Directory.] Brandeston. [Suffolk.]
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DIRECTORY.] 729 BRANDESTON. [SUFFOLK.] Kcmp James, farmer Lock Samuel \Vright, tailor & draper, Head J amcs, farmer Kerridgc flamuel, boot & shoe maker & collector of poor rates Row Francis, farmer & baker Kerridge Thomas, farmer Marsden John Marmaduke, carpenter Sillett Leonard, Queen's Heatl Lee Charles, farmer, Broad Oak farm Martin William, farmer Smith Thomas, blacksmith Lewell William, farmer NoyWilliam, wheelwright & blacksmith Squire M aria (Mrs.), baker BRAMFORD is a parish, considerable village, aml constabulary. Here are chalk pits, extensive manure station on the Eastern Union Railway and on the navigable and cement works, and a paper mill. 'l'he Hall, a hand l'iver Gipping, 701 miles from I,ondon, 2~ north-west from some brick mansion, with a good prospect, is occupied Ipswich, in the Eastern division of the county, Bosmere by Charles Snell Paris, Esq.: it was formerly the seat of and Claydon hundred and union, Ipswich county court the Acton family, and is now the property of Rear-Admiral district, rural deanery of Bosmere, archdeaconry of Suffolk, Sir George N. Broke :Middleton, Bart., c.B., who is lord of and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Stephen, wkich the manor and owner of a large portion of the soil. George has recently been reseated and partially restored, is a neat Thomas, Esq., is lord of the manor of Lovetofts, in which building, in the Early English and Decorated styles, with stands 'rbe Hall, on the site of the ancient seat of the square tower and spire covered with lead. The register Tibetots. The soil it~ light; subsoil, sand, and in places dates from the year 1553. The living is a vicarage, with chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. In 1861 the chapelry of Burstall annexed, yearly value £300, in the the population was 1,019; area, 3,226 acres. 'l'he annual gift of the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury, and held by value of assessed property was £3,881 J.')s. in 1846. the Rev. Henry Edmund Tilsley Cruso, M.A., of Worcester Parish Clerk, Jeremiah Pallaut. College, Oxford. The Independents have a small chapel here. W. Acton, in 1703, bequeathed to the poor of Bramford PosT OFFICE.- James King, receiver. Letters, re- £200 for the purchase of land, now consisting of a cottage ceived through Ipswich, arrive at 7.30 a.m. Box closes and 14 acres of land, and let for £20 per annum, for a at 6 p.m. The nearest money order office & post office quarterly distribution of bread and meat. Francis Broke savings bank is at Ipswich left a yearly modus of £5 for the benefit of the poor. The INSURANCE AGHNT.-LondonAssurance, Thomas Heard, almshouses consist of three tenements, occupied by six 217 Woodbridg-e road, Ipswich widows. Here is a common of 10 acres, and 10 acres in National School, \Villiam Dye, master; Mrs. Dye, mistress cottage gardens. There is a Police Station of the Suffolk Railway Station, Richard Dalley, booking porter PRIVATE RESIDENTS. works & offices, at Ipswich, Yarmouth Lewis Mary Ann (Mrs.), seminary Catchpole Nathaniel, esq. White house, & ~orwich Lovely William,Crowninn,&nursery- Whitton road Fiske George, farmer, Thornbush man, Whitton road Cruso Rev. Henry Edmuml Tilsley, Fison Joseph, agricultural chemist, Mayes Robert, beer retailer M.A. Vicarage Eastern Union chemical works, & at l\fayes Thomas, boot & shoe maker - Leg~att John, esq Ipswich 1\fudd John, farmer, Tye farm Mills John Hillam, esq. Hill house Flower John, painter & glazier l\fumford Robt. Wrn.farmer,TheGables Morgan Miss Goddard Ebenezer, tar distilling, naph- Mumford William Arthur,farmer, Bul- 1\Iumford Hobert Wm. csq. 'l'hc Gables tha & asphaltc works; & Orwell Ien Hall furm Packard Edward, jun. esq. The Grove \Vorks road, Ipswich Packard Edward & Co. manufacturing Paris Charles Snell, esq. Hramford hall Green Frank, maltster chemists &c. & 6 Princes st. Ipswich Wainwright Samuel, esq.Bramford ldg Hardy Pead, Cock inn Pallant Jeremiah,thatcher&parish clerk COMMERCIAL. Harrison Francis, carpenter & joiner Pall ant Thomas, butcher & farmer Bagley .Tohn, sen. blacksmith Haward Henry, farmer Pallant William, bricklayer & builder Baxter Benjamin, grocer &c Hughes Thomas, carpenter Palmer Henry, Anael inn, & farmer Bowman Rachael (Mrs.), baker Hurry William, paper manufacturer Squirrel! William Valentine, grocer & Bradbrook Samuel, nurseryman, florist James John, grocer, Whitton road draper, & at Sproughton & seedsman J olley Robert, farmer, Bullen farm Thorpe John, dealer in marine stores Bum stead Hy. market gardener & carter Kersey Clement, farmer, & at \V hi tton Tolmash William, tailor BurchJohn(~irs.),saddle&harnessmkr & Sproughton Wainwright Wm. farmer, Dairy farm Chap man Henry & Co. chemical manure King J ames, wheelwright & blacksmith, Wallis & Blake, millers manufacturers,& 17 Cornhill,Ipswich & post office receiving house \Vakc Henry, farmer, Sycamore house IIarpham & Son, roman cement & Laws Samuel, bricklayer WoodJonathan,whitesmith, Whitton rd plaster of paris &c. manufacturers; Lewis Eliza (.1\-Irs.), shopkeeper ·wood ward J ames, shopkeeper & dealer BRAMPTON is a village, parish, and station on the let for £30 per annum, which is applied for the service of East Suffolk branch of the Great Eastern railway, 5~ the church. Brampton Hall, the seat of N. H. T. Leman, mile~ south fmm Beccles, and 5 north-east from Rules Esq., erected in the year 1796, is situated on rising ground, worth, in the Eastern division of the county, Blything surrounded by a neat shrubbery. The soil is mixed. The hundred and union, Halesworth county court district, chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. The population in rural deanery of Dunwicb, archdeaconry of Suffolk, 1861 was 310, and the area is 2,002 acres. and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is a neat Parish Clerk, Austin Suggate. building, with a tower and 5 bells, and has been reseated with open benches, and new oak desk and pulpit. The living is a rectory, tithes commuted for £434 per annum, in the PosT OFFICE.-James :Mitchell, receivm·. Letters re gift of Naunton Robert Twysden Leman, Esq., and held by cP.ived through Wangford, arrive at 6.15 a. m.; dispatched the Rev. Thomas Orgill Leman, M.A., of Worcester College, at 6.55 p.m.; on sundays dispatched at 6.30 p.m. The Oxford. There are town estates, valued at £12 per annum, nearest money order office is at Wangford and about 12 acres of meadow land, called the Town Fen, Railway Station, Robert Durrant, station master Leman Nauntou Robert Twysden, esq. Cleveland John, farmer, Potash farm Lay \Villiam, carpenter & wheelwright The Hall Cunningham Robert, farmer Pedgrift Georgiana (M:rs.), farmer Leman Rev. Thomas Orgill, M.A. [rec- Cunningham Waiter, farmer Quadling Charles, wheelwright tor], Rectory Dugdale George, shoe maker Rack ham William, farmer coMMERCIAL. Gray Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper Smoothy William, farmer Adams Samuel, Railway tavern, & Halifax John, blacksmith Smoothy William, jun. farmer coal merchant Harris John Trott, farmer Suggate Charles, shopkeeper Balls Charles, farmer Hilleary George, Dog, & carpenter Woods Henry J ex, farmer Balls Rachael (Mrs.), farmer Hunter John Isaac, farmer, Old Hall BRANDESTON is a large parish and well built village, church of All Saints is a Gothic building, with a square situate on the river Deben, 12 miles north-east from Ipswich, tower containing a musical peal of 6 bells, nave, and cltan- 10 north from Woodbridge, 5 from Wickham Market, and eel, and was thoroughly restored by Charles Austin, Esq., 6 south-by-east from Debenham, in the Eastern division of in the year 1852: there is a good mural monument to thu the county, Loes hundred, Plomesgate union, Framlingham Rivett family, the former owners of the parish. The regi8- and Saxmundham county court district, rural deanery of ter dates from the early part of the sixteenth century. The Loose, arch deaconry of Suffolk, and diocese of Norwich. The living is a vicarage, yearly value £1301 with modern rcsi. 47 .