468 DIVISION.

J ohnson Henry; h Simpson John Arthur, Holmpton road Kidd Daniel & Leonard Smithson Tennison Robert Hunton (and corn miller) May Edwin, Foot Head garth Wise Thomas (and yeo.), farm Medforth Robert (and carriage proprietor) Woodhouse William, Owthorne grange Peck Frederick, Intack farm SOUTH FRODINGHAM TO\VNSHIP. Farmers. Burnham Joseph Richardson (yeo.), Froding- I Clappison James, Great and Little Newsome ham hall and Willow house and Central farm TOWNSHIP. Barnfather William, joiner and wheelwright Burnham Robert Tennison (yQo.), (the late) J ohnson John, carrier to Hull, Tuesday and Burnham Robert Wilfred; h hill Friday Butcher Mrs. Ann, Little England hill Loty Michael, cowkeeper Dales Edward Marshall William, market gardener Freeman Elijah Hubbard Pybus Mr. John Garton Foster Statters Henry, cowkeeper Lamplugh Harper (yeo.), Renish farm; h Patrington Farmers. May Benjamin Atkinson Mrs. Elizabeth (and market gardener), Stephenson Charles Rimswell lodge Wise Robert Henry TOWNSHIP. Grindell William, shoemaker and cowkeeper Farmers. Richardson J ames, steam thrashing machine Atkinson Georgc (and yeo.) proprietor Atkinson William (and yeo.) Webster Geo., blacksmith; h Cammidge street, Clubley George (and yeo.), Flagstaff house Withernsea Wallis Edward

PATRINGrrON PARISH. Wapentake of Holderness (South Division)-Petty Sessional Division of South Holderness­ County Council Electoral Division and Poor Law Union of Patrington-Oounty Court District of -Rural Deanery of Hedon-Archdeaconry of the East Riding-Diocese of York. This parish and township comprises 3,693 acres of land and 48 acres of fore­ shore, situated in the low narrow tongue of land between the estuary of the and the . The soil is loam, and the subsoil red clay. The rateable value is £6,582, and the population in 1881, was 1,360, and in 1891, 1,127. The land belongs to several proprietors of whom the principal are Waiter James Marshall, Esq. (lord of the manor), Patterdale Hall, "Testmoreland; the Rev. Henry Edward Maddock (lord of the rectorial manor), Patrington Rectory; WaIter Samuel Bailey, Esq., Anlaby; William Chessman, Esq., Ruston House, Patrington; Arthur Henry Easten, Esq., J.P., Dunedin, Patrington; Cooper's Trustees; Mr. Robert Vickerman, Sunk Island; Mrs. George Hodges, Isle of Wight; Richard Thorp, Patrington; George Brown, Sunk Island; 1fr. Edward T. Chessman, Patrington; Bxors. of Isaac Dunn, Messrs. George and Michael Suddaby Meadley, Sunk Island; and Colonel Thompson, York. That Patrington was a place of some importance in the time of our Saxon forefathers can scarcely be doubted, but some antiquaries assign to it a much higher antiquity, and think that it occupies the I;lite of the Prcetori'um of the Romans, or the still older Petuaria of the ancient Britons. The word prcetorium had a wide application among the Romans. In its most common acceptation it signifies a court of justice; it is sometimes used to denote a villa or other stately building, and more generally the residence of the Prffitor. In excavating for the foundations of the railway station at York a small brass was found, on which