Wiltshire. Little Bedwyn
DIRECTORY.] WILTSHIRE. LITTLE BEDWYN. 25 Pl}~n'Ce-Brown esq. Thomas Ark~ll esq. of Stratton St. Wilts added.) Letters arrive by road at 7 a.m. & Margarets, and the Earl of Craven. The soil is loamy; dispatched at 8.35 p.m. Postal orders are issued subsoil, clay. The chief crops are oats, ba.rley and here, but not paid. The nearest money order &; tele rootS. The area is 2,444 acres; rateable value, £1,608; graph office is at Aldbonrne, 3 miles distant the population in 190I was 232. Elementary School (mixed), rebuilt in 1885, for 90 Parish Clerk, Thomas Pressey. Fost Office. William Richard Aldridge, sub-postmaster. children j average attendance, 'H; Mrs. E. Palmer, (Railway Sub-Office. Letters should have R.S.O. mistress Shepperd Rev. Wm. (curate in charge) I Arkell Thomail, farmer, :Manor Ho. fm Hussey Oharles Herbert, farmer COMMERCIAL. Bush William, farmer, Finche's farm Leach Charles, beer retailer .Alder Charles, farmer & shopkeeper 00le8 Edward Lewis, farmer, Bailey Miell Albert, farmer, Ford farm Alder J obn, shopkeeper & carpenter Hill farm Scott John, woodman .A.ldridge William Richard, blacksmith, Dobson William, Red Lion P.H Woodley Henry, insurance agent &, sub-post office Everett Stephen & James, farmers GREAT BEDWYN is an ancient borough, large since 1874 by the Rev. Matthew Robert Edmeades M.A. village and parish, completely surrounded by forest and of Trinity College, Oxford. Here is a. Wesleyan chapel. woodland, and extending to the Berkshire border, with A charity of £10 yearly, for apprenticing boys born a station on the Newbury and Bath section of the Great within the limits of the parish, was left by Sir .A.nthouy Western ra.i.lway, 7 miles s'Outh-east from Marl~orough, Hungerford, in 1694: Cox's charity of £8, for educating .5 south-west from Hungerford and 66 from London, in poor children in the parish, is derived from land.
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