[LINCOLN. J BARROWBY. 18 POST OFFICE BARRO'W'BY, a in the wapentake of Winnihriggs parish comprises about 4,333 acres of land. The Duke of· and Threo, Gra.ntham un.i{)n, parts of Kesteven, diocese and Devonshire is lord of the manor and owner of the largest archdeaconry of Lincoln, and deanery .and county court dis- part of the soil. Sir J. C. Tltorold., Bart., and the Welby trict of Grantl1am, South Lincolnskire, is a neat and pleasant family, hold chief part of the remainder. Here is a Free village sear the CIWal, 2 miles west-north-west school, chiefly supported by the Duke of Devonshire and the of Grnntham. The living is a rectory, annual value £1,200, rector; also an Infant school. Annual donations, from includi11g 377 acres of glebe land. and residence, in the various soarces, to the amount of .£1) 12s. are distributed to pab•onage of tbe Duke Qf Devonshire; the Rev. George the poor of the parish. Here are the works of Henry Archer Earle W elby is the present ineumhent. The ehlll'Ch of All and Pearson and Son, for the ma.oufacture of ploughs. The Saints is a Gothic structure, with »ave, chancel, tower and population in 1851 was 801, including BREEDER l-IILJ.s, spire. The Wesleyans .have a place of worship here. The C.A.sTBOllPB and STENWITH. Eminson Mr. John Gibson Richard, White Swan I Pinder Thomas, farmer Faulkes Mrs GoodsonMary(Mrs.),MarquisofGnzby Pinder William, farmer Handley Henry Edwa.rd, esq Harrison Richard, bricklayer Prince John, fanner Mitchell ReY. John Henry T. (curate] Henson William, shopkeeper Ragsdale Mark, shopkeeper Welby Rev. George Earle [rector] Ireland Joseph, carpenter Rawding William, miller COMMERCIAL. Jenkinson Daniel, farmer Rudkin Joseph, farmer .A.:rcher Henry, ploughwright & agri- JenkinsoR Joseph, iarmer Scotney John, blacksmith cultltral implement mak-er Jenkinson William Dummitt, butcher Sills William, farmer, Castho:rpe Asltwell Michael, farmer Millhouse George, sacldler Singleton William, farmer Bullimore Elizabeth (Mrs.), butcher Marratt Charles, tailor Smith John, farmer~ Breeder hills Bullock Edward1 cattle dealer Marshal! John, miller, Stainwlth Smith Thomas, tmrpenter Downing Jolm, tanner Moulds John, shoemaksr Trolley Sarah (Mrs.), !!!hopkeeper Downing William, farmer, Cutborpe Musson Thomas, baker Vincent Francis. farmer, Barrowby Garton William, butcher Pearson & Son, ploughwrights Thornes Gibsol'l Leonard, stonemason Pearson Henry, shoemkr. & parish clerk Walker William, farmer PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Sarah Trolley, receiver. Letters Free School, Charles Goodson, master; Miss :Elizabeth anive from Grantham at 8 a.m. & are dispatched at 5.30 Goulding, mistress p.m. T.he nearest money order office is at Grantham

BARTO!IT-U'POl\1'-BUMBER which have recently been placed under the surveillance IsasmallmarkdtownontheHumber,distant6milessouth- of the Charity Commissioners for and Wales. west from Hull by water~ 34 north from Lincoln, and l65 In 1669 Thomas Holland gave a piece of laRd, now called north from . A branch of the Manchester, Sheffield Paradise Close, for maintaining an almshouse fur the l'ecep­ and Lincoln railway leaves this town, and joins the Great tion of four poor widows. In 1701 Christopher Benton Northern railway at Great . It is m the hundred bequeathed the Chantry House as an almshouse for the of Yarborough, union of , division of Lindsey, diocese poor. The Bluecoat charity, which clothes 70 poor men and arehde;wonry of I.incoln, and deanery of Yarborough, and women, was the bequest of William Tripp in 1679. situate on the south border of the river Humber. George The surplus of the rents of the Barrow charity, left Bradley, Esq., of Co.stleford, in the county of York, is lord by Ma.gdalea George in 1729, affords also about 20 coat~ for of the manor -of Barton, whicb. is co-extensive with the the poor annually. About .£.30 a year, derived from various parish, and includes about 6,058 acres of rich land. Many eharities, is distributed in coals to the poor; and the of the copy holders have lately enfranchised their lands, and interest of £300, left by .Alice lngle in 1830, is distributed as the lord has offered every facility for their doing so, the monthly in bread. Barton is a town of great antiquity. whole of the eopyholds will, no doubt, soon be enfranchised. In the Doomsday Survey Barton is called. Berton-super­ The living is a vicarage, va.lue .£250, in the gift of George Humber, the origin of which name is supposed to have Charles Uppleby, Esq.; the Rev. George Hogarth, M.:l.., is had reference to some defensive or protecting station of the the present incumbent, and the Rev. George Day, :o •.A.., is Romans; in fact, the remains of a rampart and fos.o;e are curate. There are two churches in this town, St. Peter's still discernible in what are called the Castle dikes. When and St. Mary's. The following remarks are collected from Edward II I. issued his mandate to raise a force for the in• Rickman's work on Architecture. He names but two vasion of France, Barton furnished {) ships and 91 men, churches in England as of (almost) undoubted Saxon origin The Doomsday Survey also states that Barton contained a -St. Peter's, in Ba.rton, -and Clapham, in Bedfordshire. church, a priest, two mills of 40s., a market, and a ferry of Referring to the former, after an elaborate description of £4 -value. At the Norman accession it was a corporntti the tower, he remarks," .All this arrangement is so different town. A court-leet is held here annually; also a county from Norman work that there seems a probability it may be court, held every other month, for the recovery of debts real Saxon." The new church of St. Mary stands within under £50. George Charles Uppleby, Esq., Rev. William 150 yards of the old church, and is principally a Norman Carr Brackenbury Clark, Thomas Tomblaseu, ES(j., and building, with an Early English tower and 4 bells, a chancel Major Taylor, are the magistrates who usually attend the of the same, and a very Eal'ly Decoratro. east window, cba:rter bench, The population in 18M wa.s-Bal'ton St. which, of course, renders it necessary to go hack to the Pete'r, 1,818; Barton St. Mary, 2,048; total, 3,866; being Conquest, at least, for the date of the old one. Both an increase since 1841 of 400 persons, A branch of the churches are in excellent repair. In 1840 a Roman Catholic Manchester, Sheffield and railway runs to chapel was erected. The Wesl.eyans, Independents, and New Holland station, and communication is had thence Primitive Methodists have each a chapel here. There are by ateamboats to Hull. There are also horse and e&ttle National and Wesleyan schools for the education of boats &everal times a day to Hull and Hessle, Sundays the poor of both sexes, and £20 a year is annually excepted. The chief trade of the town is tanning~ Dlalting, expended '()D the education of poor children by the newly.. brick, tile, ro~ and whiting manufactures! and there ~re appointed trustees under Long and Fountain'& charities, several eorn mills. PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Dannatt Mr. William, F1eetgate Holgate Misses, Fleetgate Adamson Mr. Thomas, Sheepdike walk Davies Mr. Robert, West parade Holgate Mrs. Louisa, Queen street · Agar Mrs. Elizabeth, West parade Day Rev. George, B.A. £curate], Holt Rev. GeorgeWilliam, Ba:rdney hall .Aistrop Miss Pri~stgate Waterside road Hoyle Rev. James [Independent], Allison Mr. Thomas, High street Doughtv Mr. William, Newport street Chapel lane Altham Rev. Isaac, lugs lane Eddie Wm. Hesleden, esq. Priestgate Hudson Mrs. Hannah, Burgate Ashton William, esq. Waterside road Everett Mrs. Fleetgate Ingram George, esq. High street Beek Mr.George, High street Featherstone Rev. Peter [Wesleyan], Johnson Mrs. Queen street Bord Mrs. Chapel lane Bank street Knight Rev. James, M".A. High street Bower Thomas, csq. Newport street Finn George, esq. Hig·h street Legard Mr. DriffieldL Hungate Bratten Mr. Thomas, High street France Mrs. Susan, Hungate Lunn John W. esq. Haysgarth l3rice 14Im Elizabeth, High street Gee lUr. John, 1 Castle dykes Mackrill Mrs. High street Brown Misses, Whitecross street Gibson Mr. William, West Acridge Mackrill Joseph, esq. Prospect place Brown R.obert, e&cJ• Priestgate Goy Wm. Hilliard, esq. Whitecross st Mason Hen. Edwd. esq. Whitecross st purg_e R~tv. Goorge LaWNnce [Catho- Gresham John, esq. Priestgate l\Iorley John, esq. Bm-gate lie J, Priestgate Hall Robert, Ea.~t Acridge N owell Mrs. Prospect place Bygott Miss Sarah, Whitecross street Hamilton Mr. William, West Acridge Pechell Alfred Henry, esq. Fleetgate Bygott Robert, esq. B:urgate Harker Mrs. Queen street Philp Rev. John [Wesleyan], Bank 1${; Cook Mi~.s A.lice, Hig~ ~ree~ J!ogartl;t ~ey. George7 M.A, [vicar) • Porter Mrs. :Elizabeth~ Hungate