134 LAITBKIRK. NORTH RIDING . (KELLY's Hague John, gamekeeper to Henry C. Westbury Lord, Wemmergill ball; & Forster Thomas, jun. farmer, Ythes hill Bonsor esq. M.P 30 Hill street, Berkeley square w; & Horne Thomas, butcher Hind J oseph, farmer, Lonton Carlton, Naval &; Military & Guards' Howe Margt. (Mrs.), farmer, Bow bank Lee Thomas, Strathmore Arms P.H clubs, s w Kew George, farm.er, Tbringarth Lowes John, farmer, Lonton COMMERCIAL. Kipling John, farmer, Stockholme Lowes John, jun. blacksmith Addison Thomas, mason Lee Thomas, farmer, Mount Alexander Millen John, farmer, Allens bill Allison Henry, farmer & miller (water), Longsta:ff John, farmer, Greengate Ord & Maddison, ston() quarry owners, Grassholme Lunedale Whinstone Co. (Joseph Hods. Lonton Allison Mark, farmer, Cronkley farm man, manager) Raine James, farmer, Middle farm Bainbridge James, farmer, Thringarth . Morton William, farmer, Bow bank Raine Robert, fal'mer Bainbridge John, farmer, Rigg Peacock Joseph, farmer, Blake house Raine Thomas, farmer, Hungry Bainbridge Robert, farmer, Turn bill Porter Thomas, farmer, & Pool House Raine Thos.gamekpr. to Lord Westbury Rain bridge Wm. fal'mer, Thringarth inn, Bow bank Raine ·william, farmer, Park end Bayles Robert, farmer, Scarhead Raine Chas. farmer & assistant overseer Shield John, shopkeeper & farmer Breckenfield Fras.&Jsph.frmrs.West ho Raine George, farmer, l'urnerlwlme Shield Joseph, farmer Brown John, farm bailiff to the Earl of Raine Parkin, farmer, Rigg Rhields "RNJ.dle James, farmer Strathmore . Raine Wm. farmer & gamekpl'. Kirk ho Sh1elds Henry Beadle, farmer Cameron William, farmer, West park Raine William, farmer, Chapel house Stevenson William, farmer, Step ends Collinson George, farmer, Wemmergill Robinson John, farmer, High selset

Sutherland William, farmer, Lonton Collison Joseph, head gamekeeper to 1 Sayer Thomas, farmer, Thwaites Tallentire George, farmer, The Mizzas Lord West bury Shield Margaret(Mrs. ),frmr.Grasshlme Watson Ed ward, farmer Dent Henry, farmer, Low Wemmergill Smith Jane (Mrs.), farmer, Grassholme Watson Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Dent John, farmer, East park Smith Thomas, farmer, Slack ' Wearmouth William, farmer, Mire bo Dent John Kipling, farmer Sowerby James, farmer, Yythes hall Dent Sarah (Miss), farmer & beer re- Sowerby Jn.Launcelot,frmr.High selset Lunedal e. i tailer, Grains O'Beck Sowerby Thomas, farmer, Lunehead Bell Rev. \V m. Robinson [vicar], Vicarage Dowson John, farmer, Stake hill Watson Hannah (Mrs.), dress maker Breckenfield Mrs I Faddon Margt. (Mrs.), Saddle Bow P.H Wearmouth John, farmel', Nettlepot 1 Dent John, Low nook, Thringarth ~ Forster Thomas, farmer, Bow bank 1 Williams Wm. miningagent,Lune head GREAT I.ANGTON (or Langton-u:pon-Swale), with . GREAT LANGTON is a township and parish, on the banks of and Mr. Dobson. The soil is clay and gravel; subsoil, stiff the , 4 miles north-west from Ainderby station clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area on the and Hawes branch, and 4 miles south- of the township is 8IO acres of land and 18 of water; rate­ west from Danby-Wiske railway station on the main line of able value £824; the population of the township in x8gx wa.s the North Eastern railway and 6 north-west from N orthal- 99· lerton, in the Richmond division of the Ridinf!, union and Little Langton is a township in the parish of Great county court district of Northallerton, wapentake and petty Langton; the village adjoins. Langton Hall, the property sessional diviswn of East Gilling, rural deanery of East of Captain William Henry Fife J.P. is a mansion of brick Richmond, archdcac·onry of Richmond and dioce~ of Ripon. standing in 8 park of 6s acres. Captain w. H. Fife is The church (dedication unknown) is a small building of lord of the manor and principal landowner. The soil is clay; stone of the 12th century, consisting of chancel, nave, south the subsoil the same. The chief crops are wheat, oats and porch and a western turret containing one bell: there are beans. The area is 989 acres of land and r 7 of water; ratc­ I50 sittings. The register dates from the year 1695. The !!.ble value, £ 1 , 070 : the population in 1891 was 6 . living is a rectory, average yearly value from tithe rent- 9 charge £235, with 6 acres of glebe, and residence, in the gift Parish Clerk, John Metcalfe. ·of the Dean and Chapter of York, and held since 1856 by t>osT OFFICE, Great Langton.-Mrs. Sa.rah Pearson, sub- the Rev. Charles Edward Band B.A. of Exeter College, postmistress. 1 Letters arrive at 8 a. m. from North· Oxford. The mission chapel of the Good Shepherd, allerton ; dispatched at 4.40 p.m. Scorton is the nearest licensed in 1877 will seat 9° persons. There is money order & Kii·by Fleetham the nearest telegf"dph office a Wesleyan chapel here. Vice-Admiral the Hon. Waiter Cecil Carpenter J.P. of .Nall, Bolton-upon-Swale, is National School (mixed), endowed with £6oo by the late lord of the manor. The principal landowners are Mr. John Mrs. Redfern, for so children; average attendance, 35; West, Mr. E. H. Courage, Mr. C. Clarke, Mr. John Wilson John William Dawson, master Great Langton. Metcalfe Christopher, blacksmith Little Langton. Band Rev. Charles Edward [rector], Metcalfe John, tailor Dinsdale William, farmel' The Rectory Peaeock Matthew, farmer Elgie Henry, farmer Fife Ca t. Wm. H . J.P. Langton hall P~acock Matthe~ Henry, farmer Graves Henry, land steward to Capt. P Y P1ace Thomas, timber merchant COMMERCIAL. W'lk" W"ll" f b "l"ff t J h William Henry l<'ife 1 mson 1 1am, arm at 1 0 0 n Peacock Abraham, farmer Bainbridge John William, farmer Barker esq Smith Mary (Mrs.), farmer Barker Josepb, farmer Wilson Thomas, farmer Smith Robert, jun. farmer Bendoll Edward Thomas,head gardener Wright Margaret (Mrs.), Three Horse • to Capt. William Henry Fife Shoes P.H LASTINGHAM, or LESTINGHAM, is a. township, parish west window is also stained : the tower appears to have and village, 4 miles north-by-east from Kirby Moorside, 3! been built into the church, and its walls contain the piers miles from Sinnington station on the Gilling and Pickering and arches of at least one bay, formerly part of the nave: • branch of the North Eastern railway, 6~ north-west from the crypt, which extends under the whole church, with the Pickering and 15 north-north-west from Malton, in the exception of the western bay, is in fact an underground

Whitby di-vision of the Riding, wapentakf\ and petty sessional church, probably uf Early Norman construction._ JC. ICJ90 1 division of Ryedale, union of Pickering, county court dis- and consists of apsidal chancel of two bays, and a nave and rict of Malton, rural deanery of Helmsley, archdeaconl'y of aisles of three bays, with a. vaulted roof carried on massive Cleveland and diocese of York. piers and capitals enriched with interlaced arches and rude This place was the site of a monastery founded in 648 by St. volutes ; in the crypt are preserved some stone crosses Cedd, a. Saxon bishop, and brother of St. Chad, bishop of carved with interlaced work ; a Roman altar 17 inches high Lichfield, and which in IOJB-88 became a cell to Whit by; by 14 inches wide, and a pre-Reformation bier, which is St. Cedd was eventually buried in the stone church of St. still in use: the windows, small and circular headed, are Mary, erected some time aftel' his decease, and the present deeply splayed ; the church was repaired and beautified in church, if it does not incorporate portions of the early struc- I835, from designs by Mr. Jackson, when the eastel"Il a.pse ture, at least occupies its site, and the very interesting crypt was altered and much injured in order to display the altal'­ below the church confirms this view. The church consists piece mentioned above ; in r879 it was completely rP.stored of a Norman apsidal chancel, clerestoried nave of Early under the direction of J. L. Pearson esq. R.A., F.S.A, archi­ English date, 1!. 1190, aisles of three bays on the north, and tect, at a cost of £3,300, defrayed by Sydney Ringer M. D. four on the south side, south porch, and a Perpendicular of London, and the l<~cclesiastical Commissioners: there are embattled western tower containing 3 bells: the chancel 245 sittings. The register dates from the year I559· The

retains a piscina and credence table, and has five memorial living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £1971 net windows of Italian glass ; the former altar-piece, a copy of yearly value £255, including 70 acres of glebe, with resi­ Correggio's "Christ in the Garden," by John Jackson R.A. dcnce, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since is now placed on the north side of the pulpit: in the south I89o by the Rev. James Simpson Salman M.A. of St. John's aisle are memorial windows to Annie, dauc;hter of Sydney College, Cambridge. The appropriate tithe amounts to Ringer M.D. and to Thomas and. Lydia Abbey, 1838; the,£468, and belongs to t-he Ecclesiastical Commissioners and a