DIRECTORY.] EAST RIDING . .BUBSTWICK. 499 west end of the chapel is a marble monument with lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is profile bust to Mary Payler, granddaughter and heiress partly clay and gravel; the subsoil is clay. The chief of Sir Watkinson Payler l1art. of Thorolby Hall, d. crops are wheat, oats, barley, beans and seeds. The 1756: there is also a brass to William Watkinson esq. acreage is 1,915; rateable Yalue, {,1,762; the population • ob. 1614: at the north-east angle of the church is m 191 I was 195. "-an octangular turret with pyramidal capping, contain­ Pa.rish Clerk, James Hopwood. ing a staircase: the church was restored in 1875• and Post Office. Mrs. Mary Calam, sub-postmistress. Let­ has 200 sittings. The register dates from the year ters through York arrive at 8.30 a.m.; di~patched at 16lh. The living is a discharged vicarage, net yearly 3·35 p.m.; no sunday post. Bishop Wilton, 3 miles value {,200, including glebe, value [,99, with residence, distant, is the nearest money order & telegraph office in the gift of the Archbishop of York, and held since 1873 by the Rev. John William Appleford, of Downing Public Elementary School (mixed), erected in 1872 by College, Cambridge. Thorolby Hall, formerly the Viscount Halifax, for 47 children; average attendance~ property of the rectors and the residence of Sir W atkin­ 31; Miss Margaret Wright, mistress son Payler, last bart. d. 1706, is now a farmhouse, Carrier to York. James Daniel, s-at. & to ~ about a quarter of a mile north from the church. The every alternate mon Hon. E. F. L. Wood M.P., J.P. of Temple Newsam, is Appleford Rev. John William (vicar), Flint Samuel, farmer, Manor housE:' Marshall ·william. shopkeeper Vicarage Henderson Edwin, gardener to the Paul George, farmer COMMERCIAL. Hon. Edward F. L. Wood M.~\., Petch Harry, farmer Aconley William, farmer M.P., J.P Slater Jsph. frmr. Buckthorpe grange Barker Wilson, blacksmith Hotham Robt.W.frmr.Lofthouse grng West Alfred (Mrs.), dress maker Boyes Henry, carpenter Houlden John Neap, farmer Wood William Anthony S. farmer, Calam Richard, cowkeeper Huffington Thomas, farmer Thoralby hall Clarke William, farmer Husband James, farme~ Wrigglesworth George, bricklayer Daniel James, carrier & shopkeeper Marshall Thomas W. builder

BURN BY is a parish, township, village, with a station stone in the chancel to :Major R. Waterhouse, d. 1676, called Nunburnholme on the York, besides others to the Fawsitt family: the interior was and section of the North Eastern railway, and restored in 1872, and the church in 19o8, under the is 2£ miles south-east from Pocklington, 5 north-west direction of Mr. Gilbert Scott : there are 83 sittings. from Market Weighton and 18! south-east from York by The register dates from the year 1584. The living is a rail and 16 by road ; it is in the Howdenshire division of rectory, net yearly value £250, including 47 acres of the Riding, Wilton Beaoon division of Harthill wapent11ke, glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Earl of Londes­ · Wilton Beacon petty sessional division, Pocklington union borough, and held since 1900 by the Rev. George and county court district, rural deanery of Wl'ighton, Edward William Highmore M.A. of Selw)n College, uchdeaconry of the East Riding and diocese of York. Cambridge. The :MissPs Anderson, of Lea Hall, Gains­ The church of St. Giles is an ancient building of stone, borough, are ladies of the manor and principal land­ chiefly of the Norman and Early English periods, and owners. The soil is clayey; the subsoils are clay and consists of chancel, nave and a western bell gable chalk. The chief crops are barley, wheat, oats, turnips containing 2 bells: an interesting Norman and Early and beans, and there is a considerable quantity of grass English arcade, originally dividing the nave and chancel land. The area is 1,702 acres; rateable value, £1,747; from a north aisle and choir aisle, has been uncovered the population in xgu was 117. by recessing the north wall : in the chancel are three Post &; T. Office (called Nunburnholme Station Po!!t large and handsome sedilia (probably brought from office). William John Thompson, sub-postmaster. scme other church), two aumbries, an Early Eng­ Letters through York arrive about 7.18 a.m. & dis­ lish piscina and a narrow round-headed window patched at 4·45 & 8.15 p.m.; no sunday delivery or with dog-tooth ornament and sculptured heads: collection. Pocklington, 2! miles distant, is the the circular Norman font has been partly buried nearest nrroney order ofllce in the north wall since the north aisle was de­ molished in 1585; the capitals of the pillars of the The children of this place attend the schools at Hayton. bell gable were dug up in the chapter house of Pocklington & Nunburnholme York Minster: there is a small brass in the church to Railway Station, Nunburnholme, George W. Richardson, Thomas Norton esq. d. 8th December, 1632, and a station master

PRIVATK RESIDENTS. COMMERCIA I,. Moore Wm. farmer, Throstle's Nest (Letters should be addres~ed Nun­ Adamson John, farmer Pottage Thomas, farmer burnholme station, York.) Blythe James Wm. frmr.Syke's farm Scott James, farmer, Partridge hall Hardy Robert, The White house Grisewood Gearge, farmer, ManDr ho Southcote George, cowkeeper Highmore Rev. George Edward Wm. Grisewood Thomas, cowkeeper Swan Herbert, joiner M.A. (rector), Rectory Jdhnson JOilm, farmer, The Grange ':rhompson Wm. J. shopkpr. Post off Westerman Mrs. Burnby house Moore Joseph William, blacksmith

BUBSTWICK is 8 parish and scattered village, munion set was presented by Miss Mary Leonard in standing on an eminence, commanding 8 fine prospect memory of John Leonard, her father, for fifty years of the surrounding country, and is half a mile north churchwarden, and in 1902 an oak reredos and panelling from Ryhill station on the Hull and branch were erected as a memorial to the Rev. William Lucas of the North Eastern railway, 3 miles south-east from M.A. vicar 1893-1901: the church was restored in 1893 and 9 east-by-south from Hull. The paris-h in­ at a cost of about £1,000; during the progress of the cludes Mle townships of Burstwick-cum-Skeckling and work a painting on wood of the execution of Charles I. Ryhill-cum-Camerton, in the division of the was discovered, and is now preserved in the church: Riding, south division of the wapentake of Holderness, there are about 200 sittings. In 1901 an addition was South Holderness petty sessional division, union of Pat­ made to the churchyard of one rood, which has been rington, county court district of Hedon, rural deanery of drained and enclosed with a brick wall at a cost of Hedon, archdeacunry of East Riding and diocese of York. £x8o, and was subsequently consecrated by the Bishop The church of All Saints is a spacious building of stone of Hull. The register, including Skeckling, dates from and rubble, in the Gothic style of the early part of the 1747. The living is a discharged vicarage, net yearly 14th century, and consists of chancel, nave, with chapel value £200, including no acres of glebe, with residence, on soubh side, aisle, modern brick south porch, entirely in the gift of the Archbishop of York, and held since covered with ivy, and an embattled western tower con­ 19II by the Rev. John Arthur Colbeck, of St. taining 6 bells, the gift in 1907 of the late Samuel Augustine's College, Canterbury, and Durham Uni­ Hutchinson esq. of Daisy Hill, Lelley, as a memorial to versity. In 1902 a vicarage house was erected at a hih wife and their only son: in the chancel are a plain cost of £1,400. The Church Institute, built at a cost aedile, the remains of 8 piscina. a.nd an aumbry : the of nearly £6oo, was opened 27 Dec. 1905. The interest south chapel has a Decorated piseina and sedilia, and on a. sum of £soo, left by the Rev. W. Clark, 11 former on the south side of the chancel arch is a squint : the vicar, for educational purposes, is distributed in prizes centre light of the east window is a memorial to the in accordance with the scheme of the Charity Commis­ Rev. William Clark, vicar here 18II-52; two lights on sioners. There are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist either side of this were presented in oommemoration chapels. Major Waiter George Raleigh Chichester­ of the 25th year of the incumbency of the Rev. Frank Constable D.L., J.P. of Burton Constable Hall, Hull, Bowes King M . .A.. vicar 1852-go: in 1893 a marble tablet who is lord of the manor, Mr. Jackson Marshall, Mrs. was placed in the chancel to the memory of the Rev. Davis, of Hull, Mr. Robert John H