East .Riding Yorkshire. (Kelly's

East .Riding Yorkshire. (Kelly's

f.4~ GRINDAL~. EAST .RIDING YORKSHIRE. (KELLY'S • COY:K:ERCIAL. Leeson Geo.Samuel,butcher & huckstr Stubbings Albert, farmer, Field house Cranswick Thomas, farmer Monkman George, blacksmith Stubbings Alice Jane (Mrs.), farmer Urowe Geo. & Chas. farmrs. Huntow Pudsey William, shopkeeper Stubbings Bobert, farmer, Manor frm Jackson William, farmr. Norbh Dale Robson George & Annie, farmers Watson George, farmer Jobnson Frank, joiner Rooks Harland, shopkeeper & carrier HA~ is a parish, township and scattered village, with columns of the Doric order, supporting a dome t! miles north from Ottringham station on the Hull and surmount~d by a cross : the interior is faced and floore,t Withernsea branch of the North Eastern railway, 4 miles with dark polished marble, and in the centre, on ' JJorth-west from Patrington, 6' east-south-east from pedestal of marble aurro'.lllded by railings, is an elegau~ Bedon and 12l east from Hull, in the Holderness division white marble urn, in&cribed to Sir William Constable. of the Riding, S•JUth division of the wapentake of Holder- Here is a hospital founded by Sir John Constable, by n!'ss, South Holderness petty 11essional div-ision, Patring· will, dated 1579, for eight poor men and two poor ton union, Hedon county court district, rural deanery of women. Lord Hotham and Major W. G. Raleigh Bedon, archdeaconry of the East Riding and diocese of Chichester-Oonstable, of Burton Constable, are lords of York. The church of All Saints is an ancient building of the manor. The farmers and others have freehold stone and brick, in the Tmnsition Norman and Late property here. The soil and subsoil are marl and clay. D!corated styles, consisting of chancel, with chantry The <lhief crops are wheat, barley, clover and beans, ehapel dedicated t-o St. John of Benrley, nave, aisles, The area i11 2,909 acres of land and r of water; rate­ and an embattled -tower containing 2 bells: the pulpit able value, £2,583; the population in 19II was 220. b~ars date 1634: in the chantry chapel is an alabaster recumbent figure of a knight, temp. Richard II. sup­ Letters are received from Hull, via Ottringham, at 8 posed to represent a member of the Constable family: a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at the chancl'l retains sedilia, under a single crocketed arch, Ottringham, 2 miles distant. Pillar Box cleared a\ the head of which is filled in with tracery: the church 5-45 p.m. week days only was restored in 187I, and has 240 sittings. The register East End, Wall Letter Box, cleared at 5· 15 p.m. week dates from the year 1563. The living is a rectory, net days only yl'arly value £440, including 25 acres of glebe, with resi­ df'ncP, in the gift of Mrs. P. M. Shipton, and held since Public Elementary School (mixed), erected in 1884, for 19o5 by the Rev.Charles Percy Shipton M. A. of St. Edmund 47 children; average attendance, 26; Miss Editb Ball, Oxford. There is a Primitive Methodist chapel, J ackson, mistress ; the endowment arises from money erected in 1 s73. In a small plantation east of the church in the funds, being the sum paid for the redemption is- a beautiful mausoleum, erected about 1 s02, and used of an annual rent-charge of £8o, formel'ly paid out of since that date as the burial place of the Constable lands in Burstwick, Paull & Keyingham family; it is of white freestone, in the Classic style, Carrie-r to Hull.-George Henry Jackson Shipton Rev. Charle-s Percy M.A. Ellis John Henry, farmer, Poplar Johnson George Arthur, farmer (rect{)r), Rectory farm & New farm My~rs Peter, cowkeeper ~ Garton Noel, farmer, The Grange North Frank, farmer l Gibson Alfred, farmer Parker George Edward, builder ' COKl.t.ERCUL. Hodgson Edwin, farmer Robinson William, wheelwright Atkinson Thomas, cowkeeper Hudson J ane (Mrs.), cow keeper Shaw Horace, farmer Biglin Benjamin John. blacksmith Hunter John, Stagg inn Smith Sanderson, farmer Burnham Robert William, farmer Jackson George Henry, carrier Towse Stephen, farmer ' llurton Mrs. Elizh. & Son, farmers Jackson William, farmer HARPHAM, see Burton Agnes. HARSWELL is a civil parish, with a station, M . .!. and held since 1901 by the Rev. George Deane ea.lled Evering'ham, on the Selby and Market Wed.ghton M.A. of Clare College, Cambridge, who is also curate bmnch of the North Eas~rn railway, and is 4 mile& west in charge of Seaton Boss. The trustees of the late Rev. of Market Weig<hton, in tJhe HowdeniSihire divii!ion of the Charles Slingsby M.A. are lords of the manor and Biding, Holme Beaoon diwS'ion of Harthill wapentake, ( e:ttepting the glebe) sole landowners. The soil is Holme Beacon petty sessional division; Pocklington union f'hiefly sand; subsoil, clay and marl. The chief crops and oounty court district, rural deanery of Weighton, are barley, oats, turnips and potatoes. The area is . archdeaconry of the East Riding and diocese of York. 1,026 acres of land and 1 of water; rateable value, The church of St. Peter is a sm-all building of stone, in £"1,028; the population in xgn was 70. the Norm~m style, consisting of chancel, nave, south po.roh Post Office. John Botterill O'Gram, sub~postmaster. and a western turret oontaining one beU: it was rebuilt Letters arrive from York by ma.il cart at 7·45 a..m. > in 1871, principally at the oost of the lord of the manor, dispe.oohed at 5.30 p.m. The nearest m®ey ord&r ~ and has So &littings. The register dates from the year telegraph office is at Everingham, 2 miles distant 1653· The living is a rectory, net yearly value £152, The children attend the sohool at Holme-on-Spalding-Moor jn~lnding 49 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift Everingham Railway Station, George Edward Tindill. of the trustees of the late Rev. Charles Slingsby~Slingsby station master Banks Frank, gamekeeper to Percy Featherby John Wm. farmer.Field ho Deane Rev. George M.A. (rector, & M. Stewart esq Featherby Webster, frmr. Park farm curate in charge of Seaton Moss), Banks Henry, gamekeeper to the Hardy Frank, farmer, Brouncy house Rectory trustet>s of the late Rev-. C. O'Gram John Botterill. farmr. Post off Slingsby-Slingsby Sawyer John, farmer, Manor bouso HATFIELD GREAT ttnd LITTLE, see Sigglesthorne. RA YTON is a parish, township and village on the York, stained windows : the church was restored and resea.ted Market Weighton, Beverley and Hull road, and on a in 186o, and has 200 sittings. The register dates from amall rivulet half a mile west from Nunbumholme station the year x6ro. The living was constituted a vicaral!'B in on the York and Market Weighton and Beverley section 125~. by Archbishop Walter de Grey, with the perpetual of the North Eastern railway, 2! miles south-east-by-south curacy of Bielby annexed, joint net yearly value £240, from Pocklington, 4 north~west from Market Weigh­ including tithes, together with 15o acres of glebe in the ton, 15 south-east from York and 14 north-west from parish and 20 acres at Beeford, and residence, in the gift Bt>verley, in the Bowdenshire division of the Ridi~, of the Archbishop of York, sod held since I9o5 by the Holme Beacon division of the wapentake of Barthill, Rev. John Graham B.A. of Hatfield Hall, Durham. The Wilton Beacon petty sessional division, Pocklington union appropriate tithe, amounting to [,326 yearly, belongs to and county court? district, rural deanery of Weighton, the Dean of York. There b a Primitive Methodist archdeaconry of the East Riding and diocese of York. chapel, built in t85o. The poor of Hayton have 16 The church of St. Martin, placed on & slight emimmce, acres of land in Bielby and some small rent-charges, ill an ancient bw1ding of stone in the Norman style, con­ now in the hands of T. W. Calverley Rudston esq. and l!i'Jting of chancel, nav«, north &isles, &outh porch and the vicar and churchwardens ss trustees, and producing an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing £22 yearly. Trevor Wheler Calverley-Rudston esq. of 3 pre-Reformation bells : the aisle is separated from the A.llerthorp& Ball, i8 lord of the manor, and Henry E. nave by a Norman arcade, and the doorway -of the south Preston esq. ot Middlethorpe Manor, Mrs. Lsmb and porch is a good example of Norman carving: the stained the vicar are chief lllndowners. The soil is gtmerally east -,window was erected in r86o as a memorial to Sir light ; the aubsoil is gravel and marl. The chief crops Thomas llud1-ton bart. d. 1707, and Katharine (Monn­ &re wheat, barley, oats and turnip11. The area of the '-tyne), his wife, d. 174.5, llnd there are 12 other township i1 J,BgB acres of land and I ol water; :ra\eable .

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