104 CROXALL. . [KELLY'a

Letters through arrive at 9 a. m. Alrewas is the quest till about 1750 A. D. when it was destroyed; portions nearest money order office & telegraph office. WALL of the fabric, a structure of Later Perpendicular date, are LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m still in existence in the Hall grounds as well ail a font, part National Schools (mixed), for the parishes of Croxall & Eden­ of a. window &c. Divine service is now conducted in a tem­ gale, , erected in x86o for 85 children; aver­ porary chapel provided near ihe Hall. is a age attendance, 65; Thomas Sage, master noble mansion of brick pleasantly situated in a fine park of Catton is a township and small scattered village on 92 acres, and is the seat of Mrs. Anson-Horton, lady of the the Trent, 6l miles south from Burton-upon-Trent and xt manor and principal landowner. The area is r,o64 acres; south-west from Croxall station, in the hundred of Repton rateable value £1,65o. The population in x88x was 82. a.nd Gresley, Burton-upon-Trent union and parish of Croxall. Letters through Burton-upon-Trent arrive at 8 a.m. The Catton township had a chapel of its own served by the vicars nearest money order office is at Walton-on-Trent & tele­ of Croxall from the time most probably of theNorman Con- graph office at Alrewas. LETTER BAG called for at 5·3<> Croxall. German John, farmer Catton. Gilbert John, Black Horse P.l! Anson-Horton Mrs. Catton hall Levett- Thos. J.P. Old Manor ho Heath John, farmer Arnold Charles, farmer Staley Right Rev. Thomas Nettleship Stevenson Joseph, farmer Norbury James, farmer D. D. Vicarage Wylie Robert, farmer Stevenson Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Cartright Joseph, farmer • CUBLEY is a parish comprising the vulages of GREAT Sir Nicholas Montgomery, the third of that name, ob. 3 and LITTLE CuBLEY, the first situated to the north, anrl August, 1494, and his wife Joan Haddon: in the south-east the latter on lofty ground west from the church, 139 miles angle of the chancel is a small alabaster effigy of a female from London, 6 south from Ash borne, 5 north from Sudbury, in a recumbent position upon a marble plinth : one other 7 north-east from , 13 west from Derby and 4 west tomb against the south wall of the aisle, formerly an altar from , the nearest station, on the North Stafford­ tomb beneath an arch, has been almost destroyed to make shire railway, in the Western division of the county, Apple­ room for pews : the chancel retains a piscina, and on the tree hundred and petty sessional division, Uttoxeter union walls are memorials to John Lonsdale D. D. Bishop of Lichfield and county court district, rural deanery of Ashborne, arch­ (1843), and to John Davys esq. late patron of the church deaconry of Derby and diocese of Southwell. There are two (1872); the chancel was restored in 1845 and again in I87

Humfrey Rev. Cave [rector] Gadsby John, cowkeeper 1 Mosley Thomas. farmer, Brook Gerrard Mary (Mrs.), farmer I Plant Sarah (Mrs.). farmer, The Firs COMMERCIAL. Gillson William,blacksmith,LittleCubley ! Radcliffe W tlliam, farmer & tailor Ashton John, farmer, Little Cubley Goodall Henry, farmer, Coppice Roberts Mary (Mrs.), cowkeeper Atkins William, farmer, The Common Good all Emily (Mrs.), farmer,Park hall · Smith John, shoe maker Baker James, cow keeper Goodall Rt. & Son, Cubley inn,& farmer Smith Septimus, farmer Barker Emma (Mrs.), farmer Goodall Walter ~hirley, farmer SteeleJacobHall,farmer,Roughground& Barker John, farmer, Little Cubley HarrisonWilliam, farmer, The Common Stone Frederick, farmer Brown William, cowkeeper Harrison William, farmer, Manor house Stone John, farmer, Little Cubley Bull Henry, cowkeeper Harvey Thomas, farmer, The Cottage Sturgess Nathaniel, bricklayer Bull William, cowkeeper Hidderley Henry, farmer Whitehouse Emanuel, brick & tile ma Chadfield Hy. Thos. farmer, The Lodge Leason Joseph, cowkeeper Wilson William, wheelwright Coates William, cowkeeper M:ilward William, wheelwright Wood Thomas, carrier Coxon Isaac, farmer, Cubley wood Minion Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper

CVRBAR is a township and small village, formed into '300 sittings. The register dates from the year x868. The­ a parish in 186g, from the parish of Baslow St. Anne; it living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £86, net 1 includes the townships of CALVER and FROGGATT, and is 1 yearly value £237, with re!'idence, in the gift of the vicar 5 miles north-east from Bakewell, in the Western division of of Baslow St. Anne, and held since 1870, by the Rev. Thomas. the county, High Peak hundred, Bakewell union, petty ses· Fosbrooke Salt B.A.. of Oriel College, Oxford: the vicarage is sional division and county court district, rural deanery of on the hillside immediately above the church. Here is a. Eyam, archdeaconry of Derby and diocese of Southwell. I Reformed WPsleyan chapel. Hulme Cliff College, situated The nearest railway station is at Hassop (4 miles south) on here, is in connection with the East London Institute for the Midland line The church of All Saints, built in z868, Home and Foreign Missions: about 50 young men receivtt is a small edifice of stone, in a modern Gothic style, consist- a three years' course of education here before entering upou. ing of chancel, nave of three bays, south aisle, south porch, missionary work ; offices, 53 How road, London R. 'fh~t and a small western turret containing 1 bell. There are l Duke of Rutland G.C.B., l'.C. is lord of the manor and principal