DERBYSHIRE. (KH..LY'a Church of England, Rebuilt by the Late Rev

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DERBYSHIRE. (KH..LY'a Church of England, Rebuilt by the Late Rev 336 WORMHILL. DERBYSHIRE. (KH..LY'a Church of England, rebuilt by the late Rev. William Bag­ RAILWAY STATIONS:- shawe M.A. & enlarged by the then vicar in 187x, for 8o Miller's Dale, William Whitmore, station master children; average attendance, s<>; the master's house Dove Holes Dale, called the Peak Forest, which is2! miles was enlarged by the vicar in x885; Charles Joseph Burnett from the village of Peak Forest; Wm.Farrow, st.tn. n1ast Ellis, master ; Mrs. E. Ellis, mistress Burton William W. Cottiswood Great Rocks Industrial Co-operative Potter Jonathan, farmer, Hill Deakin John, Wormhill hall Stores (John Henry Widdowson, Proudlove Henry, shopkeepe' Upper Friverleer William manager), Dove Holes dale end Great Rocks Lime & Stone Company Redfern William, farmer COMMERCIAL. (John Ash well, managing director ; Redfern William, jun. farmer ASPHALTIC LIMESTONE CON- Alfd.Hy.Jackson,sec.),DoveHolesdale Sheldon Alfred, beer retailr. Iwe holes CRETE CO Hadfield Isaac.frmr.& butchr.Dove hies Small Dale Lime Works (Tho~ Beswick Austin Paul, farmer Hadfield Waiter, grocer, Upper end &·Sons, proprietors),Dove I:oles dale Bagshaw Hoaz, wheelwright Handley John, farmer, Hill Smith Mary Hannah(Mrs. ),sbpkeeper, Beverley Thomas, farmer, Hargate wall Howe Jonathan, farmer, Tunstead Upper end Bibbington Samuel (the exors. of), lime Lees William, farmer, Chapel Steads Stafford Joseph, Midland conmercial burners, Dove holes Lees William, farmer, Great rocks hotel & posting house,Dove Ioles dale Bold Venture Lime Works (Gaskell, Lomas Robert, farmer, Dove holes Hwann William, farmer & lmdowner, Deacon& Co.proprs.),Dove Holes dale Longden Richard, farmer Hargate wall Boyd Richard, farmer, Great rocks Manchester, Sheffield & Lincolnshire Taylor Robert, farmer Bradwell Martha (Mrs.), shopkeeper Railway Stone Quarries (John Wil- Turner William, farmer, Upp[' end Bramwell Ann (Mrs. ),farmer, Tunstead shaw, manager), Dove Holes dale Wainwright Henry, farmer, 'lunstead Bramwell John, farmer, Tunstead Marrison Joseph, farmer, Tunstead Wainwright Joseph, farmcr,Geat rocks Brittain Chas. grocer, Dove Holes dale Mosley Henry Edward, farmer Warhurst Isaac, farmer, Mca,ow Burgess Peter, shopkeeper, Dove Mosley Robert, farmer, Post office Warhurst Isaac, jun, farmer,Meadow Holes dale Mosley Thomas, farmer, Meadow Wilshaw George, farmer & assistant Cartledge Geo. farmer & smith, Hill Needham Thomas, Bagshawe Arms P.H overseer, Miller's dale Dakin Joseph, farmer, Hargate wall Peak Forest Lime & Stone Works (Jsph. Wilshaw John, farmer, Dove loles Garlick Joseph, Dale head Wainwright, propr. ), Dove Holes dale Wright Joscph, farmer YEAVELEY is a village and ecclesiastical parish formed the reign of Richard I. Ralph le Salter gave the Boedictine out of Shirley in 1844, with the township of Stydd, 4~ miles hermitage here, dedicated to SS. Mary and John tb Baptist, south from Ashborne, II north-west from Derby and 3i to the Knights Hospitallers, whereupon it becamet precep­ south-east from Clifton station on the Churnet Valley section tory of that order, to which Sir William Meynell, lird of the of the North Staffordshire railway, in the Western division town A.D. 1268, was a great benefactor: this precejtory was of the county, Appletree hundred, and petty sessional divi- granted, 35 Hen. VIII. (1543), to Charles, Lord :rlountjoy. sion, union and county court district of Ashborne, rural There are still considerable remains of the chapel, onsisting deanery of Ashborne, archdeaconry of Derby and diocese of of a portion of the south walls and vestry, witt several Southwell. The church of the Holy Trinity, erected in 1840, graceful lancet windows and clustered pillars w~h richly is a building of red brick, in the Early English style, and foliated capitals, these details showing beyond d111bt that consists of nave and an embattled western tower containing they belong to the original chapel erected temp Richard one bell : it is situated towards the centre of the village and I.; there is also, close to the chapel wall, a font oft he same is nearly covered with ivy: there are 154 si ttings. The period, and on the sward a coffin slab incised with : fioriated register dates from the year 1841. The living is a vicarage, cross and a sword. The Hall adjoins these ruins and has average tithe rent-charge £36, gross yearly value ,£81, in- at one time been moated ; it was restored some y:ars since eluding 2i acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the and is now occupied as a farmhouse. The area of he town­ vicar of Shirley, and held since 1884 by the Rev. William ship is 314 acres; rateable value, £512; the pop1lation in Buck Dearden, who is also vicar of and resides at Alkmon- 1881 was 27. ton. Here is a Congregational chapel. There are a few Sexton, Thomas Oakden. small charities, left by Ed ward and Elizabeth Pegge, amount- Letters throng h Ash borne, the nearest money orffir & tele- ing to 18s. 4d. distributed at Christmas in bread. John graph office, arrive at 10 a.m. WALL LRTTEl Box, in Harrison esq. of Snelston, is lord of the manor and chief School wall, cleared at 3·45 p. m. week days on I~ · landowner. Tha soil and subsoil are various. The land is National School (mixed), erected about 1845, withresidence chiefly in pasture for dairy produce. The acreage is 1,o8o; for the mistress, for so children; average attenl3.nce, 30; rateable value, £2,300; the population in 1881 was 199. Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Walker, mistress Stydd, formerly Stedde, is a township, tithe and toll free CARRIJ!:R.-John Thompson, to Derby every fri. &!\.shbome liberty, in the hundred of Appletree, 1 mile south-west. In every sat Yeaveley. Gadsby George, farmer Robinson George, shopkeeper Dearden Robert, The Vicarage Gadsby Samuel, farmer Robinson Jasper, farmer Leadbeater Mrs Gadsby William, farmer Thorn pson John, wheelwright,~arpenter Wright Mrs Gadsby William, jun. farmer & carrier to Ashborne & Deby Glover Frederick, boot & shoe maker Torr Thomas, Horse Shoe inn,& farmer COMMERCIAL. Gould Thomas, farmer Wibberley John Edwd. veterirury surgn Bannister Isaac, farmer Harrison William, farmer, Old wash Wooliscroft Mary (Mrs.), farner Bickerton Benjamin, shopkeeper Hulland William, farmer Bowler Goorge, farmer Manifold George, farmer Stydd. Chadfield George, farmer Millward John, farmer Gadsby William, farmer Chadfield John, farmer, The Hall Pegge Arthur James, farmer Robinson Samuel, farmer, St·dd hall Clewes J oseph, wheelwright & cowkpr Ratcliffe Ralph, farmer Turner James, farmer YOULGRAVE, anciently "Giolgrave," is a parish, 5 way porch and one in the north aisle are also of his date; miles south from Bakewell, 4 from Rowsley station on the the chancel arch is Decorated, but the chancel itsef appears Ambergate and Manchester section of the Midland railway, to have been rebuilt throughout in the Perpndicular and 157 from London, in the Western division of the county, period, when various windows were inserted in oher parts hundred of High Peak, petty sessional division, union and of the building, the nave lengthened westward, he tower county court district of Bake well, rural deanery of Bakewell, erected and the whole church new roofed, the tot:] interior archdeaconry of Derby and diocese of Southwell. The rivers length being, with these alterations, 125 feet: in thwast wall Bradford and Lathkill flow through the parish uniting at of the north aisle are the mutilated remains of: piscina; Alport. The water supply for the inhabitants of the parish another, square-headed, remains in the south aisle, removed is derived from springs rising in Blackley wood. The church from the chancel in 1869 : close to the western p3r in the of All Saints, a buildmg in mixed styles, from the Norman north wall of the nave is a niche containing a dra]Cd figure work of the 12th century down to the debased alterations of carved in stone: the font, dating from c. II50-I20I, consists the 15th, consists of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and of a basin of porous red sandstone, with a small rojecting a massive and lofty embattled tower with pinnacles, con- stoup cut from the same block and held, as it wee, in the taining 8 bells recast, with additions from the former peal of jaws of a dragon, sculptured in relief on the si,.e of the 5, and hung at Easter, r87o, at the cost of Mr. and Mrs. basin, which is supported on a circular base, rith four Thornhill, of Stanton Hall: of the Early Norman church, surrounding circular shafts on moulded bases : he most probably erected between the years n3o and n5o, the ancient monument in the church is the stone efigy of a circular Norman piers supporting the arcades of both aisles cross-legged knight, holding a heart in his claspd hands remain ; the arches on the south side are Norman, but on the and girt with a cross-hilted sword ; it is now placedon a sub­ north Decorated : the south aisle, widened late in the 13th stantial stone base against the north wall of the chm.cel, and century, has three Early English windows; the south door- is supposed to represent Sir John Rossington, of RGsington, .
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