Hull Neighbourhood
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HULL NEIGHBOURHOOD. 6i3 the hamlet of Burnham, 2 miles west, was 489, with Letters for Burnbam should be addressed Burnbam, 4,934 acres of glebe; rateable value, £6,589. Barton Parish Clerk, George Oaks. National Schools (mixed), erected in 1873 by the late Post Office.-William Newmarch, sub-postmaster. John Ferraby esq. of \Vootton Hall, to the memory Letters from Ulceby S.O. arrive at 8.20 a.m. ; dis of his wife, Abigail Ferraby, at a. cost of £1,300, patched at 4.20 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, for 100 children ; average attendance, 68 ; W alter but not paid. Barrow-on-Humber is the nearest Dove, master money order & telegraph office Railway Station, George Clark, station master Brocklesby John, Burnham manor Brumpton Thos. Charles, pig dealer Houlton George, farmer, Abbey frm Dixon John Cavill John Francis, farmer & land- .Maw William, farmer, Walk house Goodacre Rev. Charles Bailey B.A. owner, College farm Newmarch William,tailor,Post office Vicarage Davey James, farmer Parrinder Joseph, blacksmith Maw William, Walk house Davy Waiter, farmer Robinson George, farmer COMMERCIAL. Dawson Richard, farmer Sergeant Philip, farmers Abey Edward, farmer Farrow Thomas, farmer, Frogmore Sharpley John Booth, fa...,rnm1er Atkinson George, farmer Haggitt Wesley, grocer & draper Thompson Frederick, farmer Brocklesby John, farmer, Burnham Hall George, 'lhornton Hunt P.H Tinkler William, builder manor Heath Saml. farmer, Thornton hall Turner Frank, farmer THORPE, see WELWICK. TICKTON-CUM-HULL BRIDGE forms a town York, and now the residence of Harold Robinson Pease ship in the parish of St. John, Beverley. Tickton esq. Tickton Grange, a mansion pleasantly situated near is about 2t miles north-east from Beverley, and Hull the village, is the property of Capt. Henry Broadley Bridge, a hamlet, is about 2 miles north-east ; both are Harrison-Broa.dley, and residence of Lieutenant Ernest situated on the road from Beverley to Bridlington, Brass. John Dickson esq. of Wold House, Nafferton, which is carried over the river Hull by a bridge of is lord ()f the manor. 'l'he principal landowners are one arch. ·The chapel of St. Paul, Tickton, a chapel William Bainton esq. of Beverley Parks, Capt. Henry of ease to the Minster, was erected in 1844, at a cost Broadley Harrison-Broadley, John Stephenson esq. of about £850, and is a building of stone, consisting of and the trustees of the late Thomas Crust esq. The chancel, nave, north porch, vestry and a western turret area of the township is 775 acres; rateable value, containing one bell : the stained east window wru;; pre £1,644 10s.; the population in 1891, including Hull sented by the late Lieut. -Col. Telford in memory of Bridge, was 305. his father, Cl1arles Telford esq. ; and there are three Parish Clerk, William Statters. memorial windows to the Stephenson family : the chapel will seat about 150 persons. Here is also a Post & Telegraph O:ffice.-William Statters, sub-post master. Letters through Beverley, which is the Wesleyan chapel, erected in 1877, in place of an older nearest money order office, arrive at 8.10 a.m. ; dis one built in 1828 and now disused. At Hull Bridge patched at 4.40 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, are the commodious wharf and extensive linseed and bone-crushing steam mills of Messrs. R. Stephenson but not paid and Son. Tickton Hall, near the bridge, is a modern National Sohool (mixed), erected in 1848, f<>r 115 gabled mansion of brick with stone quoins, in the children ; average attendance, 72; Miss Ellen Knox, Elizabethan style, the property of Mrs. Slingsby, of mistress Knox Ellen (Miss), schoolmistress & Wastling Mary (Mrs.), farmer TICKTON. organist Welbourne George, bricklayer Brru;;s Lieut. Ernest, Tickton grange Porritt Robert, farmer Pease Harold Robinson, Tickton hall Richardson Elizh. (Mrs.), beer retlr HULL BRIDGE. Robinson Nicholas Danl. blacksmith Stephenson Arth. Hull Bridge house COMMERCIAL. RoundingSpencer,gardener to Harold Dalby Matthew P. farmer Burrows William Parker, oil miller Robinson Pease esq ·1 Stephenson Robert & Son, linseed & Dean Alfred. shopkeeper Shields Charlotte (Mrs.) & John, beer cotton seed crushers, bone grinders, Dean John, machinist retailers manufacturer& of artificial manures Escritt Thomas, farmer Simpson John, machine owner & dealers in rape dust, clover Hoggard Charles (Mr~. ), shopkeeper Smith John, farmer seeds, nitrate of soda,fish guano &c Ibbetson Joseph. jun. shoe maker Statters William. shopkeeper & Tomlinson Geo.Crown & AnchorP.H Kirk William Denton, farmer parish clerk, & post office TUNSTALL is a parish. township and small village, restored in 1874-7, at a cost of £650, and now affords near the German Ocean, 4 miles north from 'Vithern- 180 sittings. The register dates from the year 1568. sea station on the Hull and Withernsea branch of the The living is a rectory annexed to that of Hilston, North Eastern railway, 15 east-by-north from Hull joint net yearly value £190, including 68 aues of glebe, and 10 eru;;t-north-east from Hedon, in the Holderness with residence, in the gift of the Archbishop of York division of the Riding. middle division of the wapen- and Sir Tatton Sykes hart. alternately, and held since take of Holderness, middle Holderness petty sessional 1858 by the Rev. Charles Abbott, of St. Bees. The dinsion, Patrington union, county oourt district of ~;:ea has swallowe:l up about 100 acres of land in the Hed.on, rural deanery of Hedon, archdeaconry of the parish within the last seventy years and is still con East Riding and diocese of York. The church of All stantly encroaching. The daughters of the late Colonel Saints is an ancient building of stone in the Early Marmaduke Jerard Grimston, who are ladies of the English and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, manor, Vice-Admiral Sir C. F. Hotham K.C.B. of nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled western Beverley, Messrs. Thomas Barron, Edward Lorrimer tower, with pinna.cles, containing 2 bells: the chancel and Michael S. Meadley, and the Rev. Edward Gordon was entirely rebuilt in 1862, when a stained east B.A. late vicar of Atwick, now of Bedford, are chief window was inserted as a memorial to Mr. John Barron landowners. The soil is strong clay; the subsoil, and Mr. James Snaith :the whole fabric was thoroughly clay. The principal crops are wheat, clover, beans • .