DIRECTORY.] . . 219

Tyas William, beer retailer, Roden street Willis William & Sons, boot & shoe makers, High street Tyler John S. solicitor, Broadway Willis William, boot & shoe maker, 6 Read's pl. High rd Warren F. & Co. coal merchants, Railway station Willmott Frederick, builder, Hope cottage, High road Watkins Peter, architect & surveyor & surveyor to Wilson & Whitworth, printers, High street llford Local Board, r Cleveland villas Wilson John, sani~ry plumber, 4 llford terrace Watling Harry & Co. plumber, Parkhurst road Wiskar Waiter, farme-r, Highlands farm Watson James Henry, fruiterer, florist & rose grower, With"\"ington James, insurance agent, The Poplars, 9 Chapel place & elements Estate nursery High road Watson William, builder, llford hill Witney Charles, cab proprietor, Adelaide terrace Weall William, coffee rooms, High road W urth & Co. provisiQill dealers, High road Wells L. C. (Mrs.), private school, The Croft, Coventry rd \Vright Samuel, market gardener, Sam's green West F. butcher, High road Yates John, builder, l:iigh road Weston Luke, confectioner, High street Yates John, tobacconist & confectioner, 7 llford market, White & Co. linen drapers, High street High road White Jessie (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, Reads place, Young Men's Christian Association (W. Collins, hon. High road sec.), Cleveland villas Wicks Annie (Miss), school, 3 Hainault terrace LITTLE ILFORD is a parish and pleasant village, grove was replaced in 18go by a new chapel at Manor situated on the west of the river H0ding, 6! miles from Park. There is a Free Methodist chapel in Herbert road, London, si west from Romford and adjoining Manor a Wesleyan chapel in Romford road and a Baptist chapel Park station on the Great Eastern railway (Colchester in Greenhill grove. The City of London Cemetery, line), in the Southern division of the county, Becontree situated in this parish, occupies 168 acres, and contains half hundred and petty sessional division, West Ham two chapels. The charities, amounting to about £27 IOS. nnion, Bow county court district, rural deanery af a year and distributed in money, are derived from Ccm­ Barking, archdeaconry of Essex and diocese of St. Albans sols left by Mr. Hayes in the last century. Charles and within the jurisdiction of the Central Criminal Bartho1omew esq. C.E. of Castle Hill House, Ealing, :Mid­ court and Metropolitan police. 'i'he church of the dlesex, IS lord otf the manOil' and principal landowner. The Virgin Mary is a small and ancient building, originally in area ris 766 acres; rateable value, £24,ooo; the population the EaJrly Norman style, of which, however, but few in 1881 was 993, in 1891, was 3,969, but is now (1894) traces, consisting chiefly of two very narrow lights deeply estimated at about 6,2oo, the greater part of which is in splayed, now remam : the church consists of chancel, the district of Manor Park, for which see Ea.st Ham. nave of two bays, north chapel, south porch and a tur­ Post, M. 0. & T. 0., Romford road, corner of Manor ~et containing one bell: the north chapel is the burial Park road. Letters arrive 8 a.m. z, 7 & 9 p.m. ; place of the ancestors of SiT Edward Hulse hart. of dispatched 9.30 & 12.25 a.m. 3.25, 5, 7 & 9 p.m. Breamore House, Salisbury : there is a brass to Thomas, son and heir of Sir John Heron, private secretary to Sub-office, Romford road, corner of Third avenue, Little Henry VIII. who died at Alderbroke, in 1517, with an IlfOird-Charles Chambers, receiver. Lette~rs dis- effigy representing him as a schoolboy of 14, with a patched at 9 a.m. 12 noon, 3, 7 & 8.45 p.m penner and ink horn at his girdle ; a second brass com­ memorates Aime, only daughter of Barnard Hyde esq. City of London Cemetery, Harry Blake, clerk; John of London, ob. 1630, ret. 18, and her brother \Villiam, Chapple Stacey, superintendent & registrar; Rev. ob. 1614, with six English verses : on the north wall of Alfred J. G. Cachemaille M.A. & Rev. James Nic'hol­ the chancel is a stone monument with many kneeling ion Nicholson M.A. of 170 Osborne road, Forest Gate, figures in high relief, of the time of James I. ; there Episcopal chaplains; Rev. George Firth, Noncon­ are also tablets of members of the Fry family, formerly formist minister residents here, SO' well known for their philanthropy ; the A School Board of 5 members was formed in r887; church will seat 170 persons. The register dates from James Turner, 4a, Broadway, Manor park, clerk to the the year 1539. The living is a re,•tory, yearly value board; Charles Kettle, attendance officer from tithe rent-charge about £450, with 7 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Lord Francis Hervey, Board School, Fourth avenue, built in 1893, for t,ooo the Right Hon. Sir Francis Henry Jenne P.C. and J. S. children; average attendance, 784; Gemge Pottinger, Lockhart esq. and held since 1894 by the Rev. Perey master; Mrs. Emma Wheeldon, mistress; Miss Emma Matheson Bayne M.A. of Hertford College, Oxford. Bentall, infants' mistress Thomas Newton, poet and physician, was rector here, Conveyance. A tram line running from White Post lane I583-16o7. The Congregational chap£!1 in Greoohill to Forest Gate & Stratford was completed in 1887

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. *Bell James, farm bailiff to Mr. Chas. :Miller Harry P. grngrcr. Romford rd (Marked thus * are 111 the postal dis­ Bartholomew, Manor farm Pavitt Oscar (Mrs.), ladies' outfitter, trict of Manor Park; the remainder Faulkner Jn. coffee rooms,Romford rd Romford road are in the postal district of llford.) Forge Thomas, watch ma. Romford rd Rumble George, water cress grower, *Bayne Rev. Percy Matheson, The Gardner Saml. Jas. laundry, Romford l'tlanor fields Rectory road Skillington Wm. beer sllr. Romford rd *Bedford Rev. E. C. The Rectory Green William Edward, cycle agent, 'White Susannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Romford road Romford road COMMERCIAL. Hyne Emma (Miss), confectioner, V.owler Henry P. electric bell fitter, Barnard Arthur, butcher, Romford rd Romford road Romford road Anderson George Mann, Coach & Johnstone George, basket maker, For others in this parish see Manor Horses P.H. Romford road Romford road Park, East Ham. INGATESTONE is an ancient town, consisting chiefly Purbeck marble, one of which has an inscription, in Lam­ of one street, of which the larger portion is in the parish bardic letters of the 16th century, to Gertrude Tyrrell, of 'Df Fryerning and is on the ancient road from London to Warlev : here also is the fine monument of Sir William Chelmsford, with a station on the main line of the Great ·kt. LL.D. ob. 13 Jan. 1572, and Anne (Browne), his Eastern railway to Colchester and Ipswich, 23 miles from &'cond wife, consisting of an altar tomb, wrought in alabaster London, 6 south-west from Chelmsford, 5 north-east from and other marbles, with superbly executed recumbent figures Brentwood and 28 south-west from Colchester, in the Mid and above the Petre arms, enriched with foliage and sus­ division of the county, Chelmsford hundred, petty sessional pended over the tomb in an ornamental frame of iron : in division, union and county court district, rural deanery of the south chapel is a costly monument to Robert Petre, Ingatestone, archdeaconry of Essex and diocese of St. AI bans. youngest brother of Sir William, ob. 1593, w1th his mail-clad The town is lighted with gas from works near the railway effigy, kneeling under an arch supported on Corinthian station, belonging to a limited company. The church of SS. columns; near this is another mural monument with portrait :Mary and Edmund is a building chiefly of brick in various in relief, to Captain John Troughton, ob. r621: 111 the north styles, and consists of a chancel of three bays, with north chapel is a stately Elizabethan monument with kneeling and south chapels, nave of three bays, south aisle, north effigies to Sir John Petre kt. lii.P. for Essex, 1st porch and a lofty brick tower at the west end, with a machi- of , ob. n October, 1613, and Mary (Waldegmve), colated parap-et, indented battlements, and low pinnacles at his lady and their son William, 2nd Baron Petre, ob. 5 May, the angles, and containing a clock and 5 bells, dated r610, 1637, and his wife Catherine (Somerset), who erected this z66o, 1701 and two 1758: the tower, a noble piece of brick- memorial, and died 30 October, 1624: there are other tombs work, was raised in the 15th century and is remarkable for and monuments to various members of this house from the its bold detail and fine proportions : the nave, dating from 16th century to 1713 : the handsome lectern was presented early in the qth century, is the oldest portion of the build- to the church by Edwin Caldecott esq. in memory of Ellen ing : the chancel is of later date and has two floor slabs of Caldecott, who died March 29, 1883. The register dates