DI.RECTORY.] . SC.AMPTON. . 379 dates from the year I563. The living is a. vicarage, consoli­ HIGH and Low INGLEBY (br !ngoldby) are hamlets about

dated with that of Ingleby, gross yearly value £ rso, includ­ one mile north from Saxilby• . ing 129 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Bishop of Lincoln, Parish Clerk, William Gilbert. and held since 1884 by the Rev. Robert Thomas Huthersal PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.­ Sammons M.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. The Mis­ Henry Read, postmaster. Letters are received through sion church of St. Andrew, near the railway station, was Lincoln at 7·45 a.m.; dispatched at 6.10p.m erected in 1879, from designs by Mr. Goddard, of Lincoln, at a cost of about £I ,ooo, and has 300 sittings. Here ScHOOLS:- are Wesleyan Methodist and Primitive Methodist chapels. National (mixed), erected in I84S• for ISO children, & Saxilby is near the Fosdyke navigation, on which there are enlarged in I888 for I go; average attendance, I35; Henry wharfs. Here is a Roman barrow. The land is freehold. Brunt, master The principal landowners are Willia.m Rudgard esq. Charles Infants', built in r87I, for 74 children; average attendance, Foster Paddison esq. of Ingleby, F. J. Burton and John so ; Miss Emily Williams, mistress Kirk Gibson esq. of Ingleby. The soil is loamy; subsoil, Railway Station, Walter Pott, station master clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and beans. CARRIER BY WATER:- The area is 4,270 acres; rateable value, £n,465; the popu­ William Denman, market boat for goods & passengers, lation in 1881 was z,rgr. passes through from Torksey to Lincoln, every fri Harrison Edward, blacksmith Shepherd George, veterinary surgeon Saxilby. Issitt Davison, saddler ShepherdThos.Holmes,farrier& castratr Bailey Misses, The Grange IJackson Wm.Porter,manager of Lindsey Simpson John, grocer Bisserot Mrs. Rose villa & Kesteven manure manufactory Slack Frederick, farmer May Mrs Keyworth Joseph, farmer Smith William, plumber Ra.inbird Horace, Fossdyke house Keyworth William, butcher Suttaby Joseph (Mrs.), saddler SammonsRev.RobertThomas Huthersal Kirton Frederick Wass, shoe maker Turner Joseph, Railway inn, & butcher M.A. [vicar J Kirton John, shoe maker Ward Thomas, inland revenue officer Sergeant Mrs Laughton John, farmer ·watmough George, blacksmith Smith Boys Lincoln Equitable Co-operative Indus- Wheatley Jn. Ship P.H. & coal merchant COMMERCIAL. trial Society Limited (Alien Chantry, Wheatley Thomas, baker Alien William, farmer manager) White Benjamin, joiner & builder Ancliff Edward, farm bailiff to Mrs. Lindsey & Kesteven Chemical Manure Whittaker John, ~Iasons' Arms P.H Keyworth Co. Lim. (Wm. Porter Jackson, Whittaker Thos. coal mer. & shopkpr Atkinson George, tailor manager). See advertisement "'ilson Charles Forster, chemist Bailey J oycey, beer retailer Marshall Hy. farmer, Jubilee house Wright Charles, boot maker Bird William, farmer Marshal! Richard, farmer "'right George, market gardener Cammack Eleker, farmer Marshal! William, wheelwright Capes Gamaliel, farmer Middleton James Brumby, builder Ingleby. Codling Thomas, tailor Moody George, farmer, Manor house Clarke James, farmer Curtois Myra (Mrs.), shopkeeper Newton John, farmer Fitchett Thomas, farm bailiff to T_ Dickinson Francis, shoeing smith & gro Pa.rmau John, hair dresser Smithson esq. High Ingleby Drury William, farmer Rainbird Horace L.R.C.P.Edin. surgeon, Gibson John Kirk, farmer & landowner,. Ford Thomas, Sun P.H medical officer & public vaccinator to Low Ingleby Forrington John Turner, farmer & corn No. ro district, Lincoln union, Foss­ Paddison Charles Foster, farmer &. merchant, Odda farm ; & at Lincoln dyke house landowner, Low Ingleby Gra.venorJn. Thos. miller t wind & steam) Rawding Henry, farmer, Odder farm Parker John, farmer, Low Ingleby Hardy William, joiner Read Henry, grocer, Post office Parr Isaac, farmer, High Ingleby Harris Edward, farmer Robinson Charles, shoe maker Ra.nby Fra.ncis, farmer, Low lngleby SCAMBLESBY is a large village and parish, situated tive Methodist chapels. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners,. on the roa.d from Louth to , 4 miles south-east who are lords of the manor, the Dean and Chapter of Lin­ from Donington-upon-Bain station on the Louth and Lincoln coln, Mr. John Bourne and Mr. Samuel Topliss, of Eastgate,. J.Jranch of the Great Northern railway, 7 south-west from Louth, are the chief landowners. The soil is clay, chalk and Louth and 6 north-by-east from Horncastle, in the East sand. The principal crops are wheat, barley, oats and turnips. Lindsey division of the county, parts of Lindsey, northern The area is 2,rso acres; rateable value, £~,246; the popu­ division of the wapentake of Gartree, Horncastle petty ses- lation in r88r was 364. sional division, union and county court district, rural deanery Parish Clerk, Joseph Bourne. of Horncastle, archdeaconry of Stow and . PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- The church of St. Martin is a small edifice of brick in the J oseph Topliss, sub-postmaster. Letters received through Early English style, consisting of chancel and nave and a Horncastle, arrive at 9· 2S a. m. ; dispatched at 4 p.m. western turret containing one bell: there are evident re- Horncastle is the nearest telegraph office mains of two aisles: the turret was restored in r883: the National School (mixed), built in 1849, at a cost of £2so, church plate includes a. chalice of silver, dated 1712 : there for go children ; average attendance, 6o ; Miss Mary are 100 sittings. The register dates from the year 1569. Sophia Frogga.tt, mistress The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £3oo, with resi- CARRIERS:- dence, in the gift of the Bishop of Lincoln, and held since Alfred Bond & Joseph Parish, to Louth, every wed. ; to x86o by the Rev. Thomas White B. A. of St. John's College, Horncastle, every sat Cambridge. The rectory is in the hands of the Ecclesiastical Willia.m Lill, to Louth, every wed. & fri.; to Horncastle,. Commissioners for . Here are Wesleya.n and Primi- every sat Bell Charles, ~camblesby Thorpe Crow George, farm bailiff to Tom Lill George & John, farmers Cartwright Thomas, Manor house Casswell esq Lill Jabez, farmer & landowner Dixon William Dunn Clarke, saddler Lill vVilliam, carrier Lill Jabez Dunn John, bricklayer North William, farmer White Rev. Thos. B.A. [vicar], Vicarage Farmery William, carpenter Parish J oseph, carrier Grant James, farmer Sanderson William, farmer COMMERCIAL. Green Gunthorpe, Green Man P.H Topliss Jsph.draper & grocer, Post office Bond Alfred, carrier • Holden Willia.m,miller (wind) & farmer Trafford John, farmer Bourne Henry, wheelwright J ohnson Michael, tailor Wilson George, baker Bourne John, farmer & landowner Ladley John, blacksmith Woodroffe "'illiam Todd, farmer Bourne Ma.ry (Mrs.), farmer Leake Charles, farmer Young Fred, farm bailiff to Charles Buruett George, shoe maker Leary John, farmer Bell esq SCAMPTON is a parish, s! miles north-north-west from was rebuilt at the sole expense of the late Sir Digby Cayley Lincoln and 6t north-east from Saxilby station on the Great bart. of Brompton, Yorks, and his son, the Rev. Reginald Northern and Great Eastern joint railway, in the West Lind- Arthur Cayley M. A. late rector, a vestry and organ chamber aey division of the county, parts of Lindsey, wapentake of added, and the north aisle completely rebuilt, under the Lawress, Lincoln (Bail and Close) petty sessional division, direction of Messrs. Bodley and Garner, of , archi­ union and county court district of Lincoln, rural deanery of tects: there are brasses on the floor to Sir John Bolle hart_ Lawress No. 2, archdeaconryof Stow and diocese of Lincoln. of Scampton, ob. 8th March, 1648, and Catherine (Conyers) The church of St. John the Baptist is a small edifice of stone, his wife, ob. 1644 : there are I Bo sittings. The register in the Early English style, with remains of Norman work, dates from the year 1548. The living is a discharged and consists of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and rectory, tithe rent-charge £Igo, net yearly value £253, an embattled western tower with pinnacles, containing 3 including 21 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of bells: the church was restored in 1877, when the chancel Mrs. Bingham, and held since r884 by the Rev. Samuel