Lincolnshire. East H.Alton

Lincolnshire. East H.Alton

DIRECTORY.] LINCOLNSHIRE. EAST H.ALTON. 223 oh. 30th Dec. x66s; Katherine {Nelham), his rst wife; in Great Hale. The population of the township of Great Smumna (Faukenbridge), his 2nd wife and Elizabeth (San- Hale in 1881 was 708, and the entire parish 1,07o; the area some), relict of John Woods, gent. his 3rd wife, who erected is s, no acres, including Little Hale ; rateable value, £8,671. this memorial; Robert Cawdron was buried in the aisle be- Little Hale township is one mile south of Great Hale. neath a large slab once containing a brass effigy and cross The Marquess of Bristol, who is lord of the manor, Hussey to a priest of the 14th century and now bearing the initials Packe esq. J.P. Rev. Henry John Cheales It!. A. vicar of Frisk­ " R. C." and the date " r66s:" there is also a mural tablet ney, George Hides esq. of The Fields, Mrs. M. Dickens, of of marble with incised effigies and inscription to Robert Fen, George Sills esq. Felix Tomlinson esq. of Thorpe Lati­ Cawdron esq. ob. nth March, r6S2• and Anne (King) and mer, Helpringham, Charles Sharpe esq. of The Pines, Old Mary, widow of John Austen, gent. his wives, with 13 sons Sleaford and Joseph Silvester Godfrey esq. of 10 Gloucester :fo~~~ul~~~ ;o:.n~ 6~~~p:~~!f~~riltti~~~~e~ra~:a~ ~~~ terrace, Regent's Park, London N w, are the principal scribed to Frnncis Cawdron, ob. 16so; another mural monu- landowners. The soil is in some parts light loam and in others clay ; subsoil, clay and stone. The chief crops are ment in this aisle commemorates Robert Cawdron esq. ob. d d · rBth Oct. 1728, and Sarah (Hussey) his wife, and in the wheat, barley, oats, beans, see s an turmps. The acreage church is a memorial to Sarah (Hussey), wife of John Smith is included with Great Hale; the population in 1881 was 62 esq. d. 17th May, 1767. The register is said to date from 3 · the year xso8, but the earlier parchments are so decayed as BROADHURST is one mile and a half south-east. w be illegible. The living is a discharged vicarage, rated Parish Clerk, John Ingall. in the King's Books at £8 6s. yearly value, tithe rent-charge PosT OFFICE, Great Hale.-William Ward, receiver. Let- £4)0, net yearly value £4 18s. including sS acres of glebe, ters arrive from Sleaford at 9.10 a.m.; dispatched at 4·S with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at since 1882 by the Rev. Ernest Julius Turckheim. The rents Heckington of the poor's allotments in Great Hale, consisting of 19 acres, PosT OFFICE, Little Hale.-John Green, receiver. Letters let at £34 yearly, and in Little Hale, of 20 acres, let at £3o, arrive from Sleaford at 9.36 a. m.; dispatched at 4 p.m. are distributed in fuel. The Marquess of Bristol, who is lord Heckington is the nearest money order & telegraph office of the manor, :r. Farrant esq. and Hussey l'acke esq. J.P. of National School (mixed), for 130 children; average attend­ Prestwold Hall, Loughborough, are the principal landowners ance, 8o; Dennis Heywood, master; Mrs. Heywood, mist Great Hale. Maston Frederick, farmer Dit:kens Monica (Mrs.),:farmer & land- Hams Miss, Old vicarage Mettam John, farmer owner, Fen Turckheim Rev. Ernest Julius [vicar] Money Henry, carpenter & wheelwright Dickenson Thomas, Bowling Green P.H Allis George, grocer & draper Read Waddington, farmer Faulkner Charles, farmer Barnard Edward, baker Rear George, farmer, Fen Garatt Julia (Mrs.), farmer Brewster \\'illiam, farmer Rowe Edward, farmer Green John, shopkeeper, & post ofiice DringJas.Rose&CrownP.H.&blacksmith Singleton Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Harrison George, Nag's Head P.H Everitt Martin, butcher Singleton John, farmer Hessel Charles, farmer Fenton Joseph Bentley, blacksmith Ward Luke, farmer Hutchinson John, farmer, Fen Harris Charles, farmer, Fen Ward William, boot maker Hides George, farmer & landowner, Harris George, farmer, Fen Ward William, jun. wheelwright The Fields Ingall John, carpenter Ward Wm.jun.grocer, baker,&post office Key Richard, farmer Ingall Thomas, wheelwright & carpenter Wheatman George, baker Lunn James, farmer Johnson Jonathan, farmer, Fen Wise Charles, Nag's Head P.H Page George, farmer KealJohn, market gardener Wood Bettison, market gardener Priestley Charles, shopkeeper Key Francis & Timothy, farmers \\'ood William, market gardener Skinner Thomas, shoe maker Knight Frederick, shoe maker Stennett J oseph, farmer, Fen Machon George, farmer Little Hale. Ward Luke, wheelwright Makins John, market gardener Barnes John, farmer, Fen Woods John, grocer & draper HALLINGTON is a parish, 2k miles south-west from Raithby, in the gift of the Right Hon. Henry Chaplin P.c., Louth, with a station on the Louth and Lincoln branch of M.P. and held since 1869 by the Rev. William Henry Dyer the Great Northern railway: it is in the East Lindsey di,-,j- Honey M.A., LL.M. of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, sion of the county, parts of Lindsey, Wold division of the who resides at Raithby. The Right Hon. Henry Chaplin hundred of Louth Eske, Louth petty sessional division, P.c., of Blankney Hall, is lord of the manor and sole land­ union and county court district, rural deanery of Louth owner. The soil is chalk and clay ; subsoil, chalk. The Eske and Ludborough No. 3, archdeaconry of Stow and chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 1,498 diocese of Lincoln. No traces of the church now remain, acres; rateable value, £1,s87; the population in r88r was but the burial ground is still used : the inhabitants attend I 12. the church at Raithby. The register is included in that Letters through Louth, the nearest money order & telegraph of Raithby. The living is a vicarage, consolidated with the office, arrive at 7 a. m rectory of Raithby, tithe rent-charge £S3S• joint net yearly Railway Station, James Chambers, station master value £S63, including 8S acres of glebe, with residence at The children of this place attend Tathwell school Chatterton William, farmer I Oliver George Allenby, farmer HALTHAM-UPON-BAIN is a parish, 4 miles south united with that of Roughton, joint yearly value £450, in­ from Horncastle, in tee South Lindsey division of the county, eluding 383 acres of glebe, in the gift of F. S. Dymoke esq. parts of Lindsey, soke, petty sessional division, county court and held since 1867 by the Rev. Henry Spurrier B.A. of district and union of Horncastle, n.rral deanery of Gartree, Trinity College, Dublin, who resides at Roughton. Here is a. archdeaconry of Stow and diocese of Lincoln. The church Wesleyan chapel. Francis Seaman Dymoke esq. of Scrivelsby, of St. Benedict is an ancient edifice of stone, in the Early the Hon. the Queen's Champion, who is lord of the manor, Norman, Early English and later styles, consisting of chan- Sir Henry James Hawley hart. of Noove Lea, Brighton, Sus­ eel, nave of three bays, north aisle, south porch and low sex, and William Henry Trafford esq. J.P. of Wroxham Hall, wooden belfry on the western gable containing 3 bells: the Norfolk, are the principal landowners. The soil is sand and 110uth doorway is Early Norman, the next earliest feature clay; subsoil, same. The chief crops are wheat, oats and being the Early English arcade; the chancel, restored in turnips. The area is 2,380 acres; rateable value,£ 1,3II; I88o, is Decorated throughout, the east window being a the population in 1881 was 179. By the Act 44 Vie. c. xviii. remarkably fine specimen of t.he style, with elaborate tracery a detached portion of the Fen Allotment was transferred to in the head : in the jamb of one of the windows is a curious the new parish of Wildmoor. recess, with a little pillar at the angle, serving as a canopy Parish Clerk, Robert Richardson. to a piscina within: there are also three sedilia, an aumbry LETTER Box cleared at 3 p.m. Letters through Horn castle, and two brackets: in the churchyard stands the base of an which is the nearest money order & telegraph office, ancient cross: there are 140 sittings. The register dates arrive at 9.30 from the year 156r. The living is a discharged rectory, The children of this parish attend the school at Roughton Brader Richard, timber merchant Houlden George, tailor Priestley Joseph, blacksmith Chapman Charles, joiner Houldershaw Curtis, farmer Strawson James, farmer Dunham Hubbert, fanner Knowles John, carpenter & wheelwright Thornley Henry, farmer Fleteher George, boot maker Leggett Wright, farmer V ear George (Mrs.), farmer Gaunt Martha (Mrs.), farmer Motley Frederick, farmer Westoby James, farmer GoodyearAlfd.MarmionArrns P.H.& grcr EAST HAI.TON is a long irregularly built village and Holland branch of the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincoln­ parish, extending to the creek called Halton Skitter, on the shire railway and one mile from the Humber, in the North nver Humber: the village is 7 miles east-by-south from Lindsey dinsion of the county, parts of Lindsey, east divi­ Barton, 2 east from Thorn ton Abbey station on the New sion of Yarborough wapentake, Glanford Brigg union, petty .

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