776 CHA SHEFFIELD SUBURBS. here in 1895, and will seat 250 persons. Services are & 6.5 p.m. and are dispatched at 7.30 & 11.0 & 6.5 & conducted by the vicar of St. George's, . 8.10 p. m. Catcliffe Station is the nearest Telegraph The WESLEYANS have a chapel in the village, built Office. in 1869, at ::~. cost of £450. The Elementary School, built in 1876, at a cost of, The township had 1,232 inhabitants in 1901, on 690 £2,500, is for 180 children. A new school, adjoin. acres of land; rateable value, £8,745. Under the ing the above, was erected in 1900, at a oost of "Sheffield Corporation Act, 1900," 14 acres of this £3,000, for 260 children. An endowment of £10 township was added to the borough of Sheffield. The for teaching ten children of Catcliffe has been con­ extension of colliery operations has caused an increase verled into a scholarship foT the higher education of in the population. one child at the Grammar School. PosT and MoNEY ORDER OFFICE at Frederick RAILWAY.--Catcliffe station, Thos. Clarke, station Rodger's. Letters arrive via Rotherbam at 7.25 a.m. master AITilStrong John Robert, police Hallam William, farmer Roddis John, victualler, Plough constable Lowe Amos, rate collector Rodger ~·rederick, postmaster, gro- Batty Mrs. Mary E. butcher Morris Arthur, boot & shoe maker cer & clerk to the Parish Counci\ Beech Joseph, (j.) joiner Masborough Equitable Pioneers So- Savage John, insurance agent Brewer Thomas John Batten, ciety Limit£d, grocers & drapers &lby Rooort George M.B., C.M. schoolmaster Oakes Miss, schoolmistress ; h. surgeon Brightmore Thomas, farmer Shaw .tlenry, farmer Burton John Thomas, pork butcher Platts John, market gardener Skeet Edgar, boot & shoe repaire! Cable Christopher,grcr.& pork btchr Popplet.on Henry, market gardener, & hairdres.ser Charlesworth Sam, greengrocer Nursery cottage Smith Albert, blacksmith Clarke Thomas, station master Priestley Henry, grocer & news agt 1 Smith William Fredk. estate agent,.

Duckenfield Rt. btchr. & at Treeton Pugh John, draper & grocer I Glasshouse hill; h. Rother cot Foers Harold, butcher Radford Thos. grocer & beer retlr Swinborn Thomas H. grocer Geldard A. S. & Son, grocers Renshaw Samuel, vict. Red Lion htl Thompson James, shopkeeper Guest James, joiner Revi:le Henry, farmer, Highfield I

CHAPELTOWN is a village, situated on the £500. The '\VESLJo:L\N CHAPEL, at Mount Pleasant,.. high road from Sheffield to Barnsley, 6 miles N. of was built in 1866, at a cost of £4,500, in place of an Sheffield, at the junction of the turnpike from earliPr structure erected in 1806. The building is in Rotherham to Wortley and Penistone, and has a the Early French style, and consists of nave and' station, built in 1877, on the Great Central Railway. transepts, with a large square tower at the­ A line was constructed in 1893 by the Midland Rail­ east end, and contains a fine organ, purchased way Co. from Wincobank to Thorncliffe, and opened in 1867. There is another WESLEYAN CHAPEL for passenger traffic, July, 1897. The ecclesiastical at '\Varren, erected in 1859; and one at High Green. district, which includes the villages of Warren, Green­ There are PRIMITIVE .METHODIST chapels at head, Burn Cross, Mortomley Lane End, High Green, Station Road (erected 1884) ; High Green (built 1877)­ Potrer Hill, and Thompson Hill, is in Ecclesficld parish and Burn CrOBs (built 1865). The METHODisT NEW and township, Wortley union, Barnsley county court CoNNEXION CHAPEL is at Potter Hill. The WEsLEYAN district, Chapeltown polling district of the Ha,llam­ REFORM CHAPEL, erecred in 1865, is at Greenhead. The­ shire division of , rural deanery of Eccles­ BuRIAL BoARD was formed in September, 1875. Mr. field, York diocese, and archdeaconry of Sheffield. Charles Barber is clerk to the Board. The CEMETER"!­ Chapeltown ecclesiastical distlict was formed in is situated on the Rotherham and W ortley turnpik~ 1844. In the district are the extensive Thorncliffe roa.d, between Chapeltown and Burn Cross. Th~ ironworks and collieries of Messrs. K ewton, Chambers laying out of the land (purchased of the Earl of Wharn­ & Co. (Limited), who employ about 4,000 hands. A cliffe), and the erection of two mortuary chapels and market is held every Friday. Mortomlcy Hall is the a curator's house, &c. cost £4,000. At Greenhead is a. ancient seat of the Parkin family. Chapeltown, HosPITAL, consisting of six houses and a chap~, Greenhead, Burn Cross, Lane End, and Mortomley endowed by the late Miss Freeman, of Howsley Hall. are lighted with gas by the Sheffield Gas-Light Com­ At Mortomley Lane End are the Lane End Hospitals,. pany, and the Chapeltown special drainage district consisting of seven dwellings for the aged poor, en­ is supplied with water from the Sheffield \Vaterworks dowed by Mrs. Reresby. The PoLICE STATION, erected' by the rural district council of W ortley. There are in 1900, contains a residence for a sergeant, office and two cast-iron tanks at Potter Hill, the capacity of three cells. The WoRKMEN's H.~LL, a large brick which is 140,000 gallons each. David Bell is the building, was erected in 1864 by Messrs. Newton, manager. Chambers & Co. Limited. The WoRKMEN's CLUB­ The CRunCH OF Sr. JoHN, erected in 1859-60, in the AND INsTITUTE, at High Green, was erected in 1900, Early English style, at a cost of about £2.000, was and contains billiard, smoking and games rooms, baths enlarged and renov~tted in 1900-1, at a total cost, in­ &c. Chapelwwn Working Men's Club and Insti­ cluding gifts, of about £3,000, under the direction of tute, opened in 1901 at a cost of £2,500, comprises­ Mr. W. J. Sykes, architect, of Hoyland, and now conversation, billiard, smoking and games rooms, and CDmdsts of chancel, nave, vestries and org-an chamber: also baths, and has about 400 members. The­ the organ was presented by R. K C. Chambers, Esq., Chapeltown and District Sacred Harmonic Society B.A. : the reredos is a memorial to Thoma.s and was established in 1882. Mr. Norman Camps is hon. Hannah Newton and some of their children, and a secretarv.• stained window, brass eagle lecrern, and other orna­ The area of the ecclesiastical parish is 1,600 acres,. ments have been presented: there are sittings for 400 and the population in 1901 was 7, 749. persons. The benefice ia a vicarage, net yearly value £284, in the gift of the Archbishop of York, PosT, MoNEY ORDER and TELEGRAPH 0FFICR at Miss. a.nd held by the Rev. William Surtees L. Th. ~farv H. Gibson's. Letters arrive via Sheffield at 6.30 of Durham university. ST. s.~VIOUR's CHAPEL OF a. m.", 2. 30 & 6. 30 p. m. and dispatched at 12.30, 6. 35· EASE, at Mortomley, was built in 1872, at a cost of p.m., & 8.30 p.m. week days; & 4.40 p.m. sundays. £3,000, in memory of Parkin Jeffcock, Esq., who PosT, ~10NEY ORDER AND TELEGRAPH Oj,'FICE at Mr. lost his life, 13 December, 1866, while endeavouring Frederick Chambers', lligh Green. Letters arrive to rescue the victims of the explosion at the Oaks at 7.40 a.m. and 4.30 p.m. and dispat-ched at 6.0. Colliery, near Barnsley. The Ro~IAN CATHOLIC and 8.20 p.rn. At Burn Cross, Mr. Jame~ CHURCH OF Oun LADY (Refuge for Sinners) is Stringer's is a PosT, MoNEY ORDER, SAVINGS BANK situated at Mortomley, and was erect€d in June. and ANNUITY OFFICE whence letrers are dispatch~ 1866, the cost, inclusive of the Presbytery and at 8.30 a.m. and 6 p.m. \VALL l..ETTEU Box, at Mor-­ Infant School, being about £1,100. The Duke tomley Lane End, cleared at 11.50 a.m. and 6.15 p.m. of Norfolk presented the land, and also defrayed week days only. WALL LETTER :Box at Warren cleare~ the greater portion of the cort, of the buildings. at 12.10 and 6.15 p. m. week days only. WALL. The WESLEYAN CHAPEL was erected in 1864, at ~ LETTER Box at Charlton Brook cleared at 7.30 a..m. cost of £1,400, of which George Chambers, Esq. gave & 7.20 p.m.