462 TRtl'STHOBPE. . [DLLY11

TRUSTHORPE is a small village and parish by the I Rev. Henry William Everingham M.A. of Corpus Christicol­ seashore, ; miles north-east from Alford, 16 south-east from lege, Cambridge. There are Wesleyan and Primitive Metho­ Louth, I~ north from Sutton-on-Sea station and I~ south dist chapels, and the poor have a small yearly charity, from station on the Louth and East Coast amounting to £x 12s. The devisees of the late Thomas AJ. branch of the Great Northern railway, in the South Lindsey cock are ladies of the manor. The principal landowners division of the county, parts of Lindsey, Marsh division of are Mr. William Riggall, the trustees of the late Stephen the hundred of Calceworth, Alford petty sessional division, Hill, Mr. W. G. West, Mrs. Loft, Charles Brooks and Frank Louth union and county court district, rural deanery of Riggall. The soil is fine alluvial and clay ; subsoil, same. Calcewaith No. x, and archdeaconryand . The chief crops are wheat, oats, beans and turnips, but a. Drain or Go'ut, which divides this parish from large portion is rich pasture. The area is x,4o6 acres of Mablethorpe, also forms the southern limit of the port of land and 85 acres of water; rateable value, £2,452 ; the , and the northern limit of the port of Boston. The population in. 188x was 334· church of St. Peter, rebuilt in x842, at a cost of £8oo, is a THORPE is one mile and a half south-west. structure of brick, in the Early English style, consisting of Parish Clerk, William Shaw. chancel and nave, west porch and an embattled western Letters from Alford arrive at 9.30 a. m. The nearest money tower of red brick, with four pinnacles and containing 3 order & telegraph office is at Mablethorpe. PILLAR Box bells: the east window is stained: in the porch is a stone cleared week days only at 4·15 p.m. winter & 5-I5 p.m. with an inscription asking the prayers of the faithful on be- summer; delivery at 9 a.m half of Richard Wright, who built the porch in 1522, his wife and family: the tower bears the date r6o6. The register PILLAR Box, Trusthorpe Hall, cleared at 4.30 p.m dates from the year x665. The living is a rectory, net yearly National School (mixed), built in 1856, for 6o children, value £300, including 230 acres of glebe, with residence, in average attendance, 40; John Jordan, master the gift of Mrs. Everingham, and held since r887 by the CARRIER-Samuel Smith, to Alford, tues. ; to Louth, wed Everingham Rev. Henry William M.A. I Dowse John, farmer I Rowson Samuel, farmer, Spain house Rectory Foster John, miller (wind) & baker Shucksmith Jn.thrashng.macbne.propr Loft Mrs. Trusthorpe hall Foster Richard, farmer, Belle Vue ho Simpson John, farmer COMMERCIAL. Gray Charles, farmer Smith John, farmer Allett George, bricklayer Gray George, farmer Smith Mary (Mrs.), farmer Ashley Mary (Mrs.), farmer Gray Isaac, farmer Smith Samuel, carrier & farmer Asbley William, farmer Hodgson Peter, butcher Stubbs Henry, farmer Brooks Matthew, farmer Johnson Joseph, farmer Stubbs John William, farmer Chapman John, farmer Riggall Wm.farmr. & landownr. Thorpe Taylor Henry, grocer &c Coupland John, farmer Robinson John, farmer West Richard, farmer, The Elms Dodds Henry, bricklayer Robinson William, farmer, Thorpe Will son Jas.Stubbs, wheelwrght.&joiner TUMBY is a township in Kirkby-on-Bain parish, but well, N otts, are the principal landowners. The soil is poor for ecclesiastical purposes a part of the township is included light sand ; subsoil, white sand and gravel. The chief crops in the parish of Wildmore, in the South Lindsey division of are wheat, barley, oats and turnips. The area is 3,276 the county, south division of Gartree wapentake, parts of acres; rateable value, £3,276; the population in r88r was Lindsey, union, petty sessional division and 39!. county court district, rural deanery of Gartree, archdeaconry Letters from Boston arrive at rr a.m. via , of Stow, and diocese of Lincoln: it is 2 miles north from by foot messenger & dispatched at 6 p.m. The nearest , but the greatest number of the inhabitants are money order & telegraph office is at Coningsby & Mare­ at Wood side, about 5 miles east from sta­ ham-le-Fen tion, and 7 south from Horncastle. Here are extensive woods of oak and larch, covering an area of over 1 , 000 acres. Some of the children of Tumby attend the Free School a.t There is no church: the inhabitants attend that at Moor Kirkby-on-Bain Houses. There is a Wesleyan chapel at Wood side. Sir National School (mixed), Wood side, built in 1878, at a cost Henry James Hawley bart. of Noove Lea, Brighton, who is of £425, on a site given by Sir Henry Hawley bart. for 70 lord of the manor, Henry Rogers esq. of Holt Hall, Nor- children ; average attendance, so; Mrs. Charlotte Lines, folk, and Robert Kelham esq. J.P. of B!easby Hall, South- mistress Hawley Henry Michael J.P.Tumby lawn George William, farmer, Wood side North Frank, farmer, Wood side COMMERCIAL. Harrison Wm. Geo. farmer, Toft grange Pindar Rt. miller (wind) & frmr.Fulsby Ashton Edward, farmer & wood keeper, Hawley Henry Michael, stPward to Sir Richardson Henry, farmer, Wood side Mareham lane Hy. Jas. Hawley bart. Tumby lawn Shaw William, farmer Cotton Pattison, farmer Hutton Henry, farmer, Wood side Sills William, farmer Dickson :Frederick, farmer Hutton Joseph, farmer, Wood side Stones Thomas, farm bailiff to H. M. Donaby Robert, farmer, Wood side Hutton 'Vm. Black Swan P.H. & farmer Hawley esq Donaby William, farmer, Wood side Kemp John English, farmer, Wood side Strawson James, farmer, Wood side Duddles Radford, farmer, Wood side Maddison Charles, blacksmith Wilkinson George, farm bailiff to Wm. Furniss William, carpenter Masden John, farmer Sinclair esq , formerly extra-parochial, is now a parish, six lancet windows, and reading pulpit, are all that remain. 9 miles west from Horncastle, 2 north from the river Capt. Robert Charles de Grey Vyner, of Fairfield, Skelton, N. Witham and the Southrey station on the Boston and Lin­ Yorks, is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The soil coln branch of the Great Northern railway, in the East is mostly clay ; subsoil, blue and yellow clay. The chief Lindsey division of the county, parts of Lindsey, Ilorncastle crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is r,795 acres; soke, west division of the wapentake of Wraggoe, union, rateable value, £862; the population in r88x was 93· county court district and petty sessional division of Horn­ castle. Here was anciently a Premonstratensian monastery, Letters through Lincoln via Bardney station, arrive at 9 dedicated to St. Mary the Virgin, founded in the time of a. m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Henry II. by All an and Gilbert de N eville : it was richly en­ Bardney dowed, and held part of Middle Rasen with the tithes. Some The poor children of this parish are entitled to receive edu- picturesque ruins, including one side of the refectory with cation at the Bardney Free schools Bemeworth Charles, farmer Goodyear William, farmer, Lowfield Massey John, farmer Clayton Thomas, farmer Holmes John, farm bailiff to Capt. ' Smithsons Alfred, farmer Duckering William, farmer, High Cell Robt. Charles Vyner, Tupholme haUl TYDD ST. MARY is a parish and village, situated remains of Transitional date, consisting of chancel, cleresto­ on the road from Long Sutton to Wisbech, and bordering on ried nave of five bays, aisles, south porch and an Pmbattled the counties of Norfolk and Cambridge, 3 miles south from western tower of brick, with stone dressings and a spire, Long Sutton, 6 north from Wisbech, 8 south-east from Hol- relieved by 3 tiers of spire lights and containing 5 bells: the beach and 3 from Sutton Bridge, with a station 2 miles dis- earliest portion of the church is comprised in the aisle tant from the church, on the Lynn branch of the Great arcades of Late Transitional work, but the fabric was almost Northern railway, in the Holland division of the county, wholly rebuilt in the Decorated period: the clerestory is parts of Holland, wapentake and petty sessional division of lighted by five windows on either side, and on the gable of Elloe, union and county court district, rural the nave is a small bell-cote: at the east end of the north deanery of East Elloe, and archdeaconry and diocese of aisle is an alabaster slab bearing the now upright effigy of Lincoln. The great South Holland drain, which bounds a knight of the time of Richard II. (1377-99) with the fol­ the parish on the north, empties itself into the river Nene. !owing inscription on its chamfered edge: "et per l'alme The church of St. Mary is an an ancient edifice of brick and "William de Tidde et sa femme dame Margaret :''and in the stone, in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, with some south aisle is a mural tablet of alabaster and marble to