Vicarage Beeston George, farmer ford farm Fox Frederick William, Hillside Bunting- William, Tiger P.H Perman Alfred E. P. colliery agent Gresley Mrs. Green bank Clark Charles, joiner Richardson Chas. R. Cross Keys P.H .J ones Owen Lee Ooates Tamar (Mrs.), shopkeeper Salt John, faiwer Massey John, Lancaster lodge Derbyshire Jn. Hy.farmr.Cross HandsiShirley George B. (Mrs.), farmer Whiston Wm. Harvey, Holme burst Dewis Elijah, shopkeeper Sutton Hy. farmer, Ash House farm Wright William, Ivy bank Gregory Harriett (Mrs.), farmer Wallis Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeep~r Hicklin John, farmer Woolley John W. farmer TWYFORD-with-STENSON form a joint town­ including one to Simon Bristowe, a combatant in the ship, chapelry and parish in the Southern division of the Civil War (r6gg), and his two wives, besides others of 1:ounty, in the hundred of .Appletree, union of Burton­ the same family. '!'he register dates from the year npon-Trent, petty sessional division and county court r657, and is in good condition. The living is a vicarage district of Derby, rural deanery of Melbourne, arch­ consolidated with Barrow-upon-Trent, joint net yearly deaconry of Derby and diocese of Southwell. value £zoo, with 40 acres of glebe and residence, in the Twyford, on the north bank of the Trent, across which gift of the Headmaster & Senior Masters of Repton there is a ferry to Repton, is 2 miles east from Repton School, and held since 19ro by the Rev. Herbert Arthur and Willington station on the Derby, Burton and Bir­ Hodges M . .A. of Oxford Univ.ersity, who resides at Bar· mingham section of the Midland railway and S! south­ row-upon-Trent. Sir Vauncey Harpur Crewe hart. of south-west from Derby. '!'he church of St. Andrew is Calke, is lord of the manor and the principal landown&r. an edifice of brick and stone of Norman origin, and con­ The soil is gravelly and loam; subsoil, mixed. The sists of chanool, nave and an embattled western tower chief crops are oats, wheat and barley, and a good with short spire containing 3 bells : a Norman arch portion of pasture land. The area is 1,741 acres of separates the chancel, which is of the same period, from land and 29 of water; rateable value, [5,636; the the body of the church, plainly built of brick : on the population in I9I r was 173. north "Wall of the chancel is a stone with a Latin inscrip­ Stenson is a hamlet, 4~ miles south-south-west from tion very much defaced, to Richard Harpur (r658), and Derby. The Midland railway and the Grand Trunk canal inclosing in the centre an incised brass to Anne, his pass near the village. The Wesleyans have a small wife (1688); here is also a fine alabaster monument chapel here. splendidly carved and surmounted by a shield of arms, Parish Clerk, John Cox . .and supposed to commemorate some member of the Vern on family ; the inscription is sru.d to have been wil~ Letters through Derby arrive at 9 a.m. The nearest fully destroyed by a man who obtained permission to money order & telegraph office is at Repton, 3 miles visit the church : on the south side of the chancel is an distant. Letter Boxes, Findern, cleared at 5· 15 pm. elaborately carved marble slab with an inscribed brass &; 'fwyford, cleared at 6.25 p.m to Samuel Bristowe esq. (r76r) and Mary, his wife (1791) Public Elementary (Endowed) School (mixed), erected in with other memorials to William Bristo'We (1597) and 1842 by voluntary subscription, at a cost of £125, on a .Annie his wife; Thomas Bristowe, their son (r6rg); and site given by the late Sir George Crewe bart. & Sarah Bristowe, 'Wife to James Huth"Waite, gentleman endowed with [15 y~:>arly from the Twyfurd & Stenson (r8oo): there are 175 sittings. The churchyard con· Charity; the school will hold 38 children; average tains some ancient gravestones with inscribed brasses, attendance, r8. TWYFORD. Hinds Catherine (Mrs.), farmer .Meakin George, fa-rmer Hudson .Arthur, gamekeeper to Sir Poyser Edward, fanner COHHERCIA.L. Vauncey H. Crewe hart Smith Joseph, fanner, 'l'wyford hall Bo.wn John, farmer Hudson Sarah (Mrs.), cowke-eper Woodlf:ud James, farmer Cox .John, blacksmith & farmer Meakin Charles, farmer .
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