bIRECTORY.] . YOULGRAVE. 383

1886, at B cost of £1,500, is a building of swne in a modern Schools. Gothic style, consisting of chancel and nave and an un- A 'School Board of 5 members was formed' in 1882 for fini~hed western tower containing one bell: there are ; F. S. Goodwin, Bakewell, clerk; Solomon sittings for 200 persons. In 1890 8 burial ground of half Wood, , attendance officer an aere, granted by F. W. Bagshawe esq. was consecrated Board, Peak Dale (mixed), erected in IB82, at 8 cost, in- by the Bishop of Southwell. The parish room, built at clusive of site, of £1,4°0, for 200 children; average the same time as the church, is US'ed as a club and read- attendance, 130; Ralph Arthan, master; Mrs. Louisa ing room. There is a WesIeyan chapel at Great Rocks, E. Arthan, mistress built in 1885, and a Primitive Methodist chapel at Upper Church of , rebuilt by the late Rev. William End, erected in 1887 ' Bagshawe M.A. &; enlarged by the then vicar in 1871, for Sexton, William Redd'em 70 children; average attendance, So; the mis,tress' Post Office.-Mrs. Elizabeth Mosley, sub-postmistress. house was enlarged by the vicar in 1885; Miss Rosa Letters through , arrive at 7.30 a.m.; departure Wilson, mistress 5.15 p.m. week days only. The nearest money order Railway Sta.tions. office is at Tideswell. The telegroph office is at Miller's Miller's Dale, William Whitmore, station master Dale railway station for Peak Dale, whiC'h is 2~ miles from the Wall Letter Box, Peak Forest stati{)n, cleared at 6 p.m village of Peak Forest; William Farrow. station master Bagsha'We Rev. Alfred Drake ~LA. Buxton Lime Firms Co. (Joseph Heath- Percival John, assist. oversr.Tunstead (vicar) cott, manager), Great Rocks, Bux- Potter Jonathan, farmer Deakin John, Wormhill Hall ton Central &; East Buxton works Proudlove Henry, shopkpr. Peak daltt FreviIlier Mrs. The Cottag-e Brittain Charles, grocer, Peak dale Redfem William, farmer Kendall Rev. Hy. (curate), Peak dale Cartledge George, farmer & smith Redfern Wm. jun. farmer &; sexton Lowe Charles', Elm house Dakin Joseph, farmer, Hargate wall Smith Mary Hannah (Mrs.), shop- COMMERCIAL. Garlick Joseph, Dale head keeper, Peak dale ABphaltlc Limestone Concrete Great Rocks Industrial Co-operative Stafford Jose-ph, Midland commercial Co, Llm. dale (John A. Stores, Peak dale hotel &; posting house, Peak dale Rankins, sec.); regist-ered offices, Hadfield Isaac, butcher, Peak dale SwannThos.civil eng.ineer,Hargate wall 121 Colmore row, Birmingham Howe Jonathan, farmer, Tunstead Swann WiIliam, farmer &; landowner, Austin Paul, farmer Lees Edward, farmer, Great rocks Hargate wall Bugshaw Boaz, wheelwright Lees William, farmer, Chapel Steads Swindell Joseph, farmer Beverley Thos. farmer, Hargate wall , & Lincolnshire Taylor Robert, farmer Bibbington Sam!. (the exors. of), lime Railway Stone Quarrie~ (John Wil- Turner William, farmer, Peak dale burners, Peak dale shaw, manager), Peak dale Vernon Josep'h, beer ret. Peak dale Bold Venture Lime Works (GaskeIl, Marrison Joseph, farmer, Tunstead Wainwright Henry, farmer, Tunstead Deacon &; Co. proprs.), Peak dale Mosley Henry Edward, farmer 'Wainwright Josph.farmer,Great rocks Boyd Richard, farmer, Great rocks Mosley Elizh. (Mrs.), farmer, Post off Warhurst Henry, farmer, Meadow BradweJl Martha (Mrs.), shopkeeper Mosley Thomas, farmer, Meadow Warhurst Isaac, farmer, Meadow Bramwell John, farmer, Tunstead Needham Thos. Bagshawe Arms P.H Wright JOSleph, farmer YEAVELEY is a village and ecclesiastical parish formerly a township, but by Local Government Board formed out of Shirley in 1844, with the townShip of Order part was in 1886 transferred to Yeaveley, the 1'e­ Stydd, 4! miles south from Ashborne, 4 east from Nor- mainder being annexed to Snelston. In the reign of bury, both of which are stations on the North Stafford- Richard I. Ralph le Salter gave the Benedictine her­ shire railway, 3~ south-east from Clifton station on the mitage here, dedicated to SS. Mary and John the Baptist, Churnet Valley section of the same line and II north- to the Knight~ Hospitallers, whereupon it became a pre­ west from Derby, in the Western division of the county, ceptory of that order, to which Sir William Meynell, Appletree hundred, and petty sessional division, union lord of the town A.D. 1268, was 8 great benefactor: this and county court district of Ashbome, rural deanery of preceptory was granted, 35 Hen. VIII. (1543), to Charles, Ashborne, archdeaconry of Derby and diocese of South- Lord Mountjoy. There are still considerable remains well. The church uf the Holy Trinity, erected in 1840, of the chapel consisting of a portion of the south walls is a building of red brick, in the Early English style, and vestry, with ,several graceful lancet windows and and consists of nave and an embattled western tower con- clus,tered pillars with richly foliated capitals, these details taining one bell: it is situated towards the centre of showing beyond doubt that they belong to the original the village and is nearly covered with ivy: there are 154 chapel erected temp. Richard I.; there is also, close to sittings. The register dates from the year 1841. The the chapel wall, a font of the same period, and on the living is a vioarage, average tithe rent-charge £40, net sward a coffin slab incised with a 1loriated cross and a yearly value £79, including 2~ acres of glebe, with resi- ,sIWord. The Hall adjoins these ruins, and has at one dence, in the gift of the vicar of Shirley, and held since time been moated; it was restored some years since and 1884 by the Rev. William Buck Dearden, who is also is now occupied as 8 farmhouse. vicar of, and resides at AIkmonwn. Here is a Congre- Sexton, Thomas Oakden. gational chapel. There are a few small charities, left Letters' through Ashborne, arrive at 10 a.m.; the nearest by Edward and Elizabeth Pegge, amounting to 18s. 4d. money order &; telegraph office is at Osmaston. Wall distributed at Christmas in .bread. John Harrison esq. Letter Box, in School wall, cleared at 3.45 p.lI1. week of Snelston, is lord of the manor and chief landowner. days only The soil and subsoil are various. The land is chie1ly in National School (mixed), erected about 1845, with resi- pasture for dairy produce. The acreage is 1,377; rate- dence for the mistress, for S0 children; average attend- able value, £2,3°4; the population in 1891 wa~ 172. ance, 39; Miss - Elstow, mistress STYDD, former;y Stedde, in the hundred of Apple- Carrier.-John Thompson, to Derby every fri. &; Ash- tree, I mile south-west, is tithe and toll fr€e and was borne every sat YEAVELEY. Gadsby William, farrner Thompson John, wheelwright, carpen­ Bowman Edward James, TheVicarago Gadsby William, jun. farmer ter, dealer in cheese salt &; carrier Leadbeater Mrs Glover Fredk. boot & shoe ma.&; farmr to Ashborne &; Derby Gould Thomas, farmer Wibberley John Edward, veterinary COMMERCIAL. Harrison William, farmer, Old waste surgeon & farmer Bickerton Benjamin, shopkeeper Hulland 'William, farmer Wooliscroft Mary (Mrs.), farmer Bowler George, farmer Manifold George, farmer Chadfield James', farmer Millward .Tohn, farmer STYDD. Chadfield John, farmer, The Hall Robinson Reuben, farmer Gadsby William, farmer Clewes Joseph, wheelwright &; cwkpr Stanley John, farmer Robinson Samuel, farmer, Stydd ball Gadsby Samuel, farmer Torr Thomas, Horse Shoe inn & frmr Turner James, farmer YOULGRAVE, anciently "Giillgrave," is a parish. building in mixed styles, from the Norman work of the 4 miles from Rowsley station on the Ambergate Bnd 12th century down to the debased alterations of the 'Z5th, Manchester .section of the Midlland railway, 5 from Bake- consists of chancel, nave, aisles, 80uth pi>Tch and a mas­ well and 157 from London, in the Western division of sive and lofty embattled tower with pinnaclelr, containing the county, hundred of High Peak, petty sessi.mal divi- 8 bells recast, with additions frotn the former peal of sion, union and county court district of Bakewell, rural 5, and hung at Easter, 1870, at the cost of Mr. and :Mrs. deanery of Bakewell, archdeaconry of Derby and diocese Thornhill, of Stant-m Hall: of the Early NOlman of Southwell. The rivers Bradford and Lathkill 1l.>w probably erected between the years II30 ,weJ\ ·\t~e through the parish uniting lit AlpO'I't. The water supply circula'1' Norman piers supporting the s of both for the inhabitants' of the parish is derived from springs aisles remain; the arches on the south i Bre ~~n, rising in Blackley wood. The church of All Saints a but on the north De<:orated: the 50 i. aiilh, wideD~d