DIRECTORY.] . KETTERING HAM, 195 ham. A market for cattle and poultry is held every 1\ionday Post, M.O. & T.O.,T.M.O.,Express Delivery,S. H. & Annuity in a1yard belonging to the Crown hotel, toll free. The fairs, & Insurance Office-Charles Buxton, postmaster. Letters for sheep and neat cattle are held on July r8th and Septem­ through delivered at~ 7.0 a. m. & 4·45 p.m. ; dis­ ber 3oth. In r892, Lord Egerton of Tatton, erected a room patched at II.o a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ; sundays, delivered 7.0 for meetings and concerts for the use of parishioners a.m.; dispatched II.20 a.m. Wall Letter Boxes, on the free. Kenninghall is supposed to have been the seat of Heath, cleared at 6 p.m. week days, sundays at I r. xo a. m.; Queen Boadicea and the East Anglian Kings, and some Church street, cleared 6.ro p.m. week days, no collection on ancient mounds supposed to mark the site of the royal castle sundays are still visible; the parks are now converted into farms A School Roard of 5 members was formed May 22, 1871' ; called ''Kenninghall Place." The Duke of Norfolk K.G. is clerk to the board & attendance o!Ii.cer, Albion Graham lord of the manor, which is an ancient demesne held by Williams, The Limes service as chief butler at Coronations, and the Ecclesiastical C()lllmissioners are owners of the Rectory manor. The Duke Board School, built in 18721 at a cost of about £840, & of Norfolk K.G. and Lord Egerton of Tatton are the chief enlarged in 1895 at a further cost of £665, for go boys, land owners. The land is mixed soil ; subsoil, chiefly clay So girls and 55 infants ; average attendance,· 71 boys, and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. 74 girls and 40 infants; Arthur Benjamin Smith, master; The area is 3,669 acres ; rateable value, £4,310 ; the Miss Maria Cracknell, mistress. population in 1891 was t,o67, including 54 officers and in­ Carriers to :­ mates of the Guiltcross Union workhouse. Diss-John NoUer, fri Parish Clerk, Jeremiah Mordey. Norwich-Vout & Filby, wed. and saL. PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Claxton John, sen. baker Long Henry, farmer Bane Misses Claxton John, jun. Red Lion P.H. Long IIannah M. (Mrs.), dress maker Bauly Miss, The Terrace assistant overseer & clerk to pansh Lusher Christopher, shoe maker Coe George S council Mallott Alfred, builder Fincham William, Kenninghall place Cole James, master of Guiltcross Union Mallott John, carpenter Jolley Mrs. The Grange workhouse Miller Louis C. solicitor (firm Stevens, M urton Thomas Cracknell John William, farmer Miller & Jones), and at Norwich Palmer Leonard J osep h Dodman Charles, insurance agent 1\Etson Alfred, blacksmith Pilgrim Mrs. Eagling Henry, carpenter Murton & Turner, iron & brass founders, Potter Miss, New villa Ellis Waiter William, farmer engineers & agricultural implement Turner Frederick Fincham William, farmer, Kenninghall manufacturers, Guiltcross iron works. Tyler Rev. Wm. Waiter B. D. Vicarage place Mordey Alfred, saddler Williams Albion Graham, The Limes Fordha.m Arthur Georgc, miller (wind) Mowle Henry, farmer COMMERCIAL, & farmer Parr Alfred, grocer & draper Avis Selina Miss, farmer .Fox Charles, bootmaker Peveritt Robert, miller (wind) Halls Lewis, White Horse P.H. French Joseph, farmer Reading Room (Thoma...o; Wallis, sec) BarkawayAlfred, shoemaker & shop kpr. Garrett Nathaniel, Royal Georgo P.H. Riches Leonard, butcher, poulterer & Barker Thomas, blacksmith & wheelwright farmer Barker William Thomas, farmer Gibson Thomas, grocer & draper Rolfe Ada (.Mrs.), dressmaker Bateman Davi, beer retailer Greenwood James, butcher Rolfe Oscar, tailor Heales Arnold, pork butcher Gunns Robert, farmer Sbepheard Thomas Cubitt, shopkeeper· Beales Sarah Ann (Mrs.), butcher Holrnan Frederick, corn merchant & & farmer Berry William Henry, relieving & school miller (steam & wind) Snelling Harper Chas., grocer & draper attendance officer and registrar of Holman William, sen. farmer Spurling Robert, shopkeeper marriages for Guiltcross union and Holman William,jun.farmer, Wash farm Stevens, Miller & Jones, solicitors, & mllector to guardians, vaccination Holmes William, fowl dealer steward of Kenninghall Rectory officer & registrar of births and deaths Hubbard Thomas Henry, Crown family manor, & at Norwich for Kenninghall sub-district, The & commercial hotel, posting in all its Wallis Thomas, stationer Villa branches, billiards, bowling green, & Ward Herbert, tailor Betney Henry, farmer tents let on hire Wells Alexander, miller (wind & steam} Blackburn George, farmer Hunt Gabriel, Prince of Wales P.H. Williams Albion Graham, accountant, Bloomfield Ann (Miss), dress maker Jessop Elijah, farmer clerk & attendance officer t~ Boreham George, currier & leather seller Jones Arthur W., LL.H. solicitor (firm Kenninghall school board, & clerk to Eoyce George Henry, plumber & glazier Stevens, Miller & Jones), and at United District school Burrows Charles, jun. farmer Norwich board, & clerk to Dyers Charity Butcher Frederick Wm. grocer & draper Kemp Christopher, brick maker trustees, & agent to the Norwich. Buxton Charles, postmaster Kettle George Frederick, baker Union Fire & Life, & Standard Euxton Kate (Miss), grocer & draper Knights Thomas, farmer Insurance Offices, The Limes Clarke James, farmer LongJoseph, deputy registrar of births, Witham .John Henry, farmer ClarkeRobert Gayford,frmr.Heath frm deaths & marriages for the Guiltcross Bobert, farmer Claxton David, jun. market gardener union Youels Robert, farmer & cattle dealer KERDISTON, see Reepham. KESWICK is a parish on the river Yare, 3 miles south. John Hy. Gurney esq. D.L., J.P. who is lord of the manor of south-west from Norwich, in the Southern division of the Intwood-cum-Keswick and chief landowner. Keswick Old county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Humbleyard Hall, an ancient mansion about 3 miles from the city of Nor­ hundred, Henstead union and Norwich county court dis- wich, has been the property of the Gurney family above 150 trict. Of the church of All Saints little now remains but years; it now belongs to J. H. Gurney esq. and is the· the round tower, which occupies an elevated site. Divine residence of Edward Knight esq. The soil is sandy in service was last held in the church in r6o2, but burials places; subsoil, chalk and marl. The chief crops are continued subsequently. In 1893 the old tower was re- wheat, oats and barley. The area is 741 acres; rateable stored, and a part of the ruined nave rebuilt for the value, £1,478; the population in x8gx was 187. purpose of a mortuary chapel, and the churchyard sur­ Post Office.-Gcorge Stone, sub-postmaster. Letters tc­ rounded by an iron railing, the cost of which was defrayed ceived from all parts through Norwich at 7 a. m.; dis­ by J. H. Gurney esq. Mr. Herbert Green of Norwich being patched at 5·45 p. m. ; sunday, II. 15 a. m. Postal orders the architect. The living is a rectory, consolidated with that are issued here, but not paid. The nearest money order of Intwood. Here is a reading room, built by J. H. Gurney & telegraph office is at Ea ton esq. and opened in Y887. Here is an extensive corn mill, worked by the river Yarc. Keswick Hall is the residence of The children of this place attend the school at Cringleford Gurney John Henry,D.L., J.P. Keswick Candler Horace Robert, miller (steam Reynolds John William, farmer hall & water), Keswick mills Taylor John, cow keeper Knight Edward, Keswick Old hall Reading Room (Mrs. Green, caretaker) KETTERINGHAM is a. parish and vi'l.lage 1 mile south- wich. The church of St. Peter is an edifice chiefly of flint west from•Hethersett station on ·1;_he Thetford and Norwich stone, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, Section of the Great Eastern railway, 3~ miles east from nave, north porch, vestry and a wes~rn tower surmounted Wymondham and 6 south-west from Norwich, in the at the angles by two full-sized figures of angels, one of St. Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty ses- Peter and one large pinnacle, and containing 5 bells and a sional division, Humbleyard hundred, Henstead union, clock, ereeted in 1870 by Sir F. G. Manningham Boileau Wymondham county court district, rural deanery of bart.: the east window was once entirely filled with stained IIumbleyard, a.rchdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of ~or- glass to the Grey family, but only a few fragments now NORFOLK. 13*