• • . DIRECTORY. ] CU~IBERLAKD. CLOFFOCKS. 115

Tremble Joscph, Prudential Assurance agt. Jacktrees I'd Cocoa &; Coffee House Co. Lim. (branch) Turner John, grocer &; draper, 31 Leconfield street (Joseph ("'bisam, manager), 10 High street Walker Sarah (Mrs.), fruit-erer, 56 llig-h street WhitBhaven Hematite, Iron &; Steel Co. Lim. (William Walsh John, beer retailer, 8 Aldby str&(}t McCowan &; \Villiam Burnyeat, direotors; John Fleteher KirkC'Onel, managing director; A.nthony Edmund Lamb, Walsh Patriek, Union inn, Leconfield street >'lee.), offices, 01eator mllor. See advertisement Ward Henry, Queen's Arms hotel, I Birks I'd. &; High st WhitEJohaven Joint Stock Banking Co. Limited. (branch) Ward Patrick, beer retailer, 100 Birks road (John Bewley, agent), High street; draw on London Wath Brow Reading Rooms (Thomas Christian, soc.), Joint Stock Bank Lim. London EC Wath brow William" Hugh, insurance agent, Ennerdale road Watson George, mineral water manufctr. Wath brow Williams Wm. Edwd. shoemaker &; clogger, 64 High sb Watson Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 30 Ennerdale road Wi1son Mary (Mrs.), Royal Oak P.R. Bowthorn road , CLIFTON is an ecclesiastical p!lrish consisting of LITTLE CLIFTO~ is a township and village in the Great and and constituted in 1858 from the of \Yorkington, about 3! miles east, ~ mile parish of St. Michaels, ; it is in the Cocker­ south-west of Bridgefoot station, there is also a station mouth division of the county, ward of A.llerdale-above­ II.t Marron Junction ! a mile north on the London and Derwent, Workington petty sessional division, Cocker­ North Western railway, but it is mostly used for mineral mouth union, and Workington county traffic, there being no direct road to the station. The court district, and in the rural deanery of Cockermouth, church, which stands on an eminence near the village, archdeaconry of \Yestmorland and diut:ese of . is a small but ancient building of stone of Norman date and consists of chancel, nave, western porch, and an GREAT CLIFTON is a township and village; the optm western belfrv containing two bells: there are 100 village is on the south side of the river Derwent i a sittings. The register dates from the year 1822. The milB !Outh from OdUlerton station on the London· and living is a vicarage, gross yearly value about £180, wiili North We8tern railway. 2~ east from Workington, and 39 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the rector 5' west from Cockermouth. The \Vesleyan Chapel, of 'Vorkington, and held since 1882 by the Rev. Edward rebuilt in 1892, will seat 80 persuns, and there is a M ulholland Rice M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin. The MBchanics' Hall, with a reading room and a small library. Earl of Lonsdale is lord of the manor and chief land­ In the parish are brickworks and lime kilns, and a owner. The soil is heavy clay; subsoil, blue clay. The colliery belonging to the Coal Co. Limited. chief crops are wheat, oats and turnips. The ~mm is Clifton House, the property of the trustees of the late 1,062 acres of land and 18 of water; rateable value, Rev. Thomas \Yilliam Falcon M.A. reetor of Charlton- £1,821; the population in r89[ was 507. on-Otmoor, Oxon, 1862-83, but now unoccupied, is a handsome mansion, on an elevated and attractive site Hoard School, Chapel Brow, huilt in 1859 for 120 hoys &; and commanding extensive r;rospects both seaward and 140 g~rls &,. infants, average attendance, [05. boy". &; 'rh Elf L d . I d f th d 141 gIrls &, ll1fants, John Ellwood, master; MISs EdIth in!and. e ar 0 ons a e IS or 0 e manor an L k . t . principal landowner. The soil is heavy clay; subsoil. . uc , mIS ress blue clay and coal. The chief crops are wheat, oats and I Hallw~y StatIon, ylarron Junction, Edward Telford, turnips. 'rhe area is 978 acres of land and 20 of water; statIOn master rateable value, £3,619; the population in 1891 was 960. BRIDGEFOOT is a small village on the river Marron, P08t &, M. O. 0., S. B., Annuity &, Insurance &, Parcel in the townships of Little elifton and Grey Southen, Offiee, Thomas Kendall Tinnion, sub-postmaster. with a. st

CLOFFOCKS is a parish now included in the borough The RHl of Lonsrlale is lord of the manor and owner of of Workington, in the Cockermouth division of the county, all the land. The soil is sandy; SUbsoil, clay; it is partly ward of Allerdale-above-Derwent, petty sessional division covered by the &ea at high tides. The area is 100 acres of Workington, union and county court district of Cocker­ of land, 8 of water, '1:0 of tidal water, and 7 of foreshore; mouth and Workington. There is a paper mill and water rateable value £917; the population in 1891 was :2. works for supplying Cammell & Co. Limited (George The nearest post, money order and telegraph office is at .Anderson, manager), and a running ground, and part of _'Yorkington. the remaining land is rented by a football and cricket club. (For names of residents, see Workington).

CUMB. 8*