THE NORTH BRADFORD HUNDRED.
The hundred of North Bradford is bounded on the north by Cheshire, on the east by Staffordshire, on the west by the hundred of Pimhill and the Albrighton division, and on the south by the hundred of South Bradford. There is a considerable extent of land in this hundred which is highly fertile, and the cheese, which is extensively made, is said to be quite equal in quality to the celebrated Cheshire cheese in the adjoining county. The soils are various. The meadow lands in general produce a rich herbage, and the arable lands are seen covered with luxuriant crops of grain. The scenery is rich and beautiful, and in some places highly picturesque. The land in most parts is pleasingly diversified with gentle undulations, and in some places there are considerable inequalities of surface and bold swells, interspersed with rising plantations and woody scenery, which add to the beauty of the prospects. In this hundred is found superior clay for making bricks, marl for improving the land, and peat or turf for firing. The hundred is divided into the Drayton Division, Wem Division, and Whitchurch Division, and at the census of 1841 contained 5,428 inhabited houses, 204 uninhabited, and 26 houses building, with a population of 27,971 souls.
The Drayton Division contains the parishes and townships of Adderley, Bearstone, Betton, Betchley, Bolas Little, Cheswardine, Chipnall, Childs Ercall, Drayton Magna, Drayton Parva, Dorrington, Eaton, Goldstone, Gravenhanger, Hinstock, Hodnet (part of), Hawkstone, Hopton, Kenstone, Longslow, Losford, Longford, Marchamley, The Morrey, Moreton Say, Norton-in-Hales, Ollerton, Peplow, Sambrook (part of), Sowdley, Spoonley, Sutton, Styche and Woodlands, Stoke-upon-Tern, Woodseaves, Wollerton, Westanswick, and Woore.
The Wem Division contains the parishes and townships of Acton Reynold, Aston, Besford, Cotton, Edgbolton, Edstaston, Horton, Lacon, Lowe and Ditches, Moreton Corbet, Muckleton, Newtown, Northwood, Preston Brockhurst, Shawbury, Sleap (part of), Soulton, Tilley and Trench, Weston-under-Redcastle, Wem, Wolverley, Wytheford Magna, and Wytheford Parva.
The Whitchurch Division contains Alkington, Ash Magna, Ash Parva, Black Park, Broughall, Booley, Calverhall or Corra, Chinnell, Darliston, Dodington, Edgeley, Fauls, Harcourt, High Hatton, Hinton, Hollyhurst, Ightfield, Lee Brockhurst, Mickley, Millenheath, Moston, Prees, Tilstock, Sandford, Steel, Stanton-upon-Hine-Heath, Whitchurch, Whixall, Willaston, Woodhouses New, and Woodhouses Old.
ADDERLEY
is a parish and small rural village, four miles N.N.W. from Market Drayton, which contains 3,938a. 2r. 38p. of land, and comprehends the townships of Adderley, The Morrey, Spoonley, and part of Shavington. In 1801 there were 365 inhabitants in the parish; in 1831, 468; and in 1841, 64 houses and 404 inhabitants. The township of Adderley, in 1841, contained 48 houses and 297 inhabitants. Rateable value, £3,096. 10s. Though now an inconsiderable village, it was in early times of sufficient importance to become a market town. In the 9th of Edward II., Bartholomew Badlesmere had a charter for keeping a market on a Thursday, at his manor of Adderley, and a fair on the eve, and the day and the morrow after the feast of St. Peter and St. Paul, with the privilege of free warren. The manor and estate were afterwards carried in marriage to William Lord Roos, who died in the Holy Land, without issue. Thomas Lord Roos died on his journey thither. John Lord Roos died on his journey to Jerusalem. His son, Thomas Lord Roos, for his fidelity to the Lancasterian interest, was attainted in the parliament 1st of Edward IV., and the manor was seized by the king. Richard Corbet, Esq., and the Earl of Kilmorey are the principal landowners. The Church is a neat structure, dedicated to St. Peter, and consists of nave, chancel, transept, and side chapel. The tower is dated 1732, and the body of the church was rebuilt in 1801. On the north side is the Kilmorey chapel and family vault, the windows of which are ornamented with armorial bearings in stained glass. There are several neat tablets in memory of this family, one of which contains the following inscription:—
Sacred to the memories of
Robert Viscount Kilmorey and Frances Viscountess Kilmorey,
daughter of Sir Robert Salusbury Cotton, Bart., of Combermere Abbey.
Their conjugal felicity, during an union of twenty-seven years,
knew no interruption, felt no decline.
The blow which severed them on earth
was mercifully healed by an early reunion in heaven;
and their mortal remains were together consigned
to the vault beneath, on the 7th day of December,
A.D. M,DCCCXVIII.
There is also a brass plate, with representations of one of the Earls of Kilmorey, his lady, and the figures of seven boys and two girls, in fine preservation, dated 1556; near to which is another brass plate, with the mutilated figure of a person in priestly vestments. The church-yard is ornamented with several fine yew trees, and the ancient font has been placed in the church-yard, and converted into a sun dial. The living is a rectory, in the patronage of the Cotton family, and incumbency of the Rev. William Cotton. The Rev. Leonard Slater is the officiating curate, and resides at the Rectory; a good residence, a little north from the church. Adderley Hall, a handsome stuccoed mansion, with centre and wings, is approached by a noble portico, and is the seat and property of Richard Corbet, Esq. It is beautified with pleasure grounds and shrubberies, and stands in a well wooded park, ornamented with a fine sheet of water.
Charities.—The Rev. Robert Adams, in 1719, devised certain lands, in trust, for charitable uses, which then produced a yearly income of £13. 12s. per annum. The donor directed £8 to be paid by the rector, vicar, and churchwardens of Muccleston, Adderley, and Drayton, alternately, on the 25th of March every year, for the setting a poor boy or girl yearly apprentice; the yearly sum of 30s. to be paid for the instruction of children in Adderley; the same sum for the like purpose in Muccleston; and the sum of 52s. to be expended in bread, and distributed to the poor who should attend divine service in the parish of Adderley. The estate now produces a yearly income of £35. 12s.; and the whole of the clear rents, since 1815, have been applied to the charitable uses mentioned in the will. The same person also bequeathed £20, to be placed out at interest, and distributed among the poor of the parish of Adderley. There is no evidence to show how this legacy has been applied.
Thomas Reynolds, in 1725, devised a messuage at Walkerton, near Wybunbury, in Cheshire, to apply one moiety of the rents and profits thereof, for the benefit of the poor of Adderley; and the other moiety among the poor of Dodcot-cum-Wilksley, in the parish of Audlem. The premises at Walkerton were subsequently sold for £1,050; and in 1814 the amount was placed in the hands of Sir Corbet Corbet, on the security of a messuage in Staffordshire-street, Market Drayton, and certain lands situated in Betton-lane, subject to redemption on the payment of £1,050, and lawful interest for the same. The yearly sum of £42 is now received from the trustees, under the will of Sir Corbet Corbet, by the churchwardens of Adderley, and one half is transmitted to the overseers of Dodcott-cum-Wilksley; and the other moiety is distributed among the poor of this parish, in sums varying from 5s. to 10s.
Thomas Viscount Kilmorey, by will, 1766, charged his whole estate with the payment of £1 per month, to be laid out in bread, and distributed among the poor every first Sunday in the month, in the parish church of Adderley.
Thomas Clayton, in 1760, left £100, and directed the interest to be expended in bread for the benefit of the poor. This money was invested in the purchase of £131. 7s. 3d. three per cent. consols, and the dividends, amounting to £3. 18s. 8d., are applied by the churchwardens in the purchase of bread, which is distributed every third Sunday in the month amongst seven poor widows.
Corbet Richard, Esq., Adderley Hall
Burgwin William, gardener, The Hall
Burrows Hester Maria, boarding school
Campell Archibald, farm bailiff, The Hall
Duckers John, farmer, The Lees
Groucott John, farmer
Hudson Thomas Heath, farmer
Kemp John, farmer, Pool farm
Lee Robert, shoemaker and parish clerk
Lowe John, shoemaker
Malem Thomas, farmer
Massey William, victualler, The Raven Inn
Moore George, shopkeeper and blacksmith
Moore John, farmer, Adderley Lodge
Moore Thomas, farmer
Pearce Richard, farmer
Roberts John, lime burner; Ellis Wynne, agent
Simons John, blacksmith
Slater Rev. Leonard, B.A., The Rectory
SPOONLEY,
a small township two miles N. from Market Drayton, at the census of 1841 contained 12 houses and 82 inhabitants, the acres of which are included in the return of Adderley. Rateable value, £1,421. 1s. Richard Corbet, Esq., is owner of the whole township, and lord of the manor. The poor of this township participate in the benefit of the charities noticed with Adderley. The principal residents are John Hudson, farmer, Castle Hill; William Lewis, farmer; Thomas Mulliner, farmer; and Richard Swan, farmer.
SHAVINGTON, OR THE MORREY,
is a township four miles N.W. from Market Drayton, partly in this county and partly in that of Cheshire, situated on the northern verge of Shropshire. In 1841 there were three houses and 25 inhabitants returned as within the bounds of this county, and in the parish of Adderley. Rateable value £1,541. 9s.; the acres are given with the parish. The Earl of Kilmorey is owner of the land, and lord of the manor, and occasionally resides at Shavington Hall—a spacious and elegant mansion of brick, surrounded with a park richly wooded, and beautifully adorned with sylvan beauty, comprising upwards of fifteen hundred acres. The noble owner enlarged the park, and began to enclose the whole with a brick wall several years ago—upwards of five miles of the wall has already been built; the park is about seven miles in circumference.
Directory.—The Earl of Kilmorey, Shavington Hall; John Gregory, Esq., steward, Shavington Hall; James Lunt, farmer, The Morrey; and Richard Vernon, farmer, The Morrey.
CHESWARDINE
is a parish and village delightfully situated near the N.E. verge of the county, four miles S.S.E. from Market Drayton. The parish comprehends the townships of Cheswardine, Chipnall, Goldstone, Sambrook, and Sowdley, and contains 5,723a. 3r. 4p. of land. In 1801 there was a population of 628 souls; 1830, 1051, and in 1841, 1015. The township of Cheswardine contains 1,715a. 3r. 10p. of land, and in 1841 had 71 houses and 367 inhabitants. Rateable value, £2,989. 10s. 9d. In the time of King Henry II. Cheswardine was held by John L’Estrange by knight’s service, and in the 32nd of Edward I. Roger L’Estrange had the grant of a market to be held on a Monday, and a fair on the eve, the day, and the day after the translation of St. Swithin. Sir John Mainwaring, knight, was keeper of the park of Cheswarthyn in the 13th of Edward IV. The church is an ancient structure, dedicated to St. Swithin, and consists of nave, chancel, and side aisles, with a tower, in which are six musical bells, which were put up, and also a new clock, about two years ago; from the summit of the tower a most extensive and beautiful prospect of the country is seen. The clock and the bells were purchased with money raised by voluntary subscriptions, and the gallery on the west side of the church was erected at the joint expense of John Butter, of Sowdley Park; William Butter, of Chipnall, and Richard Meeson, of Little Sowdley. There is a mural tablet in memory of the Rev. Samuel Orpe, who was vicar of this parish for 56 years; he died in 1724, aged 86 years. A small memorial of brass remembers Gabriel Lloyd, who died in the year 1623, and another brass plate states that Richard Jervis died in the year 1688. The living is a vicarage valued in the king’s book at £5. 6s. 8d., now returned at £260, in the patronage of T. Smallwood, Esq.; the Rev. Charles Miller is the officiating curate. This church was anciently held by the abbot of Haughmond, having been given to the Abbey by John L’Estrange in the time of Henry II. He also gave to the abbey the mill at Cheswarthyn, with the appurtenances. Queen Elizabeth, in the 26th of her reign, devised the tithes of the parish to Richard Corbet, Esq. On the western verge of the parish there is an open common, covering an area of about 100 acres. The Shropshire Union Canal intersects the parish, taking its course through some deep cuttings about a mile west from the church; on the banks of the canal there is a wharf called the Goldstone Wharf. The National School for boys was built in 1838; there is also a girl’s school, which was erected in 1738.
Charities.—The girls’ school was originally built by Richard Smithiman, and in 1738 it was rebuilt by the parishioners.
Richard Meeson, in 1712, left the yearly sum of £4, to be applied by the ministers and churchwardens of the parish, as an additional salary to the schoolmaster there, for instructing four poor boys in the English tongue, for so many years as the minister and churchwardens should think fit.
John Sawdley left to the poor of this parish £100. The churchwardens have been in possession of several closes at Foxbrook, in the parish of Dilhorne, in Staffordshire, from the year 1721. Altogether there are about ten acres, and it would appear from entries in the churchwarden’s book, that this property was purchased with the legacy above mentioned, but the purchase deeds are not now in the possession of the parishioners. The land is let at a yearly rent of £12.
Several sums of money, amounting in the whole to £172, left at different periods, and by various donors, were held by the churchwardens in trust for the poor of the parish, previous to 1754; in that year the sum of £155 was laid out in the purchase of an estate in the parish of Hinstock, comprising between eight and nine acres, which now produces a yearly income of £20. The rents of the above two charities are received by the churchwardens, and the amount, with the produce of other charities, is given away on the Friday before the first of July, and on St. Thomas’s day, in wheat to the poor parishioners in quantities varying from two gallons to a bushel.
Richard Jervis, by will, 24th July, 1688, gave to the poor of Cheswardine parish £10, to be disposed of at the discretion of his executors. The yearly sum of 10s. has been paid in respect of this legacy. The last payment was made by Cresswell Pigott, Esq., as executor of Henry Z. Jervis, who was the personal representative of the donor. For two years previous to the Charity Commissioners publishing their report nothing had been received, in consequence of a suit in the Court of Chancery having been instituted respecting the estate of Mr. Jervis. An affidavit was sworn by one of the churchwardens in support of a claim to this legacy.
Francis Butler, by will, 1694, gave a rent charge of £2 10s. per annum for the benefit of the poor of Cheswardine parish. The property from which this gift is payable is situate in the township of Chipnall, and was part of the estate of the late Henry Zachariah Jervis, whose property became the subject of a suit in the Court of Chancery, as already mentioned.
In the parliamentary returns of 1786 it is stated that Sarah Sambrook left 2s. 2d. per month, to be given to the poor in bread. A distribution of bread takes place on the first Sunday in every month, in respect of this charity, and the amount, £1. 6s. per annum, is paid by the owner of Sowdley Park farm, upon which the payment appears to be charged.
In the parish books in which the distribution of charities is entered from 1721 to 1767, there is a memorandum stating that John Butter gave to the poor of this parish three dozen of bread on Good Friday, in respect of the legacy left by John Bold, of Great Sawdley. The last entry to this effect is in 1760, and we have not met with any proof of bread having been distributed on Good Friday since that time.
William Goodall, who died in 1808, left £10 to the poor of the parish, and John Goodall, who died in 1826, left the like sum for the same purpose; 20s., the interest of these legacies, are expended in bread and given amongst the most deserving poor.
There is an estate in Sowdley, the rents of which have been applied from time immemorial in aid of the church rate. The estate consists of two closes called Denway Croft and Ames Field, and two other closes containing altogether about eight acres and a half, which is let at a yearly rental of £14. 14s. There are also two cottages, with gardens, let by the overseers for the use of poor persons, at the yearly rental of £3. The rents are applied in aid of the church rates, and in paying the interest of £150 borrowed towards the erection of the new church.
Post Office.—At Mr. Henry Bates.
Arkinstall William, tailor
Bate Edwin, butcher
Bate Henry, parish clerk and schoolmaster
Bayley Mr. Edward, surgeon, &c.
Beeston James, grocer and druggist
Beeston William, maltster & beerhouse keepr
Boffey Samuel, tailor
Challenor John, corn miller
Cooper George, shoemaker
Edge Samuel, beerhouse keeper & maltster
Goodall John, farmer
Green Samuel, draper and tea dealer
Hoole John, farmer
Hudson Thomas, Esq., Cheswardine Hill Hall
Hughes Theodore Alfred, plumber & glazier
Hurst Mr. John
James George, wheelwright
Lamford James, shoemaker
Lea James, shopkeeper
Marsh George, farmer
Miller Rev. Charles, curate, The Vicarage
Nagginton James, farmer
Nicholas Abraham Barlow, shopkeeper
Pearce James, shoemaker
Pointer Edward, farmer
Ratcliffe Mr., farmer
Spender William, farmer, Haywood
Shropshire John, farmer and butcher
Shropshire William, tailor
Turnbull Mr. John, builder and victualler, Fox and Hounds
Wakefield Thomas, farmer
Walker Mr. John
Whilton Matthew, farmer, Haywood
Whittaker Henry, saddler
Wild John, farmer
Williams William, blacksmith
CHIPNALL, OR CHIPPENHALL,
is a township and village in the parish of Cheswardine, four miles N.E. from Market Drayton. At the census of 1841 there were 30 houses and 70 inhabitants. The township contains 1,309a. 0r. 10p. of land, which is the property of Thomas Hudson, Esq. Rateable value, £1,615. 15s. 11d.
The principal residents in Chipnall township are William Adams, farmer, Lipley; Joseph Duckers, farmer, Chipnall Hall; James Goodall, farmer and beerhouse keeper; John Moreton, farmer, Lipley; Matthew Plant, farmer and corn miller; John Taylor, blacksmith; Thomas Birbeck Wakefield, farmer, Lipley; Henry Yates, farmer.
ELLERTON
township is situated three miles from Cheswardine church, and contains 448a. 2r. 0p. of land, the whole of which is the property of Robert Masefield, Esq. At the census in 1841 there was no separate return for Ellerton as a distinct township, but the inhabitants were included in the returns for Cheswardine. Ellerton Hall, a handsome modern mansion, the residence of Robert Masefield, Esq., was built in 1836, on the site of an ancient house composed of timber and plaster. The hall is delightfully situated on an acclivity near the verge of the county, and commands a beautiful prospect of great extent over the counties of Salop and Stafford. The county is here separated from Staffordshire by a small stream, which meanders in the front of the hall. Not far from the hall is a fine sheet of water, which covers upwards of six acres, near to which is a corn mill. Rateable value of the township, £732. 4s. 1d.
The residents are Robert Masefield, Esq., Ellerton Hall, John Challenor, farmer and corn miller; and William Challenor, farmer.
GOLDSTON
is a township and small village pleasantly situated on the declivity of a hill about a mile and a half west by south from Cheswardine church. The township contains 452a. 1r. 16p. of land, and at the census of 1841 there were 14 houses and 75 inhabitants. Rateable value, £598. 1s. 6d. There are only three farms in this township, two of which are the property of William Vardon, Esq., and the other is possessed by Mrs. Charlotte Masefield. Goldston Hall is a neat brick house, the occasional residence of William Vardon, Esq. Near to the hall is an antique house, chiefly composed of timber and plaster, which was most probably erected about the middle of the fifteenth century; it is now the residence of Mr. Alfred Holden, farmer. On the banks of the Shropshire union canal, which passes about half a mile from the village, there is a wharf where coal is sold, called the Goldston wharf.
The resident farmers in this township are Thomas Beeston, Alfred Holden, and Ann Lea; William Vardon, Esq., The Hall; Thomas Finn, gardener to W. Vardon, Esq.
SAMBROOK
is a small rural village, partly in the parish of Cheswardine, and partly in that of Chetwynd, three and a half miles south from Cheswardine, and three miles north from Chetwynd church. At the census of 1841 there were 22 houses and 96 inhabitants in the former parish, and 15 houses and 80 inhabitants in the latter. John Charles Burton Boroughs, Esq., is the principal landowner; Dr. Swanwick is also a proprietor. A small chapel of ease was erected here in the year 1839. The turnpike road from Newport to Market Drayton intersects the township; and at Stamford Bridge there is a respectable inn, kept by Mr. Cordwell.
Directory.—Thomas Beddall, mason; John Cordwell, timber merchant, Oak Cottage; Thomas Cordwell, timber merchant and vict., Talbot Inn, Stamford Bridge; Thomas Dix, blacksmith; Joseph Goodwin, blacksmith and beerhouse keeper; William Jones, farmer; Joseph Lockley, wheelwright; Miss Stanley, The Cottage; George Stokes, farmer; Joseph Wainwright, farmer.
SOWDLEY GREAT
is a township and scattered village in the parish of Cheswardine, situated about three quarters of a mile south-east from the church. The township contains 1,497a. 3r. 22p. of land, and in 1841 there were 75 houses and 333 inhabitants. Rateable value, £2,280. 3s. 8d. The principal landowners are Robert Masefield, Esq.; Thomas Addison, Esq.; George Addison, Esq.; Mr. Thomas Buckley; Mr. William Buckley; Mr. William Manley; Mr. Stanley; and Mr. William Brian. The Wesleyan Methodists have a small chapel in Great Sowdley, built in the year 1837, on land given by Mr. John Butterton. The poor of the several townships in this parish participate in the general charities noticed with the township of Cheswardine.
Allen Sarah, farmer
Arkinstall Henry, farmer
Ashley John, farmer, Little Sowdley
Beeston Joseph, tailor
Benbow James, farmer, Sowdley park
Brian William, farmer
Buckley Thomas, shopkeeper
Hamner George, farmer
Hayward John, carpenter, wheelwright, and beerhouse keeper, Hopshort
Hazledine Thomas, farmer, Sowdley park
Hughes James, shoemaker, Hopshort
Jackson Thomas, farmer
Lea John, farmer
Lee Philip, farmer, Little Sowdley
Pointon George, farmer
Robinson William, beerhouse
Simkin Thomas, farmer, Little Sowdley
Stanley Henry, farmer, Hanwood House
Swinnerton William, blacksmith and farmer
Walton John, farmer
Whittall John, schoolmaster
Worrall John, farmer
Worrall William, brickmaker
DRAYTON-IN-HALES, OR MARKET DRAYTON,
is a parish and considerable market town, in the Drayton division of the North Bradford Hundred, 153 miles N.W. by N. from London, 19 miles N.E. by N. from Shrewsbury, 11 miles N. from Newport, and 12 miles S.E. from Whitchurch. The town is pleasantly situated on the north-east extremity of the county, and is watered by the river Tern. It is a place of great antiquity; and, according to Nennius, was one of the principal cities of the ancient Britons. From the discovery of foundations, and other traces of buildings in the fields adjoining the town, it is probable that its extent was once more considerable than at present; and though no coins, pavements, or other monuments of antiquity have been discovered here, it is nevertheless strongly conjectured that this town was the Roman Station, Mediolanum. It is still a place of importance, and the head of a division of the county, in which the petty sessions are held. It contains several good inns, and many respectable shops in all the different branches of the retail trade. There are three firms engaged in the manufacture of hair seating, which together employ about two hundred operatives. The manufacture of paper was formerly carried on to some extent, but was discontinued about five years ago. Here is a tannery, ironfoundery, and agricultural implements are extensively made. The various handicraft trades, in which a considerable number of the population are employed, will be seen on reference to the directory. The general traffic of this locality is facilitated by the Birmingham and Liverpool Junction Canal, which passes on the eastern side of the town. Drayton is twice mentioned in the Domesday survey, and it was then held by knights’ service under Earl Roger. In the 30th of Henry III. the Abbot of Combermere had a grant of a market here on a Wednesday, and a fair on the eve, the day, and the day after the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary. The market is still held on Wednesdays, and numerously attended by the farmers who reside in the surrounding district, when considerable quantities of grain are sold. Fairs are held on the first Wednesday in February, Wednesday before Palm Sunday, first Wednesday in May, Wednesday before June 22nd, first Wednesday in August, September 19th, October 24th, and the last Wednesday in November. The parish comprehends the townships of Betton, Drayton Magna, Drayton Parva, Longslow, Sutton and Woodseaves, in this county; it also extends into the Pirehill hundred, in the county of Stafford, and is divided into four quarters for parochial purposes, viz.:—Church quarter, containing Drayton Magna and Drayton Parva; the north quarter, containing Betton, Ridgewardine, and Tunstall; south quarter, Longslow, Sutton, and Woodseaves; and Tirley quarter, containing Almington, Blore, Hales, and Tirley. The entire parish, in 1801, contained a population of 3,162 souls; 1831, 3,882; and in 1841, 4,680 souls. It embraces 7,726a. 3r. 11p. of land. The township of Drayton Magna contains 678a. 2r. 35p. of land, and at the census of 1841 had 361 houses and 1,699 inhabitants. The principal landowners are Richard Corbet, Esq., P. Sillitoe, Esq., the Earl of Powis, William Church Norcop, Esq., Thomas Whitfield, Esq., and John E. Wilson, Esq. The former is lord of the manor, and impropriator of the rectoral tithes, which are commuted for £51. 5s. 9d. The vicarial tithes are commuted for £40. 19s. 9d. Drayton Parva is a populous district, forming a western suburb to the town, chiefly consisting of cottage residences, many of which are small, ill-ventilated, and have a miserable appearance. At the census of 1841 there were 352 houses and 1,462 inhabitants. The township contains 520a. 2r. 32p. of land. Among the principal landowners are Thomas Whitfield, Esq., and Mr. Brocklehurst. Richard Corbet, Esq., and Peter Broughton, Esq., are joint lords of the manor. Mr. Benjamin Beeston, Mr. William Godwin, and Mr. Samuel Swinnerton, are also landowners; besides whom there are upwards of one hundred and fifty small freeholders. Little Drayton Common, containing 97a. 0r. 36p., was enclosed in 1850, when five acres were allotted for the site of the new church, the parsonage, and the burial ground. The rectoral tithes have been commuted for £54. 19s. 7d., and the vicarial for £21. 13s. 1d.
The Church, dedicated to St. Mary, is a massive structure, void of architectural beauty, consisting of nave, chancel, and side aisles, with a castellated tower, supported by butresses. It was built in the reign of King Stephen, and underwent a complete reparation in 1786, when it was stripped of its gothic honours. But little of the original structure remains; the pillars and arches which separate the nave from the side aisles are undoubtedly the most ancient part of the building. The approach is at the west end, under a tower, by a Norman doorway, ornamented in the zig-zag style; the ornaments and clustered pillars are, however, much corroded by time. The tower, with the exception of a small portion at the bottom, appears to have been wholly rebuilt. On a beam in the belfry there is the date 1590, but there is no historical record to show that the tower was rebuilt in that year. There are six musical bells; the tenor bell, weighing 17½ cwt., was added about five years ago. The interior is spacious and lofty, and provided with commodious galleries. Upon the gallery at the west end is a small organ. Each side aisle is divided from the nave by five pointed arches rising from octagonal pillars, the ornamental portions of which have been defaced. In the centre aisle is a capacious font, of an octagonal form. The east window is richly beautified with stained glass, which was added about twenty-five years ago, at the expense of Sir Andrew Corbet. An antique tablet remembers Dame Anne Corbet, who died in 1682, aged 80 years. “She was the mother of ten sons and ten daughters, whereof seventeen lived to be men and women.” The walls of the chancel and side aisles are ornamented with numerous other tablets in memory of members of some of the principal families resident in this neighbourhood, but which our limits will not allow us to notice; several of modern erection are very beautifully designed. There was a chantery in this church, founded by Ralph de Basset in the 14th of Edward I., for three chaplains, who had three acres of land here. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king’s book at £12. 10s. 7½d., now returned at £173, in the patronage of Richard Corbet, Esq., and incumbency of the Rev. James Lee, M.A. The Vicarage, a neat residence a little west from the church, was erected in 1837, at a cost of £1,000, by the present incumbent. The old vicarage stood near the west end of the church, and was taken down when the present edifice was built. The site and the garden, measuring about half an acre, were sold by the vicar to the parishioners for the sum of £400, and were added to the church-yard. The church stands considerably elevated, and is a conspicuous and imposing object when seen from the Newport road, the southern approach to the town. The church-yard commands a fine prospect towards the south. Immediately before you is an abrupt declevity, with cottages nestling under the cliff; the meanderings of the Tern water the fertile meadows beneath; and on the opposite acclivity is seen the beautiful seat of Purney Sillitoe, Esq., embosomed in thriving plantations with a fine extent of richly-wooded country extending into Staffordshire.
The New Church, situated on Little Drayton Common, is dedicated to our Saviour, and was built in 1846. It is a neat structure, in the early English style of architecture, with nave, chancel, and side aisles, with a tower at the north-west corner. The interior has a chaste and pleasing appearance, and will accommodate about six hundred worshippers. The sittings are uniform in character, and are all free, with the exception of forty. The total cost of the structure was £2,600, of which Mrs. Nonelly gave the munificent sum of £500, and a like sum towards the erection of a residence for the minister. The parsonage stands a little south from the church, and was built in 1847, on the five acres of land given for the site of the church and parsonage. About an acre and a half has been enclosed for a burial ground, and the rest is appropriated as gardens and pleasure grounds to the parsonage. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the Vicar of Drayton; incumbent, Rev. Edward Cheere, M.A. The district of this church comprises Little Drayton, the township of Sutton, and part of Woodseaves.
The Independent Chapel, a plain brick structure, situated in Back-lane, was built in the year 1778. It is neatly fitted up and provided with galleries. The congregation had no settled pastor when our agent visited Drayton.
The Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, situated in Shropshire-street, within the bounds of the township of Little Drayton, was built in the year 1808. The structure is plain, is provided with a gallery, and will accommodate between four and five hundred people.
The Baptist Chapel, a small structure, situate at Little Drayton, has a residence attached. There is no baptist minister residing here, but members of this persuasion meet for worship every alternate Sunday.
The Primitive Methodists have a small chapel, situated a little back from Cheshire-street. This is the only place of worship in the town,—too small for the number of hearers who attend religious service. It is expected a new chapel will shortly be built.
The Free Grammar School, situated on the south-east side of the church yard, was founded by Sir Rowland Hill, in 1554, who charged the manor at Wellington Hey, with the lands thereto belonging, with the payment of £22 per annum, for the support of the said school. The churchwardens of the parish were incorporated governors of the school, and were directed to pay twenty marks yearly out of the above sum to the master, to the usher £6. 13s. 4d., and the yearly sum of 40s. residue thereof should be kept as a fund for the reparations of the school. The governors covenanted for themselves and their successors that the hall or tenement on the south side of the church yard at Drayton, commonly called St. Mary’s Hall, wherein a grammar school was then kept, or such other house as should be thereafter erected on the site, should be for ever used for the said grammar school. The school was to be free for all children whose parents should place them there for learning to read English, the Latin, Greek, and Hebrew languages, and that neither the master nor the usher should agree for any recompense for such instruction. Sir Thomas Lake, in 1662, gave a rent charge issuing out of certain lands in the parish of Baschurch, amounting to £9. 19s. per annum, £6. 12s. 8d. thereof to the schoolmaster, and £3. 6s. 4d. to the usher. By an order in the Court of Chancery made 22nd January, 1816, on a petition presented by the governors it was ordered that the offices of master and usher should be consolidated, and that the office of usher should be abolished. That the governors should be at liberty to expend a sum not exceeding £191 in repairing the school house and other buildings belonging to the school; and that such sum should be raised by a mortgage of the said premises. That the governors should let the house then occupied by the usher. That a salary of £25 should be paid to the master, and that the residue of the annual revenues of the school should be applied in discharge of the principal money to be borrowed for the said repairs, and of the necessary repairs that might from time to time be wanted. The income of the school consists of the two rent charges above mentioned, and £7 per annum arising from the rent of the house formerly occupied by the usher. Out of the income amounting to £38 19s. there is paid a salary of £25 to the master, £9. 2s. as interest on the £182 laid out in the repairs of the school premises, and some small sums annually for repairs and incidental expenses. The Rev. Charles Cooke, M.A., is the master.
The Parochial and National School is a neat brick structure in the Elizabethan style of architecture, situated on a bold eminence a short distance west from the church. It was built in the year 1835, and is supported by annual subscriptions, and small weekly payments received from the children. There are one hundred and sixty boys and one hundred and thirty girls now educated in the school. William Scott is the teacher.
The Market Drayton Poor-law Union comprehends twelve parishes, embracing 61,637 acres of land, and an area of 91 square miles, with a population returned at the census of 1841 of 13,925 souls. The Union House, situated in Shropshire-street, was formerly used as the parish workhouse; it was enlarged by the poor-law guardians in the year 1839; the average number of inmates is usually about one hundred. A new Union House will shortly be built upon Little Drayton Common, which will accommodate about 350 inmates. The district comprised within the union is the same as that of the county court, the several places of which are stated here below:—Chairman of the Guardians: Thomas Twemlow, Esq. Vice Chairman: Walter Minor, Esq. Clerks: Messrs. Wilkinsons. Chaplain: Rev. Robert Upton. Surgeons: William W. Saxton, Market Drayton district; John Hopkins, Moreton Say district; John Walmsley, Hodnet district; Edward Bayley, Cheswardine district; and Michael Ryan, Ashley district. Master: William Crutchley. Matron: Mary Crutchley. Schoolmistress: Martha Crutchley.
The County Court Offices, situated in Cheshire-street, is a neat structure of brick with stone finishings, and was built in the year 1850, at the expense of Joseph Loxdale Warren, Esq. The lower part of the building is used as offices for the despatch of business connected with the county court, and above is a large room capable of holding upwards of 400 people, which is used for magisterial purposes. The court embraces within its jurisdiction the following townships and places, viz.:—Adderley, Almington, Ashley, Aston, Bearston, Betchley, Betton, Blore, Bolas Parva, Cheswardine, Childs Ercall, Chipnall, Dorrington, Drayton Magna, Drayton Parva, Eaton, Ellerton, Goldstone, Gravenhanger, Hales, Hinstock, Hodnet, Hopton and Espley, Howle, Hungary Hatton, Kenstone and Hopley, Knighton, Langford, Longslow, Losford, Marchamley, Moreton Say, Muckleston, Norton-in-Hales, Ollerton, Peplow, Pickstock, Sambrook, Shavington, Sowdley, Spoonley, Stoke-upon-Tern, Stych and Woodlands, Sutton, Tittenley, Wistanswick, Woodseaves, Woolerton, and Woore. Judge: Uvedale Corbett, Esq. Clerk: Joseph Loxdale Warren, Esq., The Lodge. Bailiff: Mr. William Darbyshire Green, Cheshire-st.
Petty Sessions are held on the last Saturday in every month, in the spacious room above the county court offices, when prisoners are committed to Shrewsbury or Stafford, as the case may occur, in which county the offence is committed, the magistrates having jurisdiction in both counties.
The Police Office is situated in Cheshire-street nearly opposite the county court office. It was built in 1850, and has two cells, where prisoners are confined before committal by the magistrates. In which case they are sent to Shrewsbury if the offence has been committed in this county, and to Stafford if committed in Staffordshire. Attached to the cells is a residence for the constable; William Hemming is the police officer.
The Market Drayton Society for the Acquirement of Useful Knowledge was established in September, 1850. The objects of the institution are to extend to all classes aid for cultivating, and occasion for exercising their mental powers; to afford to its members the powerful advantages and incitement of association for prosecuting their several studies in the various branches of useful knowledge, and to secure to them opportunity for engaging in such pursuits as shall tend to their moral as well as intellectual advancement. For these objects the society has taken convenient premises situate in the beast market; classes for mutual improvement have been formed, a library and news room have been established, and it is intended to have lectures on natural and experimental philosophy, and the fine arts, as occasion may occur; the news room is furnished with the principal London and provincial journals and the most popular periodicals of the day; and the library, although only recently established, contains many valuable and standard works. Persons are admitted to all the privileges of the institution on the payment of 8s. per annum. An annual subscription of 21s. per annum constitutes an honorary member, and any person giving the sum of £10. 10s., or books, or apparatus to that amount, or a course of not less than ten lectures, is considered an honorary member for life. The honorary members have the exclusive use of the reading room from nine o’clock in the morning till six o’clock in the evening. The institution has the patronage and active support of the principal gentry and clergy of the town and neighbourhood. Patrons: Henry Bayley Clive, Esq., M.P.; John Whitehall Dod, Esq., M.P. President: Thomas Twemlow, Esq. Treasurer: W. M. Wilkinson, Esq. Secretary: Mr. William Crutchley.
A News Room has been established by the gentry and tradesmen in the town, at Mrs. Barnett’s, High-street. It is supported by subscriptions of 21s. per annum.
The Gas Works are situated in the outskirts of the southern side of the town, near the river Tern; they were established by a company of shareholders, who reside in Staffordshire, and the town is expected to be lighted with gas during the autumn of the present year (1851).
Provident Societies.—There are in this town several societies or clubs, the members of which pay small contributions to their respective funds, from which they are relieved in case of sickness, infirmity, or superannuation, and from which the friends of deceased members receive a sufficient sum for their decent interment. Among these are the Market Drayton Tradesmen Club, and the fraternities or sacred Orders of Oddfellows, M.U.; Ancient Forresters, and Female Societies, &c.
The Grove is a handsome brick mansion, a quarter of a mile east from the church, the residence and property of John E. Wilson, Esq.—Spring Fields, a good house a little west from the church, situated on elevated ground, commands fine prospects of the country, and is the residence and property of Thomas Whitfield, Esq.
Near this town, during the desolating wars between the houses of York and Lancaster, a desperate conflict took place at Blore Heath, on the borders of Staffordshire, which proved very disastrous to numbers of the Cheshire gentry, and many of the principal families of the adjoining district. The battle took place on the 23rd of September, 1459, when Richard Neville, Earl of Salisbury, commanded the forces of the white rose, and had an army of 5,000 men encamped on a hill near Market Drayton. He was opposed by James Touchet, Lord Audley, on the part of the red rose, with an army of 10,000. Though so disproportionate in numbers, the army of Salisbury proved victorious: 2,400 men are said to have been slain in this bloody conflict, together with their brave and loyal chief, who fell by the hand of Robert Kynaston, Esq., of Hordley, a zealous partizan of the house of York. In a field adjoining the turnpike road from Market Drayton to Newcastle, a stone has been set up to mark the spot where Lord Audley fell. What rendered the battle more calamitous was, that the principal families ranged nearly in equal numbers on the side of each of the contending parties. The old English poet, Michael Drayton, in his “Polyalbion,” represents the conflict as partaking of the form of a duel, in which one relative falls a sacrifice to the resentment of the other:—
“There Dutton Dutton kills; a Done doth kill a Done;
A Booth a Booth; and Leigh by Leigh is overthrown;
A Venables against a Venables doth stand,
A Troutbeck fighteth with a Troutbeck hand to hand;
There Molineux doth make a Molineux to die,
And Egerton the strength of Egerton doth try.
O Cheshire! wert thou mad of thine own native gore,
So much until this day thou never shedd’st before;
Above two thousand men upon the earth were thrown,
Of whom the greater part were naturally thine own.”
Thomas Whitfield, Esq., of Drayton, has in his possession the crest of the Egertons, a sword handle, and a brass stirrup, richly ornamented and in good preservation, which were found about thirty years ago on the field of battle. During the struggles between Charles I. and the parliament, a skirmish took place in the neighbourhood of Drayton, between the King’s party, under the command of Prince Rupert, and the parliamentary forces under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax, when the royal cause gained a temporary success.
The Market Drayton Savings’ Bank, on November 20th, 1850, had a capital stock of £29,004. 3s., invested with the commissioners for the reduction of the national debt, at which period there were 866 separate accounts, of which ten were charitable societies, with deposits amounting to £260. 12s. 1d.; and ten friendly societies, with deposits amounting to £1,706. 2s. 6d. Of the total number of deposits, there were 449 whose respective balances did not exceed £20; 218 were above £20 and not exceeding £50; 109 above £50 and not exceeding £100; 36 above £100 and not exceeding £150; and 29 between that sum and £200. John Moore is the secretary.
Charities.—Frances Hill, in 1557, gave a rent charge of 29s. per annum, out of premises in Castle Donnington, and directed 2s. to be paid yearly to the vicar or priest of Drayton to say mass in the parish church, or such divine service as should be lawful to be observed there; 8d. to the parish clerk, and 16d. to the bell ringers; 2s. 8d. for two wax tapers; 8d. to her heirs for the trouble of payment; and the residue to be given to the poorest inhabitants of Drayton. Out of this gift 2s. is paid to the minister, 2s. to the clerk, and to the two churchwardens 8d. each, and the remainder is distributed among the poor, in groats, on Trinity Sunday.
Elizabeth Wetenhall, by her will, bearing date 19th December, 1693, devised to Robert Clive and John Gardner, and their heirs, two parcels of land at Drayton, called the Gallow Tree Field and the Clay Pits, which then produced a rental of £6. 16s. per annum; also a yearly rent of £4, issuing out a messuage and lands at Winstanwick; and a yearly rent of 8s. 4d. out of a farm at Childs Ercall. And she also bequeathed to the same persons £60, to be laid out in the purchase of land, or a rent charge, and out of the yearly proceeds, £4 to be paid in apprenticing one poor boy of the parish of Drayton to some useful trade; 40s. to be equally distributed among forty poor widows, or old decayed workmen of Drayton; 20s. to the vicar of the parish, provided he should preach a sermon on St. Thomas’s day; £6. to be paid to Gabriel Wetenhall and George Dodd, and their heirs and assignees; £4 for the purpose of putting forth a poor boy of the parish of Audlem, in Cheshire, apprentice; and 40s. to be distributed among forty of the poorest widows or decayed labourers of the said parish. In 1811, an information was filed against Robert Farbeck and Samuel Redshaw, as the representatives of the co-heiresses of Robert Clive, the surviving trustee, and against Richard Grant, who acted as the trustee of the charity by the attorney-general, at the relation of the Rev. William Cotton and others. On the 21st of July, 1848, a new scheme for the administration of the charity and distribution of the income thereof, was made, and certain trustees appointed. In this scheme the trustees are ordered, after paying any expenses incident to the administration of the charity, to divide the income into thirteen parts, and apply the same in the following manner, viz., four-thirteenths thereof in apprenticing a poor boy of the parish of Drayton, selected by the majority of the trustees; two-thirteenths to be distributed in money, or laid out in the purchase of coals, blankets, provisions, or clothing, at the discretion of the trustees, and distributed among forty poor widows, and old decayed workmen of the parish of Drayton; one-thirteenth to be paid to the vicar of Drayton, provided he shall have preached, or cause to be preached, two sermons on St. Thomas’s day, in Drayton church; four-thirteenths in apprenticing poor boys of the parish of Audlam, in Cheshire; and the remaining two thirteenths to be distributed in money or clothes, among forty poor widows or decayed labourers of the said parish of Audlem. From certain technicalities not yet complied with by the legal gentlemen, and which few can see the reasonableness of but a lawyer, the charity yet remains in abeyance. The accumulations amount to upwards of £1,400, out of which between £400 and £500 had been expended in the prosecution of the suit up to December, 1850. The trustees appointed for the administration of the charity by the attorney-general, July, 1848, are the Rev. George Pitt; Richard Corbet, Esq.; Henry Clive, Esq.; William Tayleur, Esq.; Thomas Twemlow, Esq.; William Wilkinson, Esq.; and Richard Grant, Esq.
John Wright left the yearly sum of 10s., to be given in bread on the feast of St. John the Baptist, and the feast of St. John the Evangelist: he also left the like sum yearly for the poor of Tyrley quarter. In respect of this charity, 20s. per annum is received from certain premises at Stoke-upon-Tern, which is applied according to the donor’s intentions. Lawrence Thompson left 20s. per annum to the poor of Drayton, to be given on St. Lawrence’s day. Ralph Kendrirk gave an annual sum of 20s. to the poor, and Mr. Cooke, a yearly sum of 3s. 4d. These several sums are carried to the poor’s account, and bread distributed to the amount on New Year’s Day.
The Rev. Richard Price, by will 1730, devised certain lands and houses in and near Drayton to the poor of Drayton and Hodnet; viz., £5 per annum, for a distribution of bread every Lord’s-day, and the remainder for the schooling of poor children of each place. The premises now held by the parish officers of Drayton, as derived from the Rev. R. Price, consist of a building in Little Drayton, formerly used as a poor house. This building was probably erected upon the site of the five messuages conveyed in trust by the Rev. R. Price; but it does not appear how the parish of Drayton became entitled to the whole, as part was allotted to the parish of Hodnet. The are also two pieces of land, called the Town Field and Crab Tree Field, and a small plot of land in Longslow lane, which produce a yearly rental altogether of £19. 11s. This sum is carried to the general account, kept by the churchwardens, entitled the Poors’ Account.
John Bill left £240, the interest to be disposed of in the Shropshire part of the parish. In 1781 the sum of £240 was lent to Thomas H. Alcock, on his bond, but he subsequently failing, a dividend of £106 was received from the bankrupt’s estate. In 1819 a sum of £190 was advanced by the churchwardens for the repairs of the Grammar School, for which interest was to be paid at the rate of five per cent. It is stated in a memorandum, entered in the churchwardens’ book, that £118, part of this money was left by Mr. Bill for the purpose of a charity school in Little Drayton, and apprenticing poor children, at the discretion of the churchwardens. Interest is now paid on £182 from the school funds, and the amount is carried to the poors’ account; but it may be observed, that in the application of those funds, only £4 is disposed of annually for the education of poor children of Little Drayton, which sum falls short of the income of Price’s charity before mentioned, which is also applicable to this purpose, and nothing whatever is applied in binding out apprentices.
It appears from a schedule of benefactions, that a great number of legacies have been left for the benefit of the poor of this parish. Among the donors is Stephen Denstone, who gave £100 in 1705, and directed the yearly produce to be distributed among the poorest widows and housekeepers of Great and Little Drayton. Richard Heeley gave £100, and directed half the interest to be expended in bread, and the other half as the minister and churchwardens of Drayton should think fit. Margaret Blest gave £50, the interest to be distributed among fifty poor housekeepers. Various other legacies, 36 in number, amounting in the whole, with the above gifts, to £577. 13s. 4d., have been laid out at different periods in the purchase of land, situate at Hinstock, Ightfield, Drayton, and Cheswardine. The income derived from these rents, with the interest on the money laid out on the school, amounting altogether to £114. 11s., is carried to one account, with the produce of other charities, entitled the “Poors’ Account;” and after defraying some few incidental expenses, there is paid thereout the following sums:—£7 in sums of 6d. each on St. Stephen’s day; £2. 10s. in small sums on St. Margaret’s day; bread to the amount of 5s. for the poor of Tyrley; bread to the amount of 19s. to the poor of Drayton on Easter Sunday; £4 to a schoolmistress; 2s. worth of bread is given away every Sunday, amounting to £5. 4s. per annum; and 5s. worth is given in addition on one Sunday in every month, amounting to £3; making a total of £22. 18s. The residue of these funds is applied principally in purchasing blankets and clothing, which are given to poor persons of the parish who have met with accidents or occasional distress, in sums of money, varying from 6d. to 5s. We cannot but observe that the small sums given away on St. Stephen’s and St. Margaret’s days, as applications are made to the churchwardens, appear to be too small to be of any real benefit to the parties receiving them.
The Rev. Robert Adams, in 1719, devised certain lands at Winnington upon trust to pay £13. 12s. yearly (the then value thereof) as follows:—£8 to the rector, vicar, and churchwardens of Muccleston, Drayton, and Adderley, alternately, on the 25th of March, every year, for putting forth a poor boy or girl apprentice; 30s. for the education of poor children in Adderley, and a like sum for educational purposes at Muccleston; and the sum of 52s. residue thereof to be expended in bread for the poor of Adderley. The estate is now let for £35. 12s. per annum, and the rents are applied to the charitable uses above mentioned.
Clara Church, by will 1753, bequeathed £150, and directed the officiating minister to distribute 2s. weekly, except in the months of June, July, and August, among poor people frequenting the church on prayer days, and who should come into the church at the beginning, and behave with decency during the time of divine service; to pay 16s. to the minister for visiting poor sick people in the parish, and distribute the residue of the interest among poor members of society visited with sickness. It appears that the amount of Mrs. Church’s legacy was not invested in the funds until December, 1823, when £174 was laid out in the purchase of certain stock in the four per cent. annuities. In 1825 part of the stock, and of another sum of £21. 4s., purchased with a legacy of £20 left by J. Grosvenor, for an addition to the organist’s salary, appear to have been improperly sold out, so as to leave £150 stock for this charity, and £20 stock for the organist. The dividends of the £150 stock amount to £5. 5s. per annum; and during forty weeks in the year 2s. are regularly distributed to the poor, and the sum of 16s. per annum is paid to the vicar. The residue of the dividends is appropriated with the proceeds of the church rate.
Joseph Williams, by will 1796, bequeathed to the minister and churchwardens of Drayton £250, invested in the four per cent. consols, to pay out of the yearly dividends the sum of 20s. to the minister of the parish, for preaching a sermon on Midsummer day; 5s. each to twenty poor widows or widowers, and twelve pennyworth of bread, on Midsummer day; to the ringers, to ring from six to eight o’clock on the same day, 15s.; to an eligible person for receiving the dividends and paying the same to the parish officers, 10s.; to the clerk of the parish, for keeping an inscription of his donations clean, 5s.; and 30s. to the overseers, for distributing his donations. He also gave a further sum of £20 to have an inscription placed in Drayton church, containing the above donations. The dividends, amounting to £8. 15s. per annum, are received by the churchwardens, and applied in the proportions directed by the testator.
Mrs. Lawrence left £500 in the five per cents, to purchase coals to be distributed to the poor inhabitants of the parish during the winter season; and she left a further sum of £100, the interest thereof for the Sunday school of the established church. In respect of the first legacy, there is £525 new four per cents, the dividends of which, amounting to £20 per annum, are received by the churchwardens, and laid out in coals, which are sold to the poor at about 3d. per cwt. under the cost price; and the produce of the sale is laid out in like manner, till the fund is exhausted. The interest of the sum of £100 is applied for the benefit of the Sunday school.
Sophia Grosvenor, in 1816 bequeathed £100, and directed the amount to be invested in government security, and the dividends distributed among the poor of Drayton. Lucina Riddlesden bequeathed £100, and directed the yearly proceeds to be applied in the purchase of warm stockings and shoes, to be given among poor boys and girls who should attend the National School. These two gifts, after deducting the legacy duty, were invested in the purchase of £200 three and a half per cent. stock, which now stands in the names of certain trustees, and of the dividends, amounting to £7 per annum, £3. 10s. is divided among twenty-eight poor old persons, men and women, belonging to the parish; the remaining £3. 10s. is laid out according to the donor’s intentions, in worm stockings and shoes.
Charles-Grooby, by his will bearing date 6th October, 1810, gave to Sir Corbet Corbet, the Rev. William Judgson, and the vicar and churchwardens of Drayton, £1,200 three per cent. bank annuities, upon trust that they should lay out the dividends on the 7th of May, yearly, being the birth day of the testator, towards clothing six poor men and six poor women of the parish of Drayton. The sum of £1,200 stock now stands in the names of certain trustees, and the dividends, amounting to £36 per annum, are received by the churchwardens, and they provide clothing to that amount, which they divide among six poor men and twelve poor women of the parish of Drayton.
Post Office.—At Mr. Richard Grant’s, Beast Market. Letters arrive from the Whitmore railway station at a quarter past four o’clock in the morning, and are despatched at half-past nine in the evening.
Adams Richard, draper and silk mercer, (Adams and Powell) Shropshire street
Adams & Powell, linen and woollen drapers, silk mercers and hatters, Shropshire street
Allen John, tailor, Beast market
Andrews George, gentleman, Stafford street
Arkinstall Mr. John, The Sitch
Arkinstall the Misses, boarding school, Shropshire street
Arkinstall William, tailor, Shropshire street
Barker John, butcher, Beast market
Barnett John, vict., Wheat Sheaf, Old wharf
Barnett Lydia, spirit vaults, High street
Barnett Martha, vict., George Inn, Beast mrkt
Barratt Thomas, builder & timber merchant, Stafford street
Basford Joseph, gardener, Tinkers’ lane
Bate Mary, shopkeeper, Shropshire street
Beeston Mr. Benjamin, Summer hill
Bennion Thomas Platt, bookseller, printer, stationer, bookbinder, circulating library, and depôt of Christian Knowledge Society, High street
Bonell Samuel, pump maker, Stafford street
Boughey and Woodcock, bonnet makers, Church street
Boulton Henry, vict., Crown Inn, Stafford st
Bowker George, watch and clock maker, Cheshire street
Bradbury John, agricultural implement maker, and wheelwright, Longslow lane
Bradbury John, boot & shoe mkr, Shropshire st
Bradbury Maria, bonnet maker, Shropshire st
Bradbury Walter, linen and woollen draper, silk mercer and hatter, High street
Bradshaw John, cabinet maker, and provision dealer, Beast market
Brasnell Thomas, beerhouse keeper, Little Drayton
Bratton John, land agent, Beast market
Brayn Joseph, linen and woollen draper, silk mercer and hatter, High street
Brayn Samuel, gentleman, Stafford street
Brookshaw Benjamin, blacksmith, and beerhouse keeper, Old Wharf
Brookshaw William, blacksmith, Beast markt
Brown Thomas, carpenter and beerhouse keeper, Cheshire street
Burd George, Esq., solicitor, Stafford street
Cartwright Martha, milliner, Shropshire st
Carver Hugh, cheesefactor, Shropshire street
Cash Philip, paper dealer, and trunk maker, Shropshire street
Cheere Rev. Edward, M.A., Parsonage, Little Drayton
Chritchley Cornelius, coach builder, Beast market
Cockayne Edward, coach and house painter, Stafford street
Cooke Rev. Charles, M.A., head master at Grammar School, Church yard side
Corfield Joseph, boot and shoe maker, Cheshire street
Craston Edward, hatter, and shoe warehouse, High street
Crutchley William, master of Union House, Shropshire street
Cutler Joseph, shopkeeper, Little Drayton
Dale Mary, butcher, Stafford street
Dale, Sarah, victualler, Elephant and Castle, Shropshire street
Davenport James, grocer, tea dealer, and tallow chandler, High street
Davies Richard, farmer and corn miller, Almington
Davies Thomas, hair dresser, Stafford street
Davies Thomas, shopkeeper, Stafford street
Deakin Peter, baker and confectioner, Shropshire street
Dickin Miss Rachael, Shropshire street
Done Robert, shoe maker, Stafford street
Drury Thomas, cooper, Shropshire street
Eaton George, schoolmaster, Shropshire st
Eaton William, tailor, Shropshire street
Edge Robert, timber merchant, wheelwright, and victualler, Stag’s Head, Beast market
Elock Frances, boarding school, Stafford st
Embrey Thomas, grazier, Stafford street
Evans George, maltster and vict., Red Lion, Beast market
Farnell John, tailor, Bell lane
Farnell Zacharia, tailor, Cheshire street
Fell Robert, agent to Hazledine and Co., coal merchants, Old Wharf
Fielding Henry, patten and clog maker, Cheshire street
Frith Joseph, land agent, Stafford street
Fletcher Joseph, maltster, Cheshire street
Fletcher Elizabeth, beerhouse, Cheshire street
Foden James, victualler, Corbet Arms Hotel, Posting house, and Excise office, High st
Fox James, plumber & glazier, Shropshire st
Frith John, hair dresser, Shropshire street
Gad Thomas, chair maker, Shropshire street
Godwin William, grocer, and chemist & druggist, Shropshire street, hair seating manufacturer, and nurseryman, Kiln bank
Goodall George, maltster, Cheshire street
Goodall John, chemist and druggist, glass dealer, Stamp Office, and agent to Salop Fire Office, Cheshire street
Gower Andrew Woodgate & Son, agricultural implement manufacturers, Stafford street
Graham Robert, currier, Little Drayton
Grant Mr. Richard, postmaster, Beast markt
Green George, solicitor’s clerk, Terrace cottage
Green William Darbyshire, auctioneer, and high bailiff of County court, Cheshire st
Grimley Henry, Esq., solicitor, Stafford street
Griffith Benjamin, brazier and tin plate worker, Beast market
Griffith Isaac, builder, cabinet maker, and registrar of marriages, Stafford street
Griffith Thomas, cabinet maker and upholsterer, Cheshire street
Griffith William, hair dresser, Shropshire st
Groom Thomas, leather cutter and provision dealer, Stafford street
Grosvenor John, tailor, Shropshire street
Grosvenor Mary Ann, bonnet maker, Shropshire street
Grosvenor Robert, watch and clock maker, registrar of births and deaths, and parish clerk, Church street
Hall Thomas, cooper and beerhouse keeper, Shropshire street
Harding Miss Sarah, Shropshire street
Harper George, shopkeeper and cabinet maker, Shropshire street
Harper William, farmer, corn miller, provision and british wine dealer, High street
Haslam Joseph, hair seating manufacturer, Stafford street
Haslam Joseph N., surgeon, Shropshire street
Hawley William ap Richard, professor of music, Back lane
Hayward Charles, butcher, Shropshire street
Haywood Richard, hosier, Stafford street
Heatley Thomas, linen and woollen draper, silk mercer and hatter, High street
Hemming William, police officer, Cheshire st
Herbert John, coal agent, Victoria Wharf
Hill Ann, vict., Royal Oak, Cheshire street
Hill Mrs. Ann, Church street
Hill Henry, saddler & harness maker, High st
Hill Robert, saddler & harness maker, High st
Hill Thomas, tanner and currier, Cheshire st
Hinton Robert, plumber, glazier, and beerhouse keeper, Shropshire street
Holdcroft Mrs. Susannah B., The Sitch
Horner, Captain John, Cheshire street
Hope Thomas, provision dealer, Shropshire st
Hopkins Eliza, milliner, Beast market
Hopkins John, surgeon, Shropshire street
Hopkinson James, shopkeeper, Cheshire st
Hopwood John, saddler and harness maker, Stafford street
Hughes Enoch, blacksmith, Bell lane
Hughes Maria, bonnet maker, Shropshire st
Jackson John, porter agent, Shropshire street
Jarvis Joseph, butcher, Cheshire street
Jones John, nail maker, Shropshire street
Jones John, hatter and provision dealer, Shropshire street
Jones Josiah, joiner and builder, Cheshire st
Jones Richard, shoemaker, Little Drayton
Jones Samuel, shoemaker, Bell lane
Jones William, shoemaker, Little Drayton
Key John Sayers, malster and vict., Star Inn, Stafford street
Kirkham William, vic., Old Cheshire Cheese, High street
Lee Rev. John, M.A., vicar, Vicarage
Leigh Emily and Fanny, dress makers, Cheshire street
Lewis George, provision dealer and currier, Little Drayton
Liseter John, letter carrier, Beast Market
Lloyd Edmund, linen and woollen draper, silk mercer and hatter, Shropshire street
Lockett John, bookseller, printer, &c., (Silvester and Lockett), High street
Lockett George, butcher, Cheshire street
Manchester and Liverpool District Bank, Shropshire street; open on Wednesday; Samuel Walter Moore, manager
Massey Mary Ann, bonnet maker, Stafford st
Massie Thomas, grocer, tallow chandler, and hop dealer, Cheshire street
Matthews James, vict., Lamb Inn, Stafford st
Matthews Miles, farmer and veterinary surgeon, Cheshire street
Mc. Manus Chas., shopkeeper, Shropshire st
Minor Mrs. Elizabeth, Shropshire street
Montford Thomas, builder, cabinet maker, and upholsterer, Church street
Moody Hy., bone merchant, Victoria Wharf
Moore Ann, milliner, High street
Moore John, baker, provision dealer, and actuary at Savings’ Bank, Cheshire street
Moore Thomas, grocer and tea dealer, Cheshire street
Morris William, shoemaker, Stafford street
Noden William, carpenter, Cheshire street
Noneley Mrs. Margerette, Beast Market
Oldcroft Eliza, glass & china dealer, High st
Painter Richard, butcher, Kiln Bank
Parsonage Frederick, plumber and glazier, Stafford street
Peake Thomas, plumber and glazier and beerhouse keeper, Little Drayton
Pegg John, beerhouse keeper, Little Drayton
Pigott Creswell, Esq., solicitor, Stafford st
Pimlett Joshua, veterinary surgeon, Stafford street
Poole Thomas, butcher, Little Drayton
Povell James, shoemaker, Little Drayton
Powell William, draper and silk mercer, (Adams & Powell,) Shropshire street
Preston Geo., beerhousekeeper, Little Drayton
Preston Mrs. Dorothy, Back Lane
Ralphes Joseph, shoemaker, Little Drayton
Ray Uriah, chair maker, Cheshire street
Ridgway William, (executors of), grocers, chemists and druggists, and glass dealers, High street
Roberts Jane, dressmaker, Shropshire st
Roberts Samuel, gardener and seedsman, Beast market
Roberts Mr. Thomas, Church street
Robson James, stone mason, Beast Market
Roden Adam, carrier, Little Drayton
Roden William, pig dealer and beerhouse keeper, Cheshire street
Rodenhurst William and John, ironmongers, agricultural implement makers, grocers, and hop and seed dealers, Cheshire street
Rogers George, jeweller, silversmith, and watch and clock maker, High street
Roylance Thomas, shoemaker, Little Drayton
Ryder George, blacksmith, Little Drayton
Salter Samuel Colley, linen and woollen draper, and silk mercer, Shropshire street
Salter Sarah, shopkeeper, Shropshire street
Sandells Thomas, maltster and vict., Unicorn Inn, Stafford street
Sandbrook Benjamin Bayley, wine & spirit merchant, Shropshire street
Sandbrook William and Son, wine and spirit merchants, Shropshire street
Sandbrook William, hair seating manufacturer, Walk Mill
Saxton William Waring, Esq., banker and surgeon, Stafford street
Scott William, schoolmaster, (National), Shropshire street
Sergeant Matthew, butcher, Stafford street
Shaw John, tailor, Stafford street
Sherwin Harry John, woollen draper, tailor, and hatter, High street
Sherwin Margery, stay maker, Shropshire st
Shuker John, bricklayer, Back lane
Sillitoe Aaron, saddler and harness maker, Beast Market
Sillitoe Purney, Esq., Pell Wall House
Silvester and Lockett, booksellers, printers, stationers, bookbinders, and circulating library, High street
Silvester Samuel, bookseller, &c., (Silvester and Lockett), High street
Simester John, rope maker, Shropshire st
Simester William, rope maker, Cheshire st
Slaney Thomas, plumber, glazier, & painter, Cheshire street
Smith Henry Jn., solicitors’ clerk, Church st
Snow Thomas, furnishing ironmonger, brazier and tin plate worker, grocer, and hop, seed, and colour merchant, High st
Spencer Mr. Walter, The Mount
Spendelow William, grocer, chemist and druggist, and hop merchant, Shropshire st
Stevens Thomas, hatter and woollen draper and tailor, Shropshire street
Steventon John, shoemaker, Little Drayton
Steventon Wm., shoemaker, Little Drayton
Stubbs Elizabeth, beerhouse, Bell lane
Swinchett George Williamson, brazier and tin plate worker, High street
Swinnerton Samuel, surgeon, Shropshire st
Tayleur Mrs. Frances, The Fields
Taylor Mr. William, Stafford street
Taylor William, cooper, Stafford street
Tomlinson William, guano, corn, and salt dealer, Old Wharf
Trueman Charles, dyer, Cheshire street
Wade Hill, beerhouse keeper, Little Drayton
Walsh Joseph, brazier and tin plate worker, Shropshire street
Warren Charles, Esq., solicitor, Shropshire st
Warren Joseph Loxdale, Esq., solicitor, clerk to magistrates, clerk to county court, and deputy-lieutenant, The Lodge
Whitfield George, ironmonger, grocer and tea dealer, and hop and seed merchant, High street
Whitfield Thomas, Esq., Spring Field
Whittington Margt., schoolmistress, Cheshire street
Wilkes Jane, dressmaker, Church street
Wilkinson Joseph Edmund, Esq., solicitor, Shropshire street
Wilkinson William Manley, Esq., solicitor and superintendent registrar, Shropshire street
Williams Mrs. Elizabeth, Stafford street
Williams John, shoemaker. Little Drayton
Williams Sarah, bonnet maker, Shropshire st
Williamson James, boot and shoemaker, Shropshire street
Wilson John Edwards, Esq., The Grove
Woodcock Thos., beerhouse, Little Drayton
Woodhouse Thomas, tailor, Little Drayton
Wright Nathaniel, beerhouse & shopkeeper Shropshire street
Wycherley Samuel, wheelwright, Beast Market
Academies.
Arkinstall The Misses, (boarding), Beast Market
Bratton Miss, (boarding), Beast Market
Eaton George, Cheshire st
Bratton Mary, Back lane
Elcock Frances, Stafford st
Grammar School, Churchyard side; head master, Rev. Charles Cooke, M.A.; second master, C. F. King
National, William Scott and Eliza Green, Back lane
Whittingham Margaret, Cheshire street
Wigley Henry William, (boarding), Shropshire st
Agricultural Implement Manufacturers.
Bradbury John, Longslow lane
Gower and Son, Stafford st
Rodenhurst William & John Cheshire street
Ale & Porter Merchants.
Foden James, High street
Jackson John, Shropshire st
Rogers George, (Burton ales) High street
Sandalls Thomas, Stafford st
Attornies.
Grimley Henry, Stafford st
Pigott Creswell, Stafford st
Warren Charles, Shropshire street
Warren & Burd, Cheshire st
Wilkinson William M. and Joseph E., Shropshire st
Auctioneer.
Green William Darbyshire, Cheshire street
Banks.
Manchester and Liverpool District Bank, Shropshire street, open on Wednesday, Samuel Walker Moore, manager
Savings’ Bank, Shropshire st.; John Moore, actuary
Saxton Brothers, High-st., draw upon Williams and Co., London
Blacksmiths.
Brookshaw Benjamin, Stafford street
Brookshaw William, Beast Market
Hughes Enock, Bell lane
Ryder George, Little Drayton
Bone Merchant.
Moody Henry Church, Victoria Wharf
Booksellers, Printers, Stationers, Bookbinders, and Circulating Libraries.
Bennion Thomas Platt, High
Silvester & Lockett, High st
Boot and Shoemakers.
Bradbury John, Cheshire st.
Corfield Joseph, Cheshire st.
Oraston Edward (dealer), High street
Done Robert, Stafford street
Jones Richard, Little Drayton
Jones Samuel, Bell lane
Jones Wm., Little Drayton
Morris William, Stafford st.
Povell James, Little Drayton
Ralphes Joseph, Little Drayton
Roylance Thomas, Little Drayton
Steventon John, Little Drayton
Steventon William, Little Drayton
Williams John, Little Drayton
Williamson James, Shropshire street
Braziers and Tin Plate Workers.
Griffith Benjamin, Beast market
Snow Thomas, High street
Swinchatt Geo. Williamson, High street
Walsh Joseph, Shropshire street
Butchers.
Barker John, Beast market
Dale Mary, Stafford street
Hayward Charles, Shropshire street
Jarvis Joseph, Cheshire st.
Lockett George, Cheshire st.
Painter Richard, Kiln Bank
Poole Thomas, Little Drayton
Sergeant Matthew, Stafford street
Cabinet Makers and Upholsterers.
Bradshaw John, Beast Market
Griffith Isaac, Stafford street
Griffith Thos., Cheshire street
Harper George, Shropshire street
Montford Thomas, Church street
Carpenters and Builders.
Barratt Thomas, Stafford st.
Brown Thomas, Cheshire st.
Griffith Isaac, Stafford street
Jones Josiah, Shropshire st.
Montford Thomas, Church street
Noden Wm., Cheshire street
Chemists and Druggists.
Godwin William, Shropshire street
Goodall John, Cheshire street
Ridgway William (executors of), High street
Spendelow Richard William, Shropshire street
Coach Builder.
Critchley Cornelius, Beast Market
Coal Merchants.
Hazledine & Co., Old Wharf, Robert Fell, agent
Ryley & Sandbrook, Victoria Wharf, John Herbert, agent
Confectioners.
Deakin Peter, Shropshire st.
Harper William (and British wine dealer), High street
Coopers.
Drury Thomas, Shropshire street
Hall Thomas, Shropshire st.
Taylor William, Stafford st.
Corn Millers.
Davies Richard, Almington
Harper William, High street
Curriers.
Hill Thomas, Cheshire street
Lewis and Graham, Little Drayton
Dyers.
Hayward Richard, Stafford street
Trueman Charles, Cheshire street
Farmers.
Beeston James, Almington
Davies Richard (and corn miller), Almington
Embrey Thomas, Stafford street
Harper William, High street
Matthews Miles, Cheshire st.
Poole Thos., Little Drayton
Fire and Life Office Agents.
Clerical & Medical, William Waring Saxton, Stafford street
Crown, Charles Warren, Shropshire street
Law, Henry Grimley, Stafford street
Legal and Commercial, Joseph Edmund Wilkinson, Shropshire street
Manchester, George Rogers, High street
Market Drayton Cattle Club, Wm. D. Green, Cheshire street
Norwich Union, Joseph L. Warren, Cheshire, st.
Royal Farmers and General, Wm. D. Green, Cheshire street
Salop, Jn. Goodall, Cheshire street
Shropshire and North Wales, Joseph Firth, Stafford st.
Glass and China Dealers.
Marked * are glass only.
* Goodall John, Cheshire st.
Oldcroft Eliza, High street
* Ridgway William (executors of), High street
Grocers and Tea Dealers.
Davenport James, High st.
Godwin William, Shropshire street
Harper William, High street
Massie Thomas, Cheshire street
Moore Thomas, Cheshire street
Ridgway William (executors of), High street
Rodenhurst William and John, Cheshire street
Snow Thomas, High street
Spendelow Richard William, Shropshire street
Whitfield George, High st.
Hair Dressers.
Davies Thomas, Stafford street
Frith John, Shropshire street
Griffith Wm., Shropshire st.
Hair Seating Manufacturers.
Godwin William, Kiln bank
Haslam Joseph, Stafford st.
Sandbrook H. and W., Walk Mill
Hatters.
(See also Linen Drapers and Hatters.)
Craston Edward, High street
Jones John, Shropshire street
Sherwin Harry John, High street
Stevens Thomas, Shropshire street
Hosier.
Haywood Richard, Stafford street
Hotels, Inns, and Taverns.
Crown, Henry Boulton, Stafford street
Corbet Arms Hotel (posting house and excise office), James Foden, High street
Elephant and Castle, Sarah Dale, Shropshire street
George, Martha Barnett, Beast market
Lamb, Jas. Matthews, Stafford street
Man in the Moon, James Beeston, Almington
Old Cheshire Cheese, James Kirkham, High street
Red Lion, George Evans, Beast market
Royal Oak, Ann Hill, Cheshire street
Stag’s Head, Robert Edge, Beast market
Star, John Sayers Key, Stafford street
Unicorn, Thomas Sandalls, Stafford street
Wheat Sheaf, John Barnett, Old wharf
Beerhouses.
Brasnell John, Little Drayton
Brookshaw Benjamin, Old wharf
Brown Thomas, Cheshire street
Fletcher Elizabeth, Cheshire street
Hall Thomas, Shropshire st.
Hinton Robert, Shropshire street
Peake Thos., Little Drayton
Pegg John, Little Drayton
Preston George, Little Drayton
Roden William, Cheshire street
Stubbs Elizabeth, Bell lane
Wade Hill, Little Drayton
Woodcock Thomas, Little Drayton
Wright Nathaniel, Shropshire street
Hop and Seed Merchants.
Groom Thomas, Stafford st.
Godwin William (seed), Shropshire street
Massie Thomas, Cheshire st.
Rodenhurst William and John, Cheshire street
Snow Thomas, High street
Spendelow Richard William, Shropshire street
Whitfield George, High street
Ironmongers.
Rodenhurst William & John, Cheshire street
Snow Thomas, High street
Whitfield Geo., High street
Ironfounders.
Rodenhurst William and John, Cheshire street
Linen and Woollen Drapers, Silk Mercers, and Hatters.
Adams and Powell, Shropshire street
Bradbury Walter, High street
Brayn Joseph, High street
Heatley Thomas, High street
Lloyd Edmund, Shropshire street
Salter Samuel Colley, Shropshire street
Maltsters.
Evans George, Beast Market
Fletcher Joseph, Cheshire street
Goodall George, Cheshire st.
Hill Ann, Cheshire street
Key John Sayers, Stafford st.
Sandalls Thomas, Stafford st.
Milliners and Dress Makers.
Cartwright Martha, Shropshire street
Hopkins Eliza, Beast Market
Leigh Emily and Fanny, Cheshire street
Moore Ann, High street
Roberts Jane, Shropshire st.
Virgen Betsy, Longslow lane
Wilkes Jane, Church street
Nail Maker.
Jones John, Shropshire st.
Painter.
(See also Plumbers, Glaziers, and Painters.)
Cocayne Edward (coach and house), Stafford street
Patten and Clog Maker.
Fielding Henry, Cheshire st.
Plumbers, Glaziers, and Painters.
Fox James, Shropshire street
Hinton Robert, Shropshire street
Parsonage Frederick, Stafford street
Peake Thos., Little Drayton
Slaney Thomas, Cheshire st
Professor of Music.
Hawley William Ap Richard, Back lane
Pump Maker.
Bonell Samuel, Stafford street
Rope Makers.
Simester John, Shropshire street
Simester William, Cheshire street
Saddlers & Harness Makers.
Hill Henry, High street
Hill Robert, High street
Hopwood John, Stafford st.
Sillitoe Aaron, Beast market
Shopkeepers, Dealers in Sundries, and Grocers.
Bate Mary, Shropshire street
Bradshaw John, Beast Market
Cutler Joseph, Little Drayton
Davies Thomas, Stafford st.
Groom Thomas, Stafford st.
Harper George, Shropshire street
Hope Thomas, Shropshire street
Hopkinson James, Cheshire street
Jones John, Shropshire st.
Lewis George, Little Drayton
Mc Manus Charles, Shropshire street
Moore John, Cheshire street
Salter Sarah, Shropshire st.
Wright Nathaniel, Shropshire street
Straw Bonnet Makers.
Boughey and Woodcock, Church street
Bradbury Maria, Shropshire street
Grosvenor Mary Ann, Shropshire street
Hughes Maria, Shropshire street
Keeling Mary Ann, Little Drayton
Massey Mary Ann, Stafford st
Ryder Elizabeth, Little Drayton
Williams Sarah, Shropshire street
Surgeons.
Haslam Joseph Nickson, Shropshire street
Hopkins John, Cheshire st.
Saxton William Waring, Stafford street
Swinnerton Samuel, Shropshire street
Tailors.
Marked * are Woollen Drapers and Hatters.
Allen John, Beast Market
Arkinstall William, Shropshire street
Eaton William, Shropshire street
Farnell John, Bell lane
Farnell Zachariah, Cheshire street
Grosvenor John, Shropshire street
Shaw John, Stafford street
* Sherwin Harry John, High street
* Stevens Thos., Shropshire street
Woodhouse Thomas, Little Drayton
Tallow Chandlers.
Davenport James, High st.
Massie Thomas, Cheshire street
Tanner.
Hill Thomas, Cheshire street
Timber merchants.
Barratt Thomas, Stafford st.
Dymock and Co., Shropshire street, residence, Shelton
Edge Robert, Beast market
Veterinary Surgeons.
Matthews Miles, Cheshire street
Pimlett Joshua, Stafford st.
Watch and Clock Makers.
Bowker George, Cheshire st.
Grosvenor Robert, Church street
Rogers George (and silversmith and jeweller), High street
Wheelwrights.
Bradbury John, Longslow lane
Wicherley Samuel, Beast market
Wine and Spirit Merchants.
Sandbrook William and Son, Shropshire street
Wine and Spirit Vaults.
Barnett Lydia, High street
Wood Turners and Chair Makers.
Gad Thomas, Shropshire st.
Ray Uriah, Cheshire street
Carriers by Water.
Crowley and Co., general carriers to all parts of England; William Tomkinson, agent, Old wharf
Grand Junction Canal Company (to London); Wm. Tomkinson, agent, Old wharf
Shropshire Union Railway and Canal Company, general carriers to all parts of England; William Tomkinson, agent, Old wharf
BETTON
is a township and small rural village, in the parish of Market Drayton, two miles N.N. by E. from the parish church. The township comprises 2,185a. 0r. 27p. of land, the principal owners of which are Peter Broughton, Esq., and William Church Norcop, Esq. The other proprietors are Richard Corbet, Esq., Purney Sillitoe, Esq., and Sir John Chetwode, Bart. In 1841 there were 38 houses and 254 inhabitants within the bounds of the township. Rateable value, £2,963. 2s. The tithes have been commuted, and £223. 5s. 9d. apportioned to William Church Norcop, Esq.; £40. 7s. 6d. to Peter Broughton, Esq.; £32. 18s. 3d. to Richard Corbet, Esq.; and to the Vicar of Drayton, £5. 13s. 6d. Betton Hall, a handsome and pleasantly situated mansion on elevated ground, is the residence and property of William Church Norcop, Esq. It was considerably enlarged and beautified about forty years ago. A pillar, in the field a little south from the hall, marks the site of an ancient chapel that formerly stood here, but no remains have been seen of it within the memory of man. Tunstall Hall, a spacious and elegant mansion, situated in park-like grounds, about a mile from Market Drayton, is the seat and property of Peter Broughton, Esq. Betton Moss is a tract of unenclosed land, containing 56a. 0r. 33p. Oakley Corn Mill is situated on the banks of the river Tern, which divides this township from the county of Stafford.
Bourne John, farmer, Betton Coppice
Broughton Peter, Esq., Tunstall Hall
Crutchley John, farmer, Brownhills
Davies Richard, farmer, Brownhills
Dobson Thomas, farmer, Ridgewardine
Duckers Charles, farmer, Ridgewardine
Heath William, farmer, Betton
Johnson Robert, farmer, Betton
Norcop William Church, Esq., Betton Hall
Spragg John, farmer, Ridgewardine
LONGSLOW,
a small township in the parish of Market Drayton, one mile and three quarters N.W. by N. from the church, contains 645a. 2r. 3p. of land, the whole of which is the property of the Earl of Powis. Rateable value, £1,866. 13s. Richard Corbet, Esq., is the impropriator of the large tithes, which are commuted for £81. 12s. 6d. The vicarial tithes are commuted for £21. 4s. 1d. At the census in 1841 there were 12 houses and a population of 70 souls. The principal residents are George Harris, farmer; Joseph Kemp, farmer; Joseph Sillitoe, farmer; John Thomas, farmer; and Robert Bruckshaw, blacksmith and general agricultural implement manufacturer.
SUTTON,
a township in the parish of Drayton, pleasantly situated about a mile and a half S.E. from the church, in 1841 had 32 houses and 177 inhabitants. The township contains 1,915a. 2r. 3p. of land. Rateable value, £326. 15s. The rectoral tithes are commuted for £268. 13s. 4d., of which £60 was apportioned to John Tayleur, Esq., and £208. 13s. 4d. to Richard Corbet, Esq. The small tithes, payable to the Vicar of Drayton, are commuted for £33. 9s. 1d. Buntingsdale Hall is a brick mansion of considerable extent, the seat and property of John Tayleur, Esq., a considerable landowner. P. Sillitoe, Esq., is also a landowner. The township is watered by the river Tern, which turns several corn mills within the bounds of the township. This locality has a bold undulating surface, is well timbered, and the scenery beautifully picturesque.
The principal residents are John Tayleur, Esq., Buntingsdale Hall; John Adams, corn miller, Tern Hill; Samuel Blenford, blacksmith; James Foden, farmer, Holly Grove; George Harding, farmer, Cliff Gravel; George Harding, farmer, Coalhurst; William Harper, corn miller, Sutton Mill—residence, Drayton; John Harris, farmer; Samuel Shaw, corn miller, Rosehill; George Smith, farmer.
WOODSEAVES,
a township and village in the parish of Drayton, on the eastern verge of the county, bordering on Staffordshire, three miles south from Market Drayton, contains 1,781a. 0r. 31p. of land, and in 1841 had 55 houses and 268 inhabitants. Rateable value, £2,040. 15s. The principal landowners are John Tayleur, Esq., Walter Minor, Esq., Purney Sillitoe, Esq., Mr. Beeston, Mr. Adams, and Mr. Silvester. Richard Corbet, Esq., is the impropriator of the rectoral tithes, which are commuted for £105. 4s. 4d. The small tithes are commuted for £27. 0s. 6d. A small Episcopal Chapel has been built at Woodseaves, by Mrs. Nonely; divine service is performed every Friday evening.
Directory.—James Boughey, farmer; John Breeze, boot and shoemaker; Richard Delves, shopkeeper; Clement Dickenson, farmer, Rose Hill; Peter Duckers, farmer and butcher; Joseph Ellis, farmer; William Hendley, gentleman; John Hill, farmer, Sutton Heath; Richard Lewis, farmer; Joseph Meakin, farmer; James Poole, farmer, butcher, and victualler, Fox Inn; George Pye, blacksmith; Mary Steel and Sons, shoemakers; Richard Steel, farmer and beerhouse-keeper; William Sutton, farmer; Thomas Thomas, farmer; Charles Townsend, farmer.
ERCALL CHILDS,
a parish and village, pleasantly situated seven miles S.W. from Market Drayton, and seven miles N.W. from Newport. The parish comprises 3,585a. 0r. 8p. of land, and in 1801 here were 466 inhabitants; 1831, 416; and in 1841, 82 houses and 471 inhabitants. The soil is chiefly a light fertile loam. Richard Corbet, Esq., is owner of the whole parish, except about fifty acres, which are the property of the Duke of Sutherland. The tithes are commuted for £730.
The Church, an ancient structure, dedicated to St. Michael, exhibits various styles of architecture, and no doubt has been erected at different periods. It consists of nave, chancel, south aisle, and a tower at the west end. Four pointed arches divide the nave from the side aisle, at the east end of which there is an ancient piscina. A neat marble tablet remembers the Cooke family. There are also two small brass memorials. The living is a perpetual curacy, returned at £72, in the patronage of Richard Corbet, Esq. The Rev. Bertie Entwisle Johnson is the incumbent, and also rector of Hinstock. The Parsonage is a handsome brick residence, a little north-west from the church; it was built by the present incumbent in the year 1846; in consideration of which the Governors of Queen Ann’s Bounty made a grant of £200 towards the augmentation of the living of Ercall. There is a National School in the village, situated near the west end of the church-yard; sixty-two boys and forty-two girls attend. Dodecote Grange is a pleasantly situated house, and extensive farm comprising upwards of 500 acres, in the occupancy of Mr. Richard Heatley. There is a considerable tract of land covered with thriving plantations in the parish.
HUNGARY HATTON,
a township in the parish of Childs Ercall, one mile north from the church, and about five miles and a half south from Market Drayton, has a scattered population, the returns of which were included in Ercall at the census of 1841. On the north verge of the township there is a plantation of thriving timber covering upwards of thirty acres, which joins the estate and plantations of Henry Justice, Esq., in Hinstock parish. The acres and tithes are included in the returns of Ercall.
Those marked * are in Hungary Hatton, and the rest reside in Ercall Childs.
Aston William, farmer
* Atkin William, farmer and maltster
Benbow Mary, farmer
Bourne Edward, farmer, Old Hall
* Boughey George, farmer
Bourne Thomas, brickmaker
* Bruckshaw Benjamin, farmer
* Bruckshaw Thomas, blacksmith
Carnall John, farmer
* Cheshire John, blacksmith
Dawes Thomas, farmer
* Downes William, shoemaker
Edwards Joseph, farmer, Caynton Wood
Evason Francis, farmer
Evanson George, tailor
* Freeman John, farmer
Green Thomas, shoemaker
Harper Charles, wheelwright
Heatley Richard, farmer, Dodecote Grange
Hewitt George, schoolmaster & parish clerk
Heycock William, blacksmith
Johnson Rev. Bertie Entwisle, M.A., Parsonage
* Morgan George, farmer
* Morgan John, farmer
Morgan John H., carpenter
Palmer William, farmer, Nagington
* Rister Philip, wheelwright
Thacker James, victualler, Elephant
Woodhouse George, maltster
HINSTOCK
is a considerable parish and village, pleasantly situated on the turnpike road from Newport to Market Drayton, six miles N.N.W. from the former, and five miles S. from the latter. The population of this parish is widely scattered, and there are a great number of small detached cottages. The parish contains 3,036a. 1r. 16p. of land, the soil of which is various; in some parts a strong loam, and in other parts a light sandy soil prevails. The land has a bold undulating surface, and on the western verge of the parish are some thriving plantations. In 1801 the parish contained a population of 536 souls; 1831, 805; and in 1841 there were 173 houses and 897 inhabitants. There are 14a. 1r. 37p. of glebe land. The tithes have been commuted for £530. Rateable value of the parish, £4.722. 19s. 1d. Henry Justice, Esq., is a considerable landowner. The other principal landowners are Robert Masefield, Esq., Richard Corbet Esq., Mr. William Griffiths, Mr. Henry Meakin, Rev. Matthew Davies, the Trustees of Drayton Poor, Mr. John Griffiths, William Howard, Esq., Mr. Walter Meakin, Mrs. Masefield, Mr. Thomas Poole, Mr. Rowley, Mr. John Adams, Mr. Thomas Beeston, the Executors of the late Colonel Dawes, and the Devisees of the Mr. Thomas James; besides whom there are upwards of seventy small freeholders, who, in most instances, own the cottages in which they live, and a small plot or a few acres of land contiguous thereto.
The Church is a small venerable fabric, dedicated to St. Oswald, and is situated on an elevated plot of land, nearly in the centre of the village. The structure consists of nave, chancel, and a small south aisle, with a square tower at the west end. A small gallery was erected in 1831, with funds raised by subscriptions. The font is very ancient, and is of a circular shape with an octagonal base. A neat marble tablet has been erected in memory of Hannah Davies, who died in 1828, wife of the Rev. Matthew Davies, formerly curate of Hinstock. There is also a tablet in memory of the Vaughans, with the date of 1714/5. The living is a rectory, valued in the king’s book at £5. 16s., now returned at £556., and enjoyed by the Rev. Bertie E. Johnson, M.A. There is a small Methodist Chapel in the village. The National School, a neat brick structure, was erected in 1839; seventy-five children attend. The Rectory is an ancient residence on the north side of the church-yard. Hinstock Hall, a handsome mansion of freestone, delightfully situated on elevated ground, about a mile north-west from the church, is the seat and property of Henry Justice, Esq. It is a modern structure, built about sixteen years ago, beautified with pleasure grounds and shrubberies, and sheltered with rising plantations. The situation commands extensive views over the fertile plains of Shropshire and the adjoining county of Stafford. Pixley are two good farm houses, situated near a mile west from the church. The land is partly in this parish and partly in that of Chetwynd; 89a. 1r. 32p. are in the latter parish.
Post Office.—At Mr. Samuel Cooper’s Falcon Inn.
Justice Henry, Esq., Hinstock Hall
Abbotts Ann, schoolmistress
Adams John, farmer
Ash Charles, land surveyor
Blagg John, farmer
Bowring Robert, shopkeeper
Cappur Thomas, farmer, Gill of Stafford
Challenor John, shopkeeper
Churm John, farmer, Mount Pleasant
Churton Rev. Charles, M.A., curate
Cooper Samuel, victualler, Falcon Inn
Crump John, shopkeeper
Davies William, farmer
Eccleston James, farmer
Freeman John, farmer, Pixley
Glover Thomas, beerhouse
Goodwin George, wheelwright
Griffiths William, farmer
Hamlet William, shopkeeper
Hardy Sarah, farmer
Hardy William, farmer
Harvey James, maltster
Jackson George, shoemaker
Jackson John, farmer
Jackson Thomas, blacksmith
Jackson William, farmer
Lockley John, wheelwright
Lockley Thomas, farmer
Machin Jn., farmer & maltstr
Machin Mary, vict., Cock Inn
Maltby John, Esq., Hinstock Villa
Matthews John, horse dealer
Meakin Henry, farmer, Longpools
Meakin Walter, farmer
Morgan William, bricklayer
Nagington William, farmer, corn miller, and maltster, Shakeford
Pearse William, farmer and shoemaker, Lockley
Phillips John, farmer
Pitt George, shopkeeper
Podmore William, tailor
Poole Thomas, farmer
Pooler Benjamin, blacksmith
Reeves John, shoemaker
Reeves Mary, schoolmistress
Robinson Richard, farmer, Pixley
Sambrook Job, bricklayer
Sambrook John, bricklayer
Sambrook William, bricklayer
Sutton Mary & Ann, farmers
Talbot William, tailor
Titley Wm., farmer & butcher
Ward John, schoolmaster
Watts Andrew, farmer
Weat Wm., farmer & butcher
Woodcock William, farmer
Worrall Mary, farmer
Williams William, beerhouse
Wynn William, clock maker
HODNET
is a pleasantly situated and considerable village on the turnpike road from Shrewsbury to Market Drayton, thirteen miles N.N. by E. from the former, and six miles S.S. by W. from the latter. At the Domesday survey Earl Roger held Odenet, which gave name to the hundred, which has since undergone the denomination of Bradford North. In the 20th of Edward I., a quo warranto was brought against William de Hodenet, to show what right he claimed to hold a market, take assize of bread and beer, and have free warren in the manor of Hodnet; for plea he produced the charter of King Henry, father of the then king, which proved his right, and so was dismissed with honour. The jury at the same assizes found that the serjeantry of William de Hodenet was to be steward of the castle of Montgomery, and to defend the outworks of the castle with his family and servants, and that this serjeantry had been given to his ancestors by Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Salop. The market at Hodnet has long been obsolete, but fairs are held on the Monday before the second Wednesday in March, May 4th, and the Monday before October 24th. These fairs are usually well attended by the farmers residing in the surrounding district. The parish of Hodnet contains the townships of Hodnet, Bolas Parva, Hawkstone, Hopton and Espley, Kenstone, Losford, Marchamley, Peplow, Woollerton and Weston under Red Castle. There are 11,596a. 1r. 6p. of land, the rateable value of which is £13,396. 6s. Population in 1801, 1386; 1831, 2097, and in 1841 there were 408 houses and 2185 inhabitants. The township of Hodnet at the census of 1841 contained 120 houses and 596 inhabitants, Odo Hodenet came into England with William the Conqueror, and fixed his seat here; from this family the estates passed by a female heiress to the Vernons, and Elisabeth Vernon carried the estates by marriage into the Heber family, from which family it again passed in like manner by an heiress to the present proprietor, Algernon Charles Heber Percy, Esq., who resides at Hodnet Hall, a plain stuccoed mansion, in a low situation, a little south from the church; it was formerly of considerable extent, and composed of timber and plaster, and the cloisters were adorned with ancient armorial bearings, but only a part of the original house is now standing, and that has been greatly modernized. Near the hall is a large mound called Castle Hill, supposed to have been the ancient residence of the Hodenets. The mound is planted with trees, and was probably the keep of the castle, but not a vestige of the stone work remains; the whole was surrounded by a moat, which may still be traced. The high grounds above the hall, which are studded with thriving plantations, were in former tithes a densely wooded park of considerable extent, and well stocked with deer. No deer have been kept there since the death of Sir Richard Vernon, who caused most of the timber to be cut down. Viscount Hill is also a considerable land owner. A. C. H. Percy is lord of the manor and patron of the living.
The Church is a spacious and elegant structure, consisting of nave and south aisle, equal in size to the nave, and an octagonal Norman tower at the west end, in which are six bells. The side aisle is divided from the nave by seven pointed arches, rising from octagonal and circular pillars alternately, and the roof is of timber stained in imitation of oak. The structure has recently undergone a complete reparation, the entire cost of which, with various embellishments, was £3,200, of which the munificent sum of £1,000 was given by Thomas Cholmondely, Esq., late of Hodnet Hall; Charles Cholmondely, Esq., gave £500; Lord Hill, £100; the parishioners raised by voluntary subscriptions £170; and the rest, £1,430, was given by the present rector. The organ cost £150, and was the gift of Richard Cholmondely, Esq.; the communion plate cost £100. The interior has a very chaste and imposing appearance, and at the east end of the chancel there is a beautiful stained glass window, commemorative of Mary Heber, who died in 1846, sister to the late Bishop Heber. At the east end of the aisle are twelve stalls, six on each side, which are for the use of the rector and the lord of the manor. The organ stands at the west end of the nave in a beautiful recessed arch. At the east end of the south aisle is a stained glass window, with representations of the four evangelists, beautifully executed by Evans, of Shrewsbury. The font is very ancient, and of an octagonal shape rudely carved. Several handsome monuments ornament the church, particularly one of fine statuary marble, exquisitely executed by Chantrey, in memory of Bishop Heber, formerly rector of this parish. Opposite it are two beautifully executed monuments of Grinshill free stone, near to which is another in the same gothic style to the memory of Charles Cooper Cholmondely, formerly rector of Hodnet, who died in 1831. Near the west end of the nave, a handsome marble tablet remembers Lord Hill and his Lady, the former died in 1814 and the latter in 1842; not far from which Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., is remembered on an elegant tablet; he died in 1783, and was buried in this church. On the same side is an elaborately ornamented tablet to the Vernon family. A lofty slate coloured marble tablet commemorates the death of several members of the Hill family; there is also an antique tablet near the pulpit to the memory of Hugh Pigot, who died in 1697, besides which there are various other monuments which our limits will not allow us to notice. The living is a rectory valued in the king’s book at £26 0s. 10d., now returned at £2,336. The Rev. Samuel H. Macauley, B.D., is the incumbent, and resides at the rectory, an elegant mansion of free stone, built by the late Bishop Heber, in 1812; the house stands on an eminence a little S.W. from the church, and commands most delightful views of the surrounding country. The old rectory stood on the grounds adjoining the hall, a little south from the church; not far from the rectory stood the tithe barn of capacious dimensions, which, with the old parsonage, was taken down soon after the erection of the present rectory. The tithes of this parish have been commuted for £1,735. There is a national school where fifty girls and sixty boys are educated. Hodnet Common, situated on the south and south-east side of the township, contains 375 acres, the whole of which is the property of A. C. H. Percy, Esq., except about thirty acres. A considerable tract of the common was enclosed in 1850. There is a small lock-up with two cells situated on the Shrewsbury road.
The late Reginald Heber, the eminent Bishop of Calcutta, was rector of Hodnet when he was raised to the episcopal dignity of Bishop of Calcutta. He was born April 21st, 1783, at the Higher Rectory, in Malpas, of which place his father was rector. He received his education, principally under a private tutor, Mr. Bristow, at Neasdon, and in 1800 he removed to Oxford, where he was a commoner at Brazennose College, and afterwards a Fellow of All Souls. It was at Oxford that he laid the foundation of his high fame. Besides being known for his general acquisitions in scholarship, he gained every distinction which the university then had to bestow, the regular under graduates and bachelors’ prizes. He was also the successful competitor for an extraordinary prize that had been offered for an English poem on the subject of Palestine. This poem is now of standard reputation; and certainly, for splendour of imagery and for poetical diction, it has deservedly placed its author—scarce twenty years old when it was written—in an elevated rank amid our English poets. After taking his degree, Heber left the university to engage in active life. The living at Hodnet was at his option, and this circumstance, coupled with his strong religious bias, determined him to devote himself to the church as his profession. But as he was still young for holy orders, he wished to employ two or three years in foreign travel; and the customary route upon the continent then being shut up by war, he bent his steps towards Russia and the east of Europe. At length the time arrived when Heber was to devote himself seriously to the duties of his sacred profession, in the humble office of a village pastor. There is on his monument in Hodnet church, a delightful testimony how for fifteen years he performed his pastoral duties “cheerfully and diligently, with all his heart, with all his soul, and with all his strength.” And in this calm retreat, which the subsequent changes in his fortune seemed only the more to endear him to, he would cheerfully have closed his days. But his reputation would not allow him to be buried in retirement. In 1823 he was elected preacher at Lincoln’s Inn. This was an appointment peculiarly suited to him. With what credit he acquitted himself is well known, and it was generally believed that the highest honours awaited him at home, when he was called to another sphere of action, by his acceptance of the proffered bishopric of Calcutta. Never, it is believed, did any man accept an office from a higher sense of duty; once he declined the proposal; but his exalted piety considered it as a call from heaven, from which he might not shrink; and he resolutely determined to obey the summons. His career in India was short, but brilliant. It is not easy to conceive a situation of greater difficulty than awaited him there. He had to preside over a diocese much larger in extent than the whole of Europe, with his clergy scattered about at stations thousands of miles apart, and over a body of Christians living in the midst of a multitude of misbelievers; and those Christians, if such more than in mere name, accustomed to be a law to themselves in religious matters; yet to all these difficulties Bishop Heber resolutely addressed himself. He went forth strong and invincible; first, in his trust in God, and next in that kindliness of disposition, which almost disarmed opposition. His memorable exploit was his extra-ordinary visitation of his diocese. Starting from Calcutta, he pursued the course of the Ganges almost to its source; visited Himalaya mountains; crossed the northern provinces of India; and, after visiting Bombay and the island of Ceylon, returned again to Calcutta. We may easily imagine what must have been the delight, to a mind ardent and poetical like Heber’s, to have had the opportunity of visiting scenes so interesting and so novel; and we have the advantage of knowing the impression they made on his mind, by the posthumous publication of his interesting journal. It was not long after the bishop’s return from the visitation of which we have been speaking, that he undertook another episcopal visitation, when the hand of death arrested him in his career of usefulness. On the 3rd of April, 1826, at Tritchinopoli, he was found drowned in a bath, owing, it was supposed, to the sudden transition of cold water, after great exertion in confirming some native Christians. A deep and painful sensation was produced by his unexpected decease, both in India and at home; and in him the Christian civilization in the east seemed to have lost its most zealous, most active, and most enlightened friend.
Charities.—There was an old school in the church yard at Hodnet, which was pulled down in 1814, and a new school and schoolhouse were built in the following year, in a more convenient situation, chiefly at the expense of Richard Heber, Esq., and with a sum of £25 given by Sir Andrew Corbet to the poor, as hereafter mentioned. The master of the school receives £8, as the interest of £200 left by Mrs. Sarah Price, for the endowment of a free school, and he occupies the school house, paying the church-wardens £1. 1s. annually, as interest of the £25 derived from Sir A. Corbet’s benefaction. In consideration of the above the master teaches seven scholars free. The site of the school and schoolhouse, and the garden and play ground, including altogether about a quarter of an acre, was given by Mr. Heber.—Stephen Denstone, of Ashley, left the poor of the township of Hodnet £100, the interest to be distributed on Stephen’s day yearly.—John Stirrop, in 1646, left £20 to the use of the poor. This gift is stated in the parliamentary report to be lost.—Abraham Deshin, in 1707, bequeathed £5, the interest to be given in bread on Christmas-day.—Mary Mollineux left £10, the interest to be distributed by the ministers and churchwardens.—Thomas Burrowes left £100, and directed the interest to be given away on the 2nd of December yearly.—William Burrowes bequeathed £100 to the poor of Hodnet, the interest to be given to the poor on the 23rd of September, yearly, by the minister and churchwardens.—Samuel Dickin left £20, the yearly proceeds thereof to be distributed by his heirs for ever.—Rowland Hill bequeathed £50 to the use of the poor.—Thomas Hill, Esq., son of the said Rowland Hill, left £350 for the benefit of the poor.—Mrs. Ann Catchpool left £50 to the use of the said poor.—John Hill, Esq., left £100, the interest to be expended in bread and given to the poor every Sunday.—The Right Hon. Richard Hill, in 1726, left £100 for the benefit of such poor as the minister and churchwardens should think fit.—Richard Clay, in 1750, left £100 to the poor.—Mrs. Brooke, in 1756, left £100, the interest to be given at the discretion of Sir Rowland Hill and his heirs.—Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., by a codicil to his will, 1779, left £100 to the poor of this parish, to be distributed at the discretion of his executor.—Mrs. Jane Hill left £100.—Sir Richard Hill, by his will, dated January 1st, 1808, left to his brother, John Hill, £300, on trust, to pay the interest of £100 thereof, at the rate of five per cent., among the poor of the parish of Hodnet, one half to be reserved for the poor of the chapelry of Weston.—Mr. Grocott left £5 to be given in bread yearly.—Stephen Stubbs, in 1815, left £10, the interest to be distributed yearly on St. Stephen’s day. A legacy of £50 was left by Sir Rowland Hill for the schooling of poor children. Some lands called Steel Lands were sold by the parish about the year 1750 for £92. The gifts amount in the whole to £1355, of which sum £150 were laid out in the purchase of a messuage and lands at Hodnet in 1701; £56 in the purchase of two cottages at Hodnet in 1728; £175 were paid into the hands of Sir John Hill; £431 in the purchase of an estate at Wem: £450 were held by Sir Rowland Hill, derived from the charities of Sir Rowland Hill, and other members of that family, and a further sum of £138 from other sources. The property at Hodnet consists of certain lands and a cottage and poor house with a garden and croft adjoining, and a cottage and croft on Hodnet Heath, with a right of common thereon, the whole of which produces a yearly income of £35. 12s., which is distributed with other charities hereafter mentioned. The property at Wem consists of five closes of land, lying in two detached parcels near the town, containing altogether about twelve acres and a half, let at a yearly rent of £40. The sum of £160 placed in the hands of Sir Richard Hill was subsequently laid out in the buildings at Hodnet. The rents derived from the estates above mentioned, and the interest of the sum of £77, with the produce of Price’s and Sir A. Corbet’s charities hereafter mentioned, amounted at the time the charity commissioners published their report to £93. 1s. 6d. The rent of the Wem estate is received by the churchwardens of Marchamley division, and the remainder of the rents is received by the churchwardens appointed for the division of Hodnet. Four shillings worth of bread is placed in the church every Sunday, and given to 32 poor persons, and bread to the amount of 15s. is also given on St. Stephen’s-day, and 5s. on Christmas-day. Each of the churchwardens pays equally towards the weekly distribution of bread, and each of them gives 30s. away on St. Stephen’s day, as the interest of Denstone’s legacy. The churchwardens of Marchamley also pay about 30s. annually towards schooling poor children at Marchamley. The remainder of the money is distributed by the churchwardens among the poor of their respective districts, in sums varying from 3s. to 8s. Of the money in the hands of Sir Rowland Hill, exclusive of the sum of £200 mentioned in the school account, and £77 for which a promissory note was given in 1818, the charity commissioners conceived that it could not be less than £558 when they published their report, for which the sum of £21 is paid as interest, and distributed by the rector of Hodnet, and a further sum of £4. 8s. is received by the curate of Weston chapelry, which is distributed in small sums among the poor.—The Rev. Richard Price, in 1730, devised certain premises to the poor of Drayton and Hodnet, and directed that £5 per annum should be distributed in bread every Lord’s day, and the residue employed for the schooling of poor children in each place. The property now held by the churchwardens of Hodnet in trust for this charity consists of three pieces of land in Drayton, containing between three and four acres, which produces a yearly rental of £12. 11s. 6d. The rents are carried to one account with the other charity money, from which a very small portion only is disposed of in schooling. It seems advisable that the rents should be employed according to the particular directions of the donor.—Sir Andrew Corbet, in 1815, gave £25 to the use of the poor of Hodnet. This donation was laid out in the building of a new school, and the yearly sum of £1. 1s. is paid in respect thereof by the master of the school to the churchwardens, by whom it is distributed with the other charities.
Post Office.—At Mr. Edward Jones’, schoolmaster. Letters arrive at 8 A.M. from Market Drayton, and are despatched at 6 P.M.
Acton Rev. William, B.A., curate
Ashley Ann, schoolmistress
Ashley George, wheelwright
Baker Mr. John
Bellis Elizabeth, shopkeeper and baker
Baydon James, registrar of births & deaths
Cartwright George, vict., Unicorn
Cartwright Samuel, boot and shoemaker
Cartwright William, tailor
Churton Thomas, boot and shoemaker
Donkin Thomas, painter and glazier
Downes Thomas, parish clerk
Eason William, veterinary surgeon
Edge William, wheelwright
Ellerthorpe Mrs. Helen
Foster Alfred, tailor
Jackson Edward, butcher
Jones Edward, schoolmaster
Laytham Henry, wheelwright
Lees Barnard, surgeon
Lester John, farmer and vict., Lion Inn
Macauley Rev. Samuel Herrick, B.D., Rectory
Morris Samuel, saddler and harness maker
Pace Piercy, grocer, draper, and ironmonger
Percy Algernon Charles Heber, Esq., Hodnet Hall
Powell John, farmer
Powell Mrs. Sarah
Pratchett Miss Jane, Ash court
Pritchard & Co., chemist, druggist, draper, and silk mercer
Ridway William, boot and shoemaker
Robinson John, boot and shoemaker
Taylor George, tailor and woollen draper
Titley Charles, butcher
Trevor James, wheelwright and beerhouse
Walmsley John Allen, surgeon and coroner for North Bradford Hundred
Wardley Mary, farmer, Horn Farm
Watson Alexander, farm steward to A. E. H. Percy, Esq.
Wild George, maltster and vict., Bear Inn, and posting house
Wild Thomas, grocer and ironmonger
Worral Henry, blacksmith
A coach from Shrewsbury to the Whitmore station passes through Hodnet at 9 A.M. and returns to Shrewsbury at 4 P.M.
BOLAS PARVA,
a small township consisting of only two farms, is pleasantly situated five miles south from Hodnet; at the census of 1841 there were nine houses and 44 inhabitants. The township comprises 594a. 1r. 15p. of land, which is vested in the devisees of the late Mr. Hatherall. The tithes have been commuted for £112. 1s. 1d. William Jennings is the only resident farmer in the township; Thomas Jones holds the other farm, but resides in the adjoining township.
HAWKSTONE
is a township, in the parish of Hodnet, six miles S.W. from Market Drayton, eight miles and a half S. from Whitchurch, and thirteen miles N.N. by W. from Shrewsbury. At the census in 1841 here were six houses and 60 inhabitants. The township contains 693a. 2r. 32p. of land, the tithes of which have been commuted for £115. Hawkstone Park, the magnificent seat of Viscount Hill, is delightfully situated in a park of great extent and picturesque beauty, not far from the turnpike road leading from Shrewsbury to Whitchurch, and has long been an alluring object to the admirers of nature, as well as to persons of taste and curiosity. The mansion is of brick, with stone finishings, and occupies three sides of a quadrangle, but it does not appear by whom it was originally built. The principal front is approached by a flight of steps, leading through a noble portico (supported by four elegant pillars of the composite order), considered an admirable piece of architecture. Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., added the wings, and made other considerable additions to the hall, which was the family mansion of the Hills in the time of Edward VI., in which reign we find, A.D. 1549, Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., was Lord Mayor of London. The Entrance Hall is adorned with ancient and modern armour, much of it collected at Waterloo, by the late General Lord Hill. The Saloon is a lofty and spacious apartment, fitted up in a costly manner, and adorned with some fine paintings; among which is the Siege of Namur, the five principal characters of which were taken from life. They are William III., the Elector of Bavaria, the Duke of Marlborough, Count Cohorn, and the Right Hon. Richard Hill, who was at that time Paymaster of the Army, Member of the Privy Council, and Envoy at the Court of Turin. The Drawing Room is a noble apartment, exquisitely furnished, and containing several fine paintings, executed by some of the most celebrated masters. The ceiling and walls are richly ornamented and gilt, and the furniture is of the same gorgeous description. The Library contains an extensive and valuable collection of books, chiefly modern works; several fine paintings; and in a glass case are the sword and orders of the late General Lord Hill. The Billiard Room contains several valuable pillars brought from Egypt by General Lord Hill. The Chapel forms the south-west wing of the hall, and is now undergoing a complete reparation. A marble pulpit and stained glass windows (the latter illustrative of scripture history) have been added, which give the interior a solemn and imposing appearance. The Museum contains many interesting objects of curiosity, and an extensive and valuable collection of British birds. Adjoining the library is the Sculpture Gallery. There are also various other apartments, adorned in the most tasteful and costly style, which our limits will not allow us to notice. The Gardens are laid out with taste, and contain a number of small ponds for aquatic birds. Near the hall on a gentle eminence is the Summer House, a handsome octagonal building of Grinshill freestone; the interior of which is painted in fresco, and represents the four seasons. From the window there is a pleasing prospect of a fine sheet of water; and in the distance appear the Broxton hills and Delamere forest, in Cheshire. A pleasant walk leads from the summer house to the Gulph, which separates the grotto rock from the opposite heights. On emerging from the beautiful lawn, the most romantic scenery suddenly presents itself to the eye of the spectator; and proceeding along a rising walk on the side of the rock, the traveller is conducted to the entrance of The Grotto, a cleft in the rock, which had lain for ages undiscovered, till Sir Richard Hill caused all the earth to be dug away, when it was found that the two sides of the rock so nearly corresponded with each other that they were doubtless once united, and separated either by an earthquake or some other violent convulsion of the earth. After proceeding about a hundred yards, you arrive at the grotto, which is a vast subterraneous cave, supported by rude pillars hewn out of the solid rock; in the midst of which is a spacious recess, ingeniously inlaid with shells, fossils, and curious petrefactions. Through a colonnade of rude pillars this labyrinth is quitted by a door on the west, which opens on an awful precipice of huge rocks and pending crags, hoary with age, forming a striking contrast with the verdant lawn and fertile plain in the distance. Proceeding under the grotto hill, by a road cut out of the shelving rock, and looking upwards, you behold enormous crags hanging over you, as if on the very point of falling. This hill stretches to the south-west to a considerable distance; and the gigantic rocks heaped one upon another look more like ruined castles than the turrets of nature. On leaving the grotto hill, you proceed by the side of stately oaks and rugged cliffs till you arrive at a natural cave called The Retreat, the top of which is tinged with variegated copper. In this cave, with its straw-matted seat and stone table, is a beautiful stanza, penned by the late Sir Richard Hill. After quitting the retreat, you pass by The Canopy and The Indian Rock, surrounded by scenery of the most romantic character, and mount up a curiously hewn pathway along the rock till you reach a little cottage, in which is the figure of a hermit, in a sitting posture, with a table before him, on which is a skull, an hour glass, a book, and a pair of spectacles. The next attraction is St. Francis’s Cave, the entrance to which is under a curiously twisted root of a venerable yew tree. After groping for some yards in total darkness, you suddenly emerge into cheering light, and which ever way you turn the most enchanting prospects are stretched out before you. A detached piece of rock of a pyramidical form is called The Fox’s Knob, from the circumstance of a fox, some years ago, leaping from the top to the valley beneath; and being followed by some of the dogs, the pursuers and the pursued perished together. Turning to the left, a verdant walk leads to the summit of The Terrace. This delightful walk is embosomed in the varied foliage of forest trees, which reach down to the ground, with openings here and there through which distant prospects are viewed. Passing beyond the limits of these Alpine heights, you arrive at Reynard’s Banqueting House, a natural cavern, in which were found the remains of hares, rabbits, and all sorts of poultry, which the foxes had carried there to feast upon.
On the highest point of the terrace is erected a noble Obelisk, built of white freestone, and about one hundred and twelve feet high. From the top of this column a most unbounded prospect presents itself to view, and England and Wales vie with each other in the loftiness of their mountains and the richness of their plains. The gallery of the obelisk forms an observatory for the astronomer. The inscription on the base transmits to posterity the piety and noble acts of a venerable ancestor, a statue of whom in his lord mayor’s gown, copied from an ancient monument which stood in the church of St. Stephen’s, Walbrook, before the fire of London, is placed on the top, holding the Magna Charta in his hand. The following is the inscription at the base:—
“The righteous shall be had in everlasting remembrance.”—Psalm, cvi. 6.
The first stone of this pillar was laid by Sir Richard Hill, Bart. (member in several parliaments for this county), on the 1st day of October, in the year 1795; who caused it to be erected, not only for the various uses of an observatory and to feast the eye by presenting it at one view with a most luxuriant and extensive prospect, which takes in not less than twelve (or, as some assert, fifteen) counties, but from motives of justice, respect, and gratitude, to the memory of a truly great and good man, viz., Sir Rowland Hill, Knight, who was born at the family mansion, Hawkstone, in the reign of King Henry VII., and being bred to trade and free of the city of London, became one of the most considerable and opulent merchants of his time, and was lord mayor of the same in the second and third years of the reign of Edward VI., anno 1549 and 1550, and was the first Protestant that filled that high office. Having embraced the principles of the Reformation, he zealously exerted himself in behalf of the Protestant cause, and having been diligent in the use of all religious exercises, “prayerful, conscientious, and watchful” (as a writer of his character expresses it), yet trusting only in the merit of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, he exchanged this life for a better, a short while after the death of that pious young monarch, being aged nearly seventy-eight years.
For a considerable time previous to his decease he gave up his mercantile occupations that he might with more devotedness of heart attend to the great concerns of another world. His lands, possessions, and church patronage were immense, particularly in the counties of Salop and Chester, the number of his tenants (none of whom he ever raised or fined) amounting to 1,181, as appears from his own hand writing. His private virtues, good deeds and munificent spirit, were quite unlimited and extended—like the prospect before us, east, west, north, and south, far surpassing all bounds. “Being sensible,” saith Fuller, speaking of him in his “Worthies of England,” “that his great estate was given him of God,” it was his desire to devote it to His glory. He built a spacious church in his own parish Hodnet, and likewise the neighbouring church at Stoke at his own expense. He built Tern and Atcham bridges in this county, both of hewn stone, and containing several arches each. He also built other large bridges of timber. He built and endowed several large schools, particularly that of Drayton. He made and paved divers highways for the public utility. He founded exhibitions and educated many students at both universities, and supported at the inns and courts others who were brought up to the law. He was the unwearied friend of the widow and fatherless. He clothed annually three hundred poor people in his neighbourhood, both with shirts and coats; and in the city of London he gave £500 (an immense sum in those days) to St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, besides (saith Fuller) £600 to Christ’s Hospital. He also gave most liberally to all other hospitals, and at his death bequeathed £150 to the poor of all the wards in London. He had no children, but his relations and kinsfolk were numerous, who all partook largely of his bounty, both in his lifetime and at his death. He constantly kept up a great family household, where he maintained good hospitality. Many resorted to him for his wise and salutary advice, and none who came to him were sent empty or dissatisfied away. Go thou and do likewise, as far as thy ability will permit, without injury to thy own relations. It is worthy of remark that as Sir Rowland Hill was the first protestant lord mayor, anno 1549, so his father, Thomas Hill, Esq., of Hawkstone, was the last lord mayor of the Roman Catholic persuasion.
A walk from the terrace leads to the White Tower, a Gothic structure, situated on a bold projection on the south-west side of the terrace, which is a conspicuous object for several miles round. In the glen not far from the White Tower is a cave in the rock, made accessible by means of some steps through a narrow romantic walk, and which is remarkable for having been the hiding place of an ancestor of the Hill family, who met with great hardships from the parliamentary forces during the commonwealth. In memory of this gentleman the late Sir Richard Hill caused a handsome urn to be placed near the cave above mentioned, with the following inscription on the base of it:—
Anno 1784.
This urn
was placed here by Sir Richard Hill, Bart.,
(eldest son of Sir Rowland Hill, Bart.)
one of the Knights of this Shire,
as a token of affection to the memory of his much respected ancestor,
Rowland Hill, of Hawkstone, Esquire;
a gentleman remarkable for his great wisdom, piety, and charity, who, being
a zealous royalist, hid himself in this glen, in the civil wars in the
time of King Charles the First.But being discovered, was imprisoned in the adjacent castle, commonly called Red Castle, whilst his house was pillaged and ransacked by the rebels. The castle itself was soon after demolished.
His son, Rowland Hill, Esq., coming to his assistance, also suffered much in the same loyal cause.
The Vineyard is a sequestered glen, embosomed in foliage and screened by the rocks behind and on each side, and open only to the south sun, and apparently peculiarly adapted to the growth and culture of the vine; but although every effort was tried, the attempt did not succeed. It was laid out in the manner of a fortification, with turrets, walls, and bastions, at very great expense, by the late Sir Richard Hill. From the tower may be seen the town of Shrewsbury, many of the Cambrian hills, the magnificent Wrekin, and the towering heights of the Briedden hills, on the latter of which is the pillar erected in honour of Lord Rodney. About a mile from the tower is the Burgh Walls, or Bury Walls, the remains of a grand Roman camp, allowed by antiquarians to be the most perfect in the kingdom. It encompasses about twenty acres of ground, and is screened on all sides but one by a chain of inaccessible rocks. The side on which there is no natural defence is strongly guarded by a triple entrenchment, which must have been a work of immense labour. Here Roman coins have frequently been found, and in the year 1821 a spur, pronounced by competent judges to be of Roman workmanship, was found in the garden of the Bury farm, about a quarter of a mile from Bury Walls. The Elysian Hill is another object of attraction; and here you find various rude and whimsical seats to rest upon, by the side of the mossy bank or rocky cavern, as you ascend the steep acclivity. An enchanting valley divides this hill from the Red Castle Hill, so called from the colour of the rock, and of the stone with which the castle is built. Having ascended the romantic heights, you enter the castle through a strong door or gateway. This fortress, long the seat of warriors, and remarkable for its strength and the prodigious thickness of its walls, is now a heap of ruins, and inhabited only by birds of prey, whilst its martial sons are buried in oblivion, and nothing left to perpetuate their deeds of prowess but these fragments of desolation. Dugdale informs us that this castle was erected in the reign of Henry III.; but an ancient manuscript in the Audley family proves it to have had a much earlier existence. It is there said that “Maud, or Matilda, wife of William the Conqueror, gave to John de Audley and to his heirs, the lands about Red Castle, in the county of Salop, for certain services done by him to the state.” The castle and surrounding domain were purchased by Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., about the middle of the eighteenth century. On the castle hill there is a deep well, commonly called the Giant’s Well, the depth of which, from the top of the tower, is two hundred and six feet; it is ten feet in diameter at the entrance, and hewn out of the solid rock. The tower is also hewn out of the solid rock to the height of about forty feet. Near to the well a coffin was found, many years ago, which, on being exposed to the air, crumbled into dust; in it were discovered several human bones, and the iron beard of an arrow. The southern entrance to the glen, which divides the castle into two nearly equal parts, is flanked on each side by a rock, on which formerly stood watch towers; and where the fosse, which intersected the glen, required additional defence or altitude, masonry was employed. A wall of great strength has crossed the glen at each end, passing up the slopes of the hill, connecting the rocks which overlook the entrances, and enclosing an area of an oblong form. The approach to the highest division of the castle is by steps cut out of the solid rock, and continued through a low tortuous passage, the entrance to which has been guarded by a door. A wall of about three hundred feet in circumference has been carried round the summit of the rock, the sides of which are for the most part perpendicular. The park is richly adorned with timber, and the scenery is pleasingly diversified and enchanting—the awfulness of its shades, the horrors of its precipices, the verdure of its hollows, and the loftiness of its rocks, all combine to give an additional charm to the fairy scene. A fine sheet of water, in some parts nearly one hundred yards in breadth, stretches for upwards of two miles in length, and forms the boundary to the north and west sides of the park. The park is stocked with herds of Scotch bullocks, and upwards of six hundred head of deer.
The principal residents in Hawkstone are Rowland Viscount Hill, Hawkstone Park; Rev. William Blackley, domestic chaplain; William Carling, butler; Mrs. Morgan, housekeeper; Frederick Nieman, gardener; John Hopkins, farmer; and Thomas Holding, farmer.
HOPTON AND ESPLEY,
a township in the parish of Hodnet, one mile south from the church, contains 969a. 2r. 16p. of land, and in 1841 had twelve houses and 77 inhabitants; the tithes have been commuted for £183. 12s. 7d. There are only three farms in this township, two of which are the property of Viscount Hill, and the other is the property of A. C. H. Percy, Esq.
The principal residents are Samuel Cartwright, farmer, Hopton; George Gill, farmer and land agent to Viscount Hill, Hopton; John Liversage, farmer, Espley.
KENSTONE,
a township and small village one mile W.W. by S. from Hodnet, contains 858a. 0r. 9p. of land, mostly a bold undulating district, the high grounds of which are covered with thriving plantations. The land is chiefly the property of Viscount Hill; Mr. George Clay is the owner of one farm. The Primitive Methodists have a small chapel near the verge of the township, on the turnpike road leading from Hodnet to Wem. The tithes have been commuted for £73. 1s. 8d. At the census of 1841 there were twenty houses and 104 inhabitants.
Directory.—James Cartwright, farmer; Martha Ellis, farmer; George Clay, farmer; Richard Powell, farmer, Hopley Hill; William Gregory, carpenter and joiner.
LOSSFORD, OR LOSTFORD,
a small township two and a half miles N. from Hodnet, with a few scattered houses, near the turnpike road from Hodnet to Market Drayton, contains 438a. 0r. 9p. of land, which is the property of Richard Corbet, Esq., and Miss Mary Murhall; the latter resides at a neat residence of modern construction, on an acclivity near the turnpike road. In 1841 here were 11 houses and 64 inhabitants. A small stream intersects the township, and tradition says that a person was formerly lost here in fording the stream, and hence the name of Lost-ford, now corrupted to Lossford, has been given to the township.
Directory.—Thomas Glassey, farmer; John Lodmore, farmer and cheese factor; John Merry, farmer; Miss Mary Murhall, farmer.
MARCHAMLEY
is a township and small village pleasantly situated on elevated ground, commanding fine prospects of the surrounding country, one mile N.W. from Hodnet, and six miles S.W. from Market Drayton. The township contains 1424a. 0r. 29p. of land, and in 1841 here were 84 houses and 441 inhabitants; the tithes have been commuted for £217. 2s. 9d.; Viscount Hill is the principal landowner in the township. The village is situated near the entrance to Hawkstone Park, some portions of which are within the bounds of this township. The poor of Marchamley and the other townships comprising the parish of Hodnet participate in the benefit arising from the several charities noticed with the township of Hodnet. The farm premises of Viscount Hill, who holds a considerable extent of land in his own hands, are situated at Marchamley.
Directory.—Thomas Cotton, farmer; Jane Lane, shopkeeper; Robert Graham, farmer and architect and builder; Richard James, police constable; John Martin, joiner; John Powell, farmer, The Well House; Samuel Vaughan, blacksmith; Samuel Whittaker, farm steward to Viscount Hill.
PEPLOW,
a township and small rural village in the parish of Hodnet, three miles S. from the parish church, contains 1,388a. 2r. 30p. of land, which is the property of Viscount Hill. At the census of 1841 there were 28 houses and 220 inhabitants. The tithes have been commuted for £532. 19s. 9d. The hall is a spacious brick mansion, which was originally built by the Pigott family; it is now the residence of Captain George Hill. On the north side of the hall is a private chapel, an ancient structure mantled with ivy, where the residents at Peplow usually attend divine service, which is performed by the rector or curate of Hodnet. Not far from the chapel is a neat school and residence for the teacher, which was built and is supported by Viscount Hill. The township is watered by the river Tern, the meadow lands on the banks of which are enriched by that river occasionally overflowing its banks; a little below the village it turns a corn mill. The land for the most part in this locality is flat, it has been greatly improved by superior cultivation, and is generally highly productive.
Directory.—Captain George Hill, Peplow Hall; Ralph Brett, corn miller; John Cartwright, farmer; Thomas Casewell, farmer; Samuel Deakin, farmer; Richard Everall, farmer; James Gray, farmer, Hall Green; Samuel Hughes, blacksmith; Thos. Liversage, blacksmith; John Ravencroft, farmer; Samuel Shuker, shoemaker; George Topham, farmer, maltster, and butcher; Elizabeth Williams, schoolmistress.
WESTON UNDER RED CASTLE
is a township and chapelry in the Wem division of the North Bradford Hundred, the rest of the parish being returned in Drayton division. The village is delightfully situated near the verge of Hawkstone Park, four miles E. from Wem, and in 1841 there were 76 houses and 348 inhabitants. The township contains 2,210 acres of land, of which 576 acres are in woods and plantations, and 15 acres in roads. Rateable value, £2645. 4s. 10d. The tithes are commuted for £195. 17s. 6d. Viscount Hill is the principal landowner and lord of the manor; Philip Hill, Esq., is also a landowner. The country around Weston is pleasantly diversified with hill and dale, richly clothed with timber, and the scenery beautifully picturesque. Here are extensive quarries of free stone, which is much used for building purposes; blocks of immense size are frequently raised from the quarries. The Chapel is a neat structure of free stone, with a tower containing a clock; it was rebuilt in 1791, with funds raised by subscriptions, towards which Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., gave the munificent sum of £720. The organ was purchased by subscriptions in 1838, and cost upwards of £100, of which £83. 2s. were given by various benevolent individuals, and the remainder was given by General Lord Hill, together with the communion plate. The font is of Grinshill free stone, and exhibits some fine workmanship. A neat marble tablet dated 1809 remembers George Downward and his wife Elizabeth. The living is enjoyed by the Rev. John Hill. The National School is a neat modern erection, with a residence for the teacher, built and endowed by the Hill family, of Hawkstone, (see charities noticed with Hodnet), 54 boys and 20 girls attend; the teachers have each a stipend of £20 per annum. The Citadel is a stately pile of building in the castellated style of architecture, situated on a bold eminence, commanding delightful views, and beautified with park grounds richly clothed with timber. It is the residence of the Rev. John Hill, M.A. Hawkstone Hotel is a commodious and handsome structure elegantly fitted up, and situated near the entrance to the park. From its contiguity to Hawkstone, the magnificent seat of Viscount Hill, it is frequented by immense numbers, who annually visit this delightful locality. Wixhall is a hamlet in this township, the acres of which are returned with the parish. Viscount Hill is the chief landowner; Phillip Hill, Esq.; C. D. Hill, Esq.; J. H. Sandford, Esq.; Mr. E. Evanson, and Clara Beddow, are also freeholders.
Those marked * reside at the hamlet of Wixhall.
* Ashley Ann, The Hall
* Ashley Samuel, farmer
* Ashley Thomas, farmer
Blakeway Richard, coachman
Clewes Richard, grocer, draper, & provision dealer
Denham James, Esq., architect
Evanson Edward, beerhouse keeper
Farnandez Mariano, vict., Hawkstone Hotel
Gill George, Esq., land agent and steward to Lord Hill
Hamer Mrs.
Higginson William, blacksmith
Hill Rev. John, The Citadel
Holding Thomas, Abbey Farm
Izzard Susannah, schoolmistress
Jones John, shoemaker
Lester Samuel, farmer
* Lewis Edward, quarry master
Lewis Samuel, tailor, The Heath
Lewis Thomas, mason, The Heath
Lewis William, mason, The Heath
Massey William, The Berry Farm
Phillips John, shoemaker, The Heath
* Powell Ann, farmer
Robinson Thomas, gamekeeper
Snape John, park keeper
Vigers John, Hawkstone Farm
Watson Joseph, shoemaker
Whalley James, The Hermitage Farm
* Williams Enoch, wheelwright and machine maker
Williams William, schoolmaster
WOLLERTON
is a straggling but pleasantly situated village a little more than a mile E.E. by N. from Hodnet. At the census of 1841 there were 46 houses and 231 inhabitants; the township contains 1,334a. 2r. 6p. of land, the principal owners of which are A. C. H. Percy, Esq., Viscount Hill, Walter Minor, Esq., Mr. Richard Whitfield, Mr. William Massey, Mr. John Beacall, Mr. Samuel Brayn, and Mr. Thomas Pritchard. There is a small Independent Chapel with a residence for the minister, situated on rising ground not far from the turnpike road leading from Hodnet to Market Drayton; it was built about half a century ago, and will accommodate about 120 hearers; the congregation is under the pastoral care of the Rev. Daniel Davies. The tithes of Wollerton are commuted for £196. 1s. 1d. The township is watered by the river Tern, on the banks of which there is a corn mill.
Directory.—Walter Minor, Esq.; Betty Blockley, farmer; Rev. Daniel Davies, Independent minister; Richard and John Cartwright, farmers, maltsters, and corn millers; John Hope, wheelwright; Phillip Hughes, blacksmith; Samuel Hughes, blacksmith; Margaret Icke, beerhouse keeper; John Lester, farmer; William Massey, farmer; William Massey, jun., farmer; James Pickering, cooper; William Powell, farmer.
IGHTFIELD,
a parish and village in the Whitchurch division of the hundred of North Bradford, four miles and a quarter S.E. by E. from Wem, contains 2,800 acres of land, mostly a strong soil, which produces good crops of grain. In 1801 there were 209 inhabitants; 1831, 301; and in 1841, there were 70 houses and 361 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,959. The principal landowners are Lord Kilmorey, Messrs. Corsers, Mr. John Walmsley, Mr. Isaac Forrester, Miss Morton, Mr. Samuel Lea, the Misses Hinton, Rev. John Justice, George Harper, Esq., and the representatives of William Skitt; besides whom there are several smaller freeholders. The Church, dedicated to St. John the Baptist, is situated on an eminence, and has a lofty square tower, ornamented with pinnacles. It is an ancient structure in the Gothic style of architecture, much delapidated, and fast falling to decay. The body of the church is divided into two compartments, and has a pitched roof, supported by octagonal stone pillars with pointed arches; the caps of the pillars are curiously carved. The tower contains four bells; and from its summit a most delightful and extensive prospect over the fertile plains of Shropshire is seen. The living is a rectory, valued in the king’s book at £7. 19s. 4½d., in the patronage of H. Justice, Esq., and incumbency of the Rev. John Justice, M.A. The tithes were commuted in 1839 for the sum of £657. 16s. 5d., of which the sum of £320 was apportioned to the rector. The estate of Lord Kilmorey in this parish is tithe-free, but he pays a small modus, and keeps a portion of the north compartment of the church in repair. Kempley House is an ancient residence, and was formerly surrounded by a moat, which may still be traced.
Charities.—Several sums of money, amounting in the whole to £113, left by ten several donors, were laid out in the year 1819 in the purchase of certain premises, for the purpose of converting the same into a poor-house. The sum of £5. 10s. has been since paid annually as the interest of the charity money out of the parish rates, and disposed of as follows:—The sum of £1 is divided annually among poor widows of this parish; 18s. are expended in penny loaves, and distributed every Sunday amongst poor old persons most constantly attending the church; and the residue is distributed among the most necessitous poor of the parish, in sums varying from 4s. to 8s.
Bentley William, farmer, The Heath
Bentley William, jun., farmer
Blackmore John, farmer
Burgess Geo., farmer, Dairy House
Dickin Robert, farmer
Ebrey John, butcher
Gresty William, maltster and farmer
Haynes Thomas, tailor
Heath John, farmer
Hinton John, farmer and butcher
Jones Elizabeth, farmer
Justice Rev. John, M.A., The Rectory
Langford Enoch, shoemaker
Langford Joseph, bricklayer
Langford Joseph, victualler, Lamb Inn
Shelley John, farmer, The Hall
Shucker William, blacksmith
Skitt Wm., farmer, Kempley
Tyler Thomas, shoemaker and parish clerk
Wainwright John, shopkeeper
Walmsley Samuel, farmer
Wharton John, shopkeeper
Wiggin Richard, farmer
Williams Richard, beerhouse-keeper and blacksmith
Wilson George, wheelwright
Wilson John, wheelwright
Worrall Josh., farmer, Yew-tree House
LEE BROCKHURST
is a small parish and village, two miles and a half S.E. from Wem, in the Whitchurch division of the hundred of North Bradford. In 1801 there was a population of 137 souls; 1831, 151; and in 1841 there were 31 houses and 165 inhabitants. The parish contains 564a. 2r. 21p. of land, of which 216a. 3r. 36p. are arable, 75 acres meadow, 10a. 2r. sheep walks, 61a. 2r. woods and plantations, and about eleven acres in gardens and homesteads. Of the total acreage 374a. 3r. 23p. are titheable, and the remainder tithe-free. Rateable value, £588. 11s. 3d. The principal landowners are Viscount Hill, John H. Walford, Esq., Mrs. Brooks, and Samuel Long Waring, Esq. The tithes are commuted for £74; John H. Walford, Esq., is the impropriator. The turnpike road from Whitchurch to Newcastle intersects the parish, which is bounded on the south-east and south west by the river Roden, the stream being crossed by two stone bridges. At Lee Bridge there is a respectable and commodious inn, the Corbet Arms; near to which are immense rocks of red sandstone, the soil on the summits of which is planted with fir and other timber trees. On the top of one of these rocks a tower has been erected, from which a most extensive and picturesque view of the country is obtained. The whole district has a bold undulating surface, finely wooded, and the scenery towards Hawkstone, the fine domain of Viscount Hill, is truly magnificent. An Obelisk has been erected by the tenantry of Besford and Lee Bridge, as a token of esteem and respect to their landlord, Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., and to commemorate the coming of age of his eldest son, Vincent Rowland Corbet, Esq., August 11th, 1842. It bears the following inscription:—
“May there be Corbets and Hills this obelisk to pass,
So long as time and it doth last.”
A bath has been cut out of the red sandstone rock, which is supplied with an abundance of fine spring water. The Church, dedicated to St. Peter, is a plain unpretending structure of venerable appearance; the interior is neatly pewed, and consists of nave and chancel, and contains a small gallery. A neat tablet remembers John Henshaw, Esq., and there are several tombs in the church-yard in memory of the Heatleys. The living is a perpetual curacy, returned at £74, in the patronage of John H. Walford, Esq., and incumbency of the Rev. William Walker. The parish register is in good preservation, and dates from the year 1566. Near the church is a barrow or tumuli, where it is stated human bones have been found.
Directory.—Mrs. Brookes; Miss Harris; Samuel Heatley, farmer, The Hall; John Holding, shopkeeper and shoemaker; William Ikin, farmer, Cranberry farm; Mary Ikin, schoolmistress; Richard Powell, farmer; Richard Powell, jun., farmer; the Misses Skitt; William Staples, huntsman to the Albrighton Subscription Hunt, and victualler, the Raven and Hand and Corbet Arms.
MORETON CORBET
is a village and parish seven miles N.N. by E. from Shrewsbury, and four and a half miles south-east from Wem. The parish contains the township of Moreton Corbet and part of the townships of Preston Brockhurst and Besford, and comprises 2,140a. 1r. 17p. of land, of which 200 acres are in woods and plantations. In 1801 there was a population of 180 souls; in 1831, 679; and in 1841 there were 37 houses and 226 inhabitants. Rateable value, £2,765. 8s. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., is lord of the manor, impropriator, and owner of the whole parish. The land is of a superior quality; the soil is a mixture of sand and loam. There is a fine breed of sheep kept here, and several of the farmers have large flocks. The tithes have been commuted for £400. The township of Moreton Corbet contains 607a. 3r. 1p. of land, of which 214 acres are woods and plantations.
Moreton Corbet Castle stands a short distance from the church, and presents a noble pile of ruins, magnificent in decay. A considerable portion of the walls is still standing, but its roof has been many years demolished. In early times it was the stately mansion of the Corbets. Several dates may be discovered in different parts of the building, but the date of its erection is uncertain; it is probable that only a portion of the original design was ever completed; and it has by no means the appearance of having been intended for a fortress, for the windows are large, and unlike those of castles in general. It was garrisoned in 1644 by the parliament against Charles I. The king having possession of Shrewsbury and several places in the neighbourhood, the parliament sent part of the garrison from hence against Shrewsbury, which soon after surrendered to their forces. This castle is said to have been partly burnt during the civil wars, since which it has gradually sunk into insignificance and dilapidation. The present noble owner is descended from an ancient and honourable family, who have been seated in this county from the time of the conquest, when Roger Corbet held large possessions under the Earl of Shrewsbury. Sir Vincent Corbet was created a baronet in 1641, whose descendant, Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., now resides at Acton Reynald. Mr. Blakeway gives the following tradition of the Pilgrim of Moreton:—“The real progenitor of all the Shropshire Corbets had but one son that we know of, William, who left issue. Ebraid and Simon occur as granting lands in Wentnor to the Abbey of Shrewsbury, but we know nothing of them. William Corbet is stated to have made Wattlesborough his residence, and no doubt dwelt in that ancient castle, of which, however, there are no remains so old as his age. He had three sons, Thomas Corbet of Wattlesborough, Robert of Caus, and Philip. Several circumstances concur to show that the former was the eldest, though Robert became much the more considerable personage. A tradition still subsists that the heir of Moreton Corbet went to the Holy Land, and was kept in captivity so long that he was supposed to be dead. In consequence of this his younger brother engaged to marry, that he might continue the line. On the morning of his marriage, says the tradition, a pilgrim came to the house to partake of the hospitalities of that festal occasion. After dinner he revealed himself to the assembled company as the long-lost elder brother; but when the bridegroom would have surrendered the estate, he declined the offer, and desired only a small portion of the land, which he accordingly received. Such incidents are related of other families, and were perhaps not unfrequent in a romantic age; and some were doubtless feigned. I am inclined to think the present has a basis of truth, for we are assured that Thomas Corbet of Wattlesborough went beyond sea, and left his lands in the custody of his brother Robert; and this may have given rise to the tale I have just related. The primogeniture of Thomas is established by the armorial bearings of his posterity,—the single raven. The descendants of Robert bore two such—a proof that they were a younger line; but they were barons of the realm, an elevation never attained by the Wattlesborough branch: and Caus, the seat of their barony, appears to have been carved out of the elder line, Westbury, where it lies, having been granted by Earl Roger to their progenitor, Roger, son of Corbet. All these coincidences, with the tradition above mentioned, afford it some support. Moreton, indeed, has in this case been made prematurely the scene of the transaction.”
The Church, dedicated to St. Bartholomew, is a handsome structure of free stone, in the decorative style of English architecture, with a square tower. The interior has a very beautiful and chastened appearance, and the tablets and monuments to the Corbet family exhibit some very elaborate workmanship. A monument to Vincent Corbet, the third baronet, who died in 1670, is richly decorated with festoons of oak leaves, finely executed in marble. The four corners are held up by ravens, in allusion to the armorial bearings of this ancient family, and surmounted by their crest, the elephant and castle. The latter is said to have been the armorial bearings of the Scottish Oliphants, one of whom was taken prisoner by a Corbet, in a war between the two kingdoms. The livingis a rectory, valued in the king’s book at £5. 3s. 6d.; now returned at £376; in the patronage of Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., and incumbency of the Rev. Robert F. Wood, M.A., who resides at the rectory, a good residence situate near the church. There are 39a. 2r. 26p. of glebe land. The National School, a spacious stone building, is supported by Sir A. V. Corbet. About eighty children attend. The poor of this parish are entitled to a yearly sum of £1. 5s., the gift of Andrew and Elizabeth Downes, which is now paid out of certain lands in Ollerly lane, in the manor of Wem. Various benefactions left for the benefit of the poor, in the whole amounting to £86. 5s., were formerly placed out at interest; but in 1821 the amount was laid out in building some cottages for the poor, upon land rented for this purpose by the parish officers. The parishioners having found that no benefit had been derived from the use of these houses, prevailed on Sir Andrew Corbet to take the land with the cottages thereon, and to repay them the sum they had expended, which was again put out at interest for the benefit of the poor.
The principal residents in Moreton Corbet are Eleanor Bennett, school teacher; Robert Broughall, farmer; John Harris, farmer; John Harris, jun., farmer; Mrs. Ann Henshaw, the Castle; Richard Henshaw, the Castle Farm; William Lawley, blacksmith; Rev. Robert Faulkner Wood, M.A., the Rectory.
PRESTON BROCKHURST
is a scattered village and township, partly in the parish of Shawbury, and partly in the parish of Moreton Corbet, three and a quarter miles south-east from Wem. At the census of 1841 there were 21 houses and 138 inhabitants, of which 2 houses and 17 persons were returned as in the parish of Shawbury, and the remainder in this parish. The township contains 1,482a. 1r. 23p. of land, much improved by superior cultivation. The village is delightfully situated on the turnpike road from Shrewsbury to Hawkstone; the vicinity has a bold undulating surface, richly wooded, and pleasingly diversified with rural scenery. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., is lord of the manor and sole proprietor. The Hall is a fine specimen of ancient architecture, with projecting gables and bay windows, and was in early times the seat of a branch of the Corbet family. It is lofty and spacious, and entered by a fine old porch, above which is a watch tower; the whole has a venerable yet interesting appearance. The interior contains some fine specimens of elaborate oak carving; the entrance hall is of panelled oak, and the antique staircase is also of oak, of massive and beautiful workmanship, the whole of which is in excellent preservation. Preston Wood covers an area of 204a. 1r. 20p. acres of land.
Brayne Richard, farmer, the Hall
Darlington Thomas, vict., the Elephant and Castle
Deakin James, butcher
Edwards William, farmer, Bridleway-gate
Evans John and Son, blacksmiths and agricultural implement makers
Evans John, farmer, Shawbury house
Huxley Richard, farmer, the Grove
Lewis Thomas, maltster and vict., Corbet Arms
Morgan Mr. Thomas
Snape Thomas, shopkeeper and gamekeeper
Travar John, sawyer
Travar Richard, joiner and cabinet-maker
Travar Samuel, wheelwright and van proprietor
Windsor Thomas, farmer, Wainhouse
MORETON SAY, OR MORETON SEA,
is a parish which comprehends the townships of Betchley, Longford, Moreton Say, Styche, and Woodlands, and contains 4,804a. 1r. 30p. of land, of which 53a. 2r. 13p. are woods and plantations, roads, and waste; the soil for the most part is a strong tenacious clay: in other parts a fertile loam prevails. In 1801 the parish contained 683 inhabitants; in 1831, 679; and in 1841, there were 126 houses and 770 inhabitants. Rateable value of the whole parish, £5,299. 8s. Rent charge, £645. The middle and the northern verge of the parish bordering on Cheshire, present a bold undulating surface, and from the high grounds a most beautiful prospect of the surrounding country may be seen. Richard Corbet, Esq., and John Tayleur, Esq., are joint lords of the manor. The village of Moreton Say is pleasantly situated three miles west from Market Drayton, and in 1841 had 42 houses and 202 inhabitants. Rateable value of the township, £1,928. 11s. The population are chiefly employed in agricultural pursuits, and the land in this locality has been greatly improved by draining and superior cultivation. The principal landowners are John Whitehall Dod, Esq., M.P.; the Earl of Powis; and John Tayleur, Esq. The Church is a venerable fabric, with a tower surmounted by a wooden turret. The structure underwent a complete reparation in 1788, at a cost of £386. 8s., which was raised by private subscriptions. The chancel is ornamented with a beautiful stained glass window, of exquisite workmanship. The walls of the chancel are decorated with implements of war, taken by the late Lord Clive in his campaign through India; there are also six beautifully designed marble tablets, in memory of the predecessors of Lord Clive, of Styche Hall; a fine tomb of elaborate workmanship, with three full sized figures in a recumbent posture, remembers the Grosvenors of Eaton, and is dated 1619. A beautiful mural monument, chastely executed, has been erected in commemoration of John Bostock, Esq., who died in 1623. There is also a tablet of curious workmanship in memory of Elizabeth Rotton, with others to the Corser, Redshaw, Woolley, and other families. In the churchyard is a magnificent altar tomb of marble, to the memory of Sir John Markham, who died in 1778. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the rector of Hodnet, and enjoyed by the Rev. Robert Upton, M.A. The tithes have been commuted, and £555 apportioned to the rector of Hodnet, and £90 to the incumbent of Moreton Say. There are 48a. 2r. 39p. of glebe land. The parsonage is an ancient structure a short distance from the church. There is a school here, which is chiefly supported by the minister and a few benevolent individuals.
In the parliamentary returns of 1786 several sums of money are mentioned as having been given to the poor of this parish, amounting in the whole to £199. 10s., which sum is stated to have been laid out in the purchase of £250 stock in the four per cents. There is reason to question the accuracy of this statement, as we find that most of the charities recorded (many of which do not exceed £5) are supposed to have been distributed as soon as received. There was, however, a close called the Poor’s Field, containing about seven acres, the rent of which was given away to the poor; but whether this field was purchased with any part of the charities bequeathed to the parish, or derived from any other source, is not now known. This field was sold about seventy years ago, with the consent of the parishioners, by the churchwardens and overseers, to Archdeacon Clive, the then incumbent of Moreton Say, who gave for it £250 stock in the four per cents., producing £10 a year, being the rent at which the close was then let. The dividends of this stock now amount to £8. 15s., with £1. 5s. added from the poors’ rate, to make up £10, is expended in bread, and given away among poor persons attending divine service at the church.
Directory.—Francis Grocott, farmer, Calverhall; Johnson and Moore, farmers, Styche farm; William Lea, farmer and corn miller; Samuel Minor, farmer, Moreton Hall; William Overton, farmer, Higgins Wood; William Parker, farmer, the Wood; Thomas Peplow, farmer; Rev. Robert Upton, M.A., the Parsonage.
BETCHLEY
is a township and scattered village, pleasantly situated one mile south from Moreton Say, which in 1841 had 16 houses and 101 inhabitants. Rateable value, £684. 16s. The acres and tithes are included in the returns given of the parish. The Earl of Powis and George Corser, Esq., are the landowners. The soil is mostly a cold clay, but has been much improved by draining and by freely using bone-dust as a fertilizer.
The principal residents are Thomas Baker, farmer; Mrs. Cartwright, farmer; William Humphreys, farmer; and Samuel Sharratt, farmer, Oldfields.
LONGFORD,
a township and village, delightfully situated on elevated ground, two miles S.E. by E. from Moreton Say, in 1841 contained 53 houses and 262 inhabitants. The land produces good crops of wheat and barley, and there is some fine grazing land; the soil is chiefly strong. The Market Drayton, Shrewsbury, Whitchurch, and Newport turnpike roads intersect the township. The scenery around is beautifully varied and picturesque. Gross estimated rental, £1,537. 14s. John Tayleur, Esq., is lord of the manor and a landowner; besides whom the Rev. Thomas Henshaw Jones, Mr. Charles Warren, Mr. Samuel Hudson, Richard Corbet, Esq., John Hazledine, Esq., and others are also proprietors.
Directory.—George Harding, Esq., estate agent and steward to Richard Corbet, Esq., Tern Hill House; Joseph Harris, farmer; Samuel Harris, farmer; John Hazledine, Esq., Tern Hill; John Hill Stephenson, farmer; Samuel Hudson, farmer; Joseph Johnson, blacksmith and victualler, the Lion; Joseph Sillitoe, farmer, Tern Hill; James Wood, beerhouse-keeper.
STYCHE AND WOODLANDS,
a township and village on the northern verge of the county, bordering on Cheshire, at the census of 1841 contained 24 houses and 145 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,148. 7s. The soil is mostly a strong clay; there is some good meadow land in the township. The Earl of Powis and Lord Kilmorey are the landowners. Styche Hall is an elegant mansion of brick, with stone quoins and stuccoed, which produces a light and handsome appearance. It is situated on a gentle elevation, and being lofty and spacious, and approached by a fine portico, gives it an imposing aspect. The front of the mansion opens into a fine extent of park-like grounds. The offices and stables are behind the hall, and form a spacious quadrangle. Styche is now the seat of Henry B. Clive, Esq., M.P., for the borough of Ludlow. The celebrated Lord Clive, the founder of the present noble family of Powis, was born at Styche. He was the son of Richard Clive, Esq., and received his education first at the free-school in Drayton, and afterwards at Dr. Stirling’s school, Hempsted. He subsequently became a celebrated commander in the East India Company’s service, and contributed to the prosperity of the company in a most unexampled manner. He represented the town of Shrewsbury in parliament from 1760 to 1774, but rarely spoke in the house, though upon special occasions he displayed great powers of elocution. By his will he bequeathed £70,000 to the invalids in the Company’s service.
Directory.—Henry B. Clive, Esq., Styche Hall; Thomas Akers, farmer, Shavington Park; Samuel Beeston, farmer, Nobridge; Thomas Betterley, farmer, Shavington; Richard Caldicot, farmer. New-street Lane; Charles Gregory, farmer, Barnetts; John Horton, beerhouse-keeper; Abraham Price, farmer; Thomas Sharratt, farmer, New-street Lane.
BEARSTON
is a township and small village, pleasantly situated four miles and a half N.E. from Market Drayton, in the parish of Muckleston, which is mostly comprised within the bounds of the Pirehill Hundred, in the county of Stafford. The Church is also in Staffordshire, and situate about a mile to the north of Blore Heath. It is an ancient structure, with a lofty tower, from the top of which Queen Margaret witnessed the slaughter at the battle of Blore Heath. The townships comprised in this county are Bearston, Dorrington, Gravenhanger, and Woore. The township of Bearston contains 1,084a. 1r. 6p., of land. The soil for the most part is a strong loam, in other parts it is of a light sandy nature, particularly near the banks of the river Tern. In 1841 there were 17 houses and 101 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,196. 4s. 5d. Gross estimated rental, £1,319. 9s. 8d. The land is the property of Thomas Kinnersley, Esq., except one farm, the property of the Rev. Hugh Ker Cokburne. The river Tern here divides the county from that of Stafford, on the banks of which is the Bearston Corn Mill, occupied by Mr. Bruckshaw, whose residence is just within the bounds of this county.
Directory.—John Benbow, farmer; Thomas Bennion, farmer; George Bruckshaw, farmer, maltster, and corn miller, Bearston Mill; Robert Tilsley, farmer.
DORRINGTON,
a small village and township, in the parish of Muckleston, five miles and a quarter N.N.E. from Market Drayton, in 1831 contained 35 houses and 188 inhabitants. The township contains 965a. 0r. 35p. of land. Gross estimated rental, £1,296. 3s. 6d. Rateable value, £1,181. 2s. 1d. Sir J. W. L. Chetwode, Bart., is the principal landowner. Miss Birchall is also a proprietor. Pipegate is a hamlet, a little to the east of Dorrington. Irelands Cross, a hamlet on the turnpike road to the north of Dorrington. Here is the old Workhouse; a plain brick structure, now unoccupied. Adjoining the workhouse are four small tenements, called The Almshouses, which are stated to have been built at the expense of the parish. The inmates have no income, and they have been so long in undisturbed possession, that they now claim them as their own.
Directory.—Thomas Ball, victualler, Fox and Hounds; Sarah Benbow, farmer; Elizabeth Birchall, farmer; Mary Goodall, farmer; Henry Hopwood, farmer; Jane Latham, beerhouse-keeper; Mary Lindop, farmer; Henry Taylor, manager to Miss Birchall; Robert Timmis, farmer; Matthew and William Wildig, joiners, builders, and brick-makers, Irelands Cross.
GRAVENHANGER,
a township six miles N.N.E. from Market Drayton, contains 1,144a. 2r. 9p. of land. Gross estimated rental, £1,745. 9s. 7d. The principal landowners are William Barber, Esq., Thomas Eld, Esq., Messrs. Wilkinson, Mr. Samuel Sherrard, Miss Elizabeth Birchall, George Kendrick, Esq., Executors of the late Mr. Latham. The Hall is an ancient residence, occupied by Mr. John Beeston. Gravenhanger Moss is a tract of land of about twenty acres unenclosed.
The principal residents are John Beeston, farmer, The Hall; Ralph Bennet, farmer; Henry Buckley, beerhouse-keeper; Samuel Foxley, victualler, Crow Inn; Robert Huntback, farmer; Jane Latham, farmer; Thomas Latham, farmer; John Lea, farmer; Charlotte Morrey, farmer; James Sandbach, farmer, Brooklands; Samuel Wilkinson, farmer.
WOORE
is a chapelry and considerable village, pleasantly situated at the north-east extremity of the county, seven miles N.N.E. from Market Drayton. The village contains many good houses, a neat church, and a respectable hotel, and stands on a salubrious acclivity, which commands extensive views of the surrounding country. The township contains 1,000a. 2r. 26p. of land, and in 1841 there were 98 houses and 372 persons. Gross estimated rental, £1,810. 15s. 2d. Rateable value, £1,632. 17s. 9d. The principal landowner is George Kendrick, Esq. Mr. Smith, Mr. Richard Clough, and the Devisees of the late Mr. Latham, are also proprietors.
The Church is a neat structure, dedicated to St. Leonard, and has been built about twenty years. The cost of the fabric was £1,300. The living is a perpetual curacy, returned at £100, in the patronage of the Kendrick and Kinnersley families alternately; incumbent, Rev. John Hawksworth, M.A., who resides at the Parsonage, a neat residence a short distance from the church. The old church was taken down on the erection of the present structure, and stood near the site of the parsonage house. The National School was built by voluntary subscriptions and a grant from the national society in 1832. At the present time, forty boys and sixty girls and infants attend. The master has £15 per annum paid him, for which fifteen children are educated free; the children of cottagers pay one penny per week, and an additional charge is made for farmers’ children. The Manor House, a handsome residence embosomed in foliage, was unoccupied when our agent visited Woore. The Primitive Methodists have a small chapel here. Fairs are held on the last Thursday in April and November.
Post Office.—At John Hitchen’s. Letters arrive from Market Drayton at 9 A.M., and are despatched at 4.30 P.M.
Baddiley Gregory, grocer
Bradbury William P., farmer and victualler, Swan Hotel
Brooke George, farmer
Buckley Thomas, grocer
Burslem Thomas, tailor
Collier George, cabinet and chair maker
Clough Richard, farmer
Clough Wm., schoolmaster
Dunkley Rev. John, curate
Goodall William, farmer, Woore Hall
Hayward Mr. John
Hawksworth, Rev. John, M.A. The Parsonage
Hitchens John, Post Office
Hough David, farmer
Hulse Mr., farmer
Jackson George, blacksmith
Latham Mr. Thomas
Lander George, butcher
Lewis Abraham, tallow chandler
Lewis John, shoemaker
Lindop John, victualler, The Falcon Inn
Minor Henry Robert, farmer
Morrey Richard, cooper and victualler, Coopers’ Arms
Morrey Thomas, shopkeeper
Mullington Mary, school-mistress
Nickson William, saddler
Rowley William, tailor
Salt John, surgeon
Taylor James, farmer
Vickers Richard, farmer
Watmough Charles, surgeon
Wayte Henry, shopkeeper
NORTON IN HALES,
a parish and village situated three and a half miles N.E. by N. from Market Drayton, at the census of 1841 contained 64 houses and 312 inhabitants. In 1801 there was a population of 269 souls, and in 1831, 311. The parish contains 1,845 acres, the gross estimated rental of which is £2,732, 16s. 8d. Rateable value, £2,475 1s. 8d. The tithes are commuted for £305. P. Sillitoe, Esq., is the principal land owner, the other chief owners are William Church Norcop, Esq., Mrs. Heath, and Rev. Hugh Ker Cokburne, the latter of whom is lord of the manor. At the Domesday survey Nortone in Odenet hundred was Held by one Helgot. The Church is an ancient structure dedicated to St. Chad, consisting of nave and chancel, with a handsome square tower at the west end, embattled and ornamented with pinnacles; the chancel is of much older date than the rest of the church. There is a magnificent monument of Derbyshire alabaster, with full length figures, of Sir Rowland Cotton and his lady, in a recumbent posture; it is dated 1686; the Cottons had a seat at Etwall in Derbyshire, and Bellaport in this county. Over the tomb is an ancient helmet. There is also a neat tablet in memory of the Cotton family in the chancel. The church will accommodate about 100 hearers, and there is a gallery at the west end which holds about fifty children. The old antique font of rude construction is now disused and stands under the tower; a small new font has recently been added and placed in the chancel. The pews belonging to the rector and the lord of the manor are handsomely carved. The curfew bell tolls at eight o’clock from Michaelmas-day to Lady-day, a practice still continued in many of the rural villages of this county. The living is a rectory valued in the king’s book at £5. 9s. 4d., now returned at £330, in the patronage of W. Silver, Esq., and incumbency of the Rev. Frederick Silver, M.A., who resides at the Rectory, a good stuccoed house pleasantly situated near the north-east side of the churchyard. There are eleven acres of glebe land. The Primitive Methodists have a small chapel in the village. Bellaport House, the occasional residence of the lord of the manor, the Rev. Hugh Ker Cokburne, is delightfully situated on high grounds, and commands views of great extent and beauty. Brand Hall, a good brick mansion, the property of P. Sillitoe, Esq., was unoccupied when our agent visited Norton.
Charities.—The National School is a small structure, where about fifty children are educated. In 1751 Margaret Higginson left £50 towards founding a school at Norton; Sir Rowland Cotton gave a house of two bays and a barn for the use of the schoolmaster, and Ralph Pilsbury left £6 towards teaching one child. It is supposed that the money given by Mrs. Higginson was laid out in the purchase of land, though no deeds can be found relating thereto. The property belonging the school consists of the school, with a yard and garden, containing 1r. 9p., and an allotment of 21p. added at the inclosure. The schoolhouse with a garden containing 19p., and two closes containing 5a. 0r. 20p., producing together a yearly rental of £12. There is also a yearly sum of 4s. 9d. paid by the churchwardens as the interest of £6 left by Ralph Pilsbury, the principal having been applied to the use of the church previously to the year 1746, from which period this payment has been made. In respect of this income the master instructs seven children.
William Shore, in 1675, gave a rent charge of 26s. 8d. per annum, issuing out of a meadow in Dorrington, for the use of the poor, and afterwards in consideration of a sum of £40 conveyed the said land in trust, that all the rents and profits should be disposed of for the benefit of the poor. The said £40 having been given by various donors for the good of the poor of this parish.
Several sums of money given by the Cotton family about the year 1694, amounting in the whole to £80, were laid out in the purchase of land and premises at Wem; the property consists of a house and about six acres of land, which are let for about £15. 12s. per annum. The income derived from the above estates forms one fund, which is distributed among poor parishioners on Good Friday and Christmas-day.
Richard Grosvenor left 20s. per annum to the poor. In the churchwarden’s accounts about the year 1756, there is an entry of £30 paid by Robert Davison for the purpose of exonerating the estate which then belonged to him from the rent charge, and the amount is carried to the general account of the church rate. No payment has been made in respect of this charity from the church rate, but we conceive that interest on the purchase money ought to be paid from this account, for the benefit of the poor.
Beech William, tailor, Norton Forge
Benton Thomas, farmer, Norton Wood
Blackhurst James, blacksmith and grocer
Bloore Thomas, wheelwright
Brookshaw George, blacksmith
Butters Snow, tailor
Churton Thomas, shoemaker, Forge
Clorley Thomas, parish clerk
Cokburne Rev. Hugh Ker, Bellaport House
Duckers Thomas, vict., The Crescent and Anchor
Eardly Richard, farmer, Bellaport Lodge
Eley William, butcher
Fox Henry, bailiff to Rev. H. K. Cokburne
Green Thomas, wheelwright, Norton Forge
Jones George, farmer
Jones Richard, farmer
Keay John, farmer and shoemaker
Leighton Daniel, farmer and maltster
Mate William, farmer, Norton Wood
Matthews John, farmer, Brand Common
Minshall William, shoemaker
Morris Richard, wheelwright and beerhouse
Randles William, grocer
Ratcliff Thomas, gardener, The Hall
Rowe Isaac, painter and glazier
Silver Rev. Frederick, M.A., The Rectory
Simcock Joseph, tailor
Snow Sarah, farmer
Spragg Samuel, gamekeeper
Walley Elizabeth, farmer
Wickstead John, master of National School
PREES
is an extensive parish and considerable village, situated on a gentle acclivity, four miles north-east from Wem, and fourteen miles north-east from Shrewsbury. The parish contains the townships of Calverhall or Corra, Darliston, Fauls, Mickley, Millen Heath, Prees, Sandford, Steele, Willaston, and the chapelry of Whixall, which together contain 14,160 acres of land, of which 2,657a. 1r. 10p. are in mosses, woods, covers, and heath land. In 1801 the parish had a population of 2,653 souls; 1831, 3,355; and in 1841 there were 638 inhabited houses 24 uninhabited, and 3,270 inhabitants. Rateable value, £17,466. 2s. 8d. The rectoral tithes are commuted for £1,041. 1s., and the vicarial tithes for £636. Some part of the land is mossy, others of a peaty nature, and in some instances gravelly; there is also a portion of clay soils, of a reddish colour. The township of Prees contains 3,854a. 3r. 11p. of land, and is intersected by the Ellesmere, Whitchurch, Newport, Shrewsbury, and Market Drayton turnpike roads. Rateable value, £5,474, 8s. 8d. In 1841 here were 302 houses and 1,473 inhabitants. The land has a bold undulating surface, and commands interesting views of the surrounding country. Prees is celebrated as the birth place of the Salopian hero General Lord Hill, and has acquired importance from its contiguity to Hawkston, the magnificent seat of Viscount Hill. In the 43rd of Henry III. the Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield had a grant of a market here on a Tuesday, and of a fair on the eve, the day, and the morrow of St. Chad the Bishop, with the liberty of free warren. In the 35th of Edward I. the market was changed to Wednesday, but the markets were never of much consideration, and subsequently were discontinued. Two fairs are, however, still held, on the second Monday in April and the second Monday in October, for the sale of sheep and cattle, which are well attended by the farmers and graziers of the surrounding country. Viscount Hill is lord of the manor, and the principal landowner. Sir R. C. Hill, Bart.; George Harper, Esq.; John Dickin, Esq.; and a few others are also proprietors.
General Lord Hill, whose brilliant military services have acquired such general renown, was born at Prees, August 11, 1772. His lordship entered the army in the sixteenth year of his age, and commenced his military duty at Edinburgh. His friends being anxious for his early promotion, obtained permission for him to raise an independent company, which gave him the rank of captain in the army, in the year 1792. In the interval of his being attached to any particular corps, he accompanied Frances Drake, Esq., on a diplomatic mission to Genoa, from whence Captain Hill proceeded to Toulon, and was employed as aide-de-camp to Lord Mulgrave, General O’Hara, and Sir David Dundas, successive generals there. He was deputed by Sir David Dundas to be the bearer of the despatches to England relating to the evacuation of Toulon by the British. He was shortly after promoted to a lieutenant-colonelcy in the 90th regiment, and went through a great deal of arduous duty at Gibraltar, and had his full share in the memorable Egyptian campaign. In the action of the 13th of March Colonel Hill commanded the advanced guard, and received a wound in the right temple from a musket ball, the force of which was providentially averted by a strong brass binding in front of his helmet; the blow, however, was severe, and he was removed from the field of battle in a state of insensibility. After the return of the troops from Egypt, the 90th was ordered to proceed to Ireland, where Lord Hill continued to perform his regimental duty till he was appointed brigadier-general. Early in the summer of 1808 he joined the army in England, destined to act in the Peninsula. In the battles of Roleia and Vimiera he was fully employed, and gained the thanks and approbation of his comrades; and during the whole of Sir John Moore’s advance and retreat Lord Hill continued indefatigible in his exertions. His humanity and attention to the troops on their landing at Plymouth earned him the admiration of the inhabitants, and he was voted the freedom of the borough. About this time he became possessed of the seat and estate of Hardwick Grange, left him by his uncle, Sir Richard Hill, Bart. At the battle of Talavera Lord Hill was slightly wounded on the head, but his firmness and courage in repelling the successive attacks of the French, greatly contributed to the success of the day. The generalship and activity of Lord Hill in surprising and capturing a French corps under General Girard, in Spanish Estremadura, is deserving of commemoration. The force that Girard had with him consisted of 2,500 infantry and 600 cavalry, the whole of which were totally dispersed or captured. Among the latter were General Brune, the Prince d’Aremberg, several colonels, thirty captains and subalterns, and upwards of 1,000 soldiers, with the whole of their baggage, artillery, and commissariat. The enemy’s loss in killed was very severe, whilst from the activity and skilful manœuvres of Lord Hill, it was very trifling on the side of the British. Lieutenant-general Hill, during his detached command in Spain, was principally opposed to Soult, perhaps the most able general whom Napoleon employed in that country; and the acuteness of General Hill in foreseeing the intentions of that officer very materially contributed to the happy results of the action at Buzaco. In the memorable battle of Vittoria the centre of the allied army was commanded by the Duke of Wellington, and the right by Lord Hill. Here the enemy were completely routed, and the booty which was captured was immense. Besides the baggage horses, and other articles taken on the field, the value of the specie, plate, and jewels, was estimated at six millions of dollars. Of this sum only 100,000 dollars came to the military chest; the rest was divided by the troops on the spot. When Lord Hill occupied the valley of Bastan with an army of 3,000 men, he was attacked by a force of 14,000 men; but notwithstanding the superiority of the numbers, the enemy acquired but little advantage over these brave troops, during the seven hours they were engaged. At the conclusion of another brilliant achievement shortly after, the noble Wellington rode up to Lord Hill, and in the spirit of a great and candid mind said, “Hill, this is all your own.” The various other engagements in which Lord Hill took a prominent position, our limits will not allow us to notice. On his return to his native country, every token of honour was manifested by his grateful countrymen, and on his first visit to Shrewsbury thousands went out to meet him, and his lordship was presented with the freedom of the borough in a gold box. But the most splendid and durable token of gratitude and esteem is the column erected in Shrewsbury to his honour, which is the largest Doric column in the world. On the unexpected return of Napoleon from Elba, the allied sovereigns immediately flew to arms, on which occasion Lord Hill again obeyed the voice of his sovereign, and in the memorable battle of Waterloo, on the 18th June, 1815, his lordship gave fresh proofs of his skill, bravery, and intrepidity. In this conflict Lord Hill’s favourite charger was shot under him; and whilst he was on foot, completely exposed to the enemy, he was discovered by an officer of Lord Wellington’s staff, who procured him the horse of a French dragoon. For a full hour the officers of his lordship’s staff were in a state of the greatest consternation, and twice met under the apprehension that their beloved general had fallen. On the Duke of Wellington accepting office as prime minister, in 1828, Lord Hill was appointed commander-in-chief. The following are the titles and dignities which he bore:—Knight of the Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath, Knight of the Portuguese Order of the Tower and Sword, Knight of the Grand Cross of the Guelphic Order, Knight of the Order of Maria Theresa, Knight of the Russian Order of St. George, Knight of the Belgian Order of Wilhelm, Baron Hill of Almarez, Hawkstone, and Hardwick Grange.
The Church, a venerable fabric of red sandstone in the Norman style of architecture, consists of nave, chancel, and side aisles, and a square tower, in which are six musical bells. The body of the church is of much older date than the tower, which is of modern construction. The church is entered by a fine old porch; the interior has a solemn and imposing appearance; and the chancel contains several beautifully designed monuments of exquisite workmanship: that to the memory of Sir John Hill, with figures in basso relievo, is a most admirable specimen of modern sculpture. Major-general Clement Hill is remembered on a neat tablet erected by his friends and comrades in the Madras presidency, and by the officers of the Royal Horse Guards, in testimony of their love for his person and esteem for his character. He was born at Prees, on December 6th, 1781, and died at the Falls of Guersoppa, and was buried at Hanowar, 22nd January, 1845. There are various other memorials, and over the charity box is a curiously-carved figure of the Saviour. The churchyard is elevated, and commands a fine view of Hawkstone hills and the distant country. There are several fine old yew trees of considerable girth. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king’s book at £10; now returned at £507; in the patronage of the Bishop of Lichfield, and incumbency of the Venerable Archdeacon John Allen, M.A. The rectoral tithes of this township are commuted for £329. 15s. 9d., and the vicarial for £83. 2s. 7d. The vicarage, a good residence, has been rebuilt on the site of a former edifice, by the present incumbent; the gardens and pleasure grounds are tastefully laid out.
The Independents have a small chapel in Prees, with a burial ground attached; the Rev. Samuel Minshall is the minister. The Primitive Methodists also have a small chapel here. There is a National School and an Infant School, which are numerously attended. Prees Hall, the property and residence of Sir Robert Chambre Hill, Bart., J.P., is a commodious, pleasantly-situated, and well built mansion of brick.
Charities.—The Right Hon. Richard Hill, by will, October 17, 1726, bequeathed £300 for the poor of the parishes of Hodnet, Prees, and Wem, to be applied for the benefit of such poor as the minister and churchwardens of each parish should think fit. With respect to the legacy left to the poor of this parish, it appears to have been laid out in the purchase of land, which now produces a yearly sum of £10. 10s. Sir Rowland Hill, in 1769, bequeathed to the poor of the parishes of Hodnet and Prees the sum of £200. Sir Richard Hill, by will, 1808, bequeathed £30 to his brother, John Hill, in trust, to pay the interest to the poor of the parish of Hodnet, Prees, and Wem, in such proportions as his said brother should think fit. Several sums of money, left by various donors, amounting in the whole to £140, in the year 1812 was placed in the hands of Sir John Hill, who gave a promissory note for the same; and the interest is distributed amongst the poor. Arthur Harper, by will, 1787, directed his trustees to pay the interest of £40 to the minister, churchwardens, and overseers of the parish of Prees, to be distributed among poor housekeepers of the township of Darliston. The yearly sum of £5. 4s. is paid as a rent charge issuing out of a field in Williston, called the White Bread Field. It does not appear from whose benefaction this arises. The amount is expended in bread and given among the deserving who attend divine service. Elizabeth Barbour devised certain lands, and directed the proceeds to be expended in bread and given amongst the poorest parishioners every Sunday. The property thus devised consists of 9a. 0r. 35p., with a small cottage, which was built by the vicar on the site of an old house destroyed by lightning. It is let for £12 a year, which is applied in carrying out the donor’s intentions.
Post Office at Mr. William Langford’s.—Letters arrive from Whitchurch at 9.10 A.M. and are despatched at 5.0 P.M.
Aldersea George Ora, farmer
Allen The Rev. Archdeacon, The Vicarage
Arthur Thomas Norway, Esq.
Bather Richard, farmer
Bather Stephen, Prees Corn Mills
Bather William, farmer
Barber Emma Mary Burd, dressmaker
Bayley Mary, school teacher
Bennett Arthur, tailor
Bootroyd John, decorative painter
Boote Thomas, farmer, Heath Bank
Blantorn Miss Mary
Boyd Allen, sergeant major
Chester William, shoemaker
Churton Joseph, watch and clock maker
Clay John, blacksmith
Colley Thomas, saddler
Croxon Richard, tailor
Darlington Abraham Edward, Esq.
Davies Charles, baker and confectioner
Dickin Elizabeth, vict., The Well House
Dickin Mrs. Elizabeth
Dickin John, gentleman, Platt House
Dickin John, Prees Wood Farm
Dickin William Francis, Esq., The Hill
Dovey Richard, police officer
Drury John, corn machine maker
Drury Thomas, vict., The College Inn
Drury William, maltster
Dutton Joseph, farmer, Ferney Leys
Ebrey Robert, butcher
Eccleston William, carrier
Edwards Edward, house steward
Foulkes Richard, joiner and carpenter
Gregory Mr. John Paul
Handley John, carrier
Hares Robert, draper and druggist
Hares Samuel, gentleman
Hares Samuel, grocer and tea dealer
Hill Sir Robert Chambre, Bart., J.P., The Hall
Holding John, draper and grocer
Holding Mrs. Mary, Cruck Moor
Holding William, maltster
Hopwood Samuel, farmer
Ikin William, maltster, draper, and registrar
Jenkins Samuel, tailor and draper
Johnson Mr. William, The Fields
Kay Richard, basket maker
Longford Richard, postmaster
Lee Luke, schoolmaster
Maddocks Thomas, tailor
Minshall Rev. Samuel, Independent minister
Moore Thomas, blacksmith and farrier
Morray Thomas, shoemaker
Muller Mr. Charles, professor of music
Mumford Charles, gentleman
Paling John, butcher
Powell Joseph, farmer, Yew Tree
Powell Joseph, grocer and shopkeeper
Powell John, shoemaker, The Wood
Powell Mr. Thomas, The Villa
Powell Thomas, Manor House Farm
Powell William, bricklayer
Ray Thomas, vict., The Lion and Commercial Inn and posting house
Reaves John, shoemaker
Rightson Captain W.
Ruscoe John, Heath Gate Farm
Sandford Rev. H. R. P., curate
Shirley Captain John
Skitt Thomas, Lee Hall Farm
Spencer James, wheelwright
Stubbs Thomas, baker and confectioner
Whatmouth Miss Ann
Whitfield Mrs. Ann
Whitfield Miss Mary
Whitfield Mrs. Mary
Wilkinson Andrew, farmer, Prees
Wood Wilkinson Thomas, gentleman
Worrall Thomas, machineman & wheelwright
Vaughan Samuel, beerhouse
Academies.
Boarding School, The Hill Rev. Samuel Minshall, proprietor
National School, Luke Lee, boys; Mary Bayley, girls
Bakers & Flour Dealers.
Davies Charles, & confec.
Stubbs Thomas, & confec.
Basket & Bendware Maker.
Kay Richard
Blacksmiths.
Clay John
Moore Thomas, and farrier
Boot & Shoemakers.
Chester William
Morray Thos., & leather cutter
Powell John
Reeves John
Butchers.
Dickin John
Ebsey Robert
Paling John
Coopers.
Drury George
Drury William
Farmers.
Aldersea George Ora
Bather Richard, Lighteach Farm
Bather William
Boote Thomas
Dickin John, Prees Wood Farm
Drury Thos. College Farm
Drury William, and cooper
Dutton Joseph, Ferney Leys
Ebrey Robert
Holding Mrs. Mary, Cruck Moor
Hopwood Samuel
Johnson William
Powell Joseph
Powell Thomas
Ray Thomas
Skitt Thomas
Wilkinson Andrew
Wilkinson Thomas, The College Farm
Grocers & Tea Dealers.
Hares Messrs. Robert and Samuel
Holding John, hop & seed merchant
Ikin William
Powell Joseph
Hairdresser.
Boothroyd John
Hotels & Inns.
Dickin Elizabeth, The Well House
Ray Thomas, The Lion and Commercial Inn
Drury Thos., The College Inn
Beerhouses.
Churton Joseph
Vaughan Samuel
Steam and Horse Thrashing Machines to Let for Hire.
Drury Thomas
Carriers.
To Shrewsbury, William Eccleston & John Handley, on Saturdays.
CALVERHALL, OR CORRA,
is a chapelry and scattered village three miles north-west from Prees, which in 1841 contained 33 houses and 151 inhabitants. The township contains 1,287a. 0r. 22p. of land, mostly an undulating district. The principal landowners are John Whitehall Dod, Esq., M.P.; Viscount Hill; Lord Kilmorey; Mrs. Dale; and Thomas Hugh Sandford, Esq. Viscount Hill is lord of the manor and impropriator of the rectoral tithes, which are commuted for £86. 18s. 9d. The vicarial tithes are commuted for £26. 7s. The Chapel is a modern erection of beautiful workmanship, executed in freestone. The interior has a chaste and imposing appearance; the roof is of groined timber, and the seats are of oak; the windows are decorated with stained glass, and the altar-piece is of freestone of elaborate workmanship. A neat marble tablet remembers Elizabeth, the wife of the Rev. Edward Mainwaring, the present incumbent; another very beautifully designed, has been erected to the memory of Elizabeth, the wife of John W. Dod, Esq., M.P.; there is also a neat tablet to John Dod, Esq. The living is perpetual curacy, in the patronage of John W. Dod, Esq., and enjoyed by the Rev. Edward Mainwaring, who resides at the Parsonage, a modern brick residence, pleasantly situated and embosomed in foliage; it is beautified with pleasure grounds and shrubberies. The Almshouses consist of eight tenements, and were founded and endowed by Catherine Kerr, in 1724; the inmates are widows or aged people, who have about £4. 10s. per annum.
The Hall, the residence and property of John W. Dod, Esq., M.P., is a commodious brick mansion, stuccoed, with a front of hewn freestone, and a noble portico supported by six fluted pillars. It stands on a gentle eminence, and the views it commands are beautifully varied, picturesque, and extensive. The park grounds are richly clothed with timber, and the pleasure grounds and shrubberies are laid out with great taste. There are no remains of the ancient hall; it was surrounded by a moat, which still is filled with water, a neat bridge connecting the site on which it stood with the gardens. There is a school in the village, endowed with £20 per annum, free for all cottagers’ children. The teacher also receives £6 annually from subscriptions. Jack of Corra is a well-known liquor vessel, composed of leather, which has received the patronage of successive generations in this locality, and is interesting as a relic of the hospitality of by-gone days. It is stated that a person of the name of Corra or Kerr charged lands with the payment of £10 annually, and directed that any wayfaring traveller should call and refresh himself with the Jack filled with good malt liquor, on the payment of one penny. The bottom and the top of the vessel are encircled with a broad rim of silver, upon which is engraved, “From time immemorial: Jack of Corra is my name, don’t abuse me then for shame.” This chapelry comprises Corra, with Willaston and Millen Heath.
Post Office.—At Mr. James Jenkins’. Letters arrive by foot post from Whitchurch, at 9.30 A.M., and are despatched at 4 P.M.
Dod John Whitehall, Esq., M.P., The Hall
Dod John Whitehall, Esq., jun.
Mainwaring Rev. Edward, M.A., The Parsonage
Beeteley George, farmer
Beeteley John, farmer & vict. Jack of Corra
Court William, postman
Growcott Francis, farmer
Growcott Francis, jun., farmer
Jenkins James, schoolmaster
Newell James, gentleman
Newnes John, farmer
Mac Cload John, gardener
Morris Charles, blacksmith
Overton William, farmer
Owens Owen, farmer
Perry Robert, butcher
Reeves Josiah, farmer
Snipes Robert, coachman
DARLISTON
is a township and well-built village, five miles and a quarter N.E. from Wem, which in 1841 had 53 houses and 278 inhabitants. The township contains 714a. 3r. 23p. of land, the soil of which is a mixture of sand and loam. There are several extensive farms here, with commodious out-buildings. Viscount Hill is lord of the manor, and owner of the whole township. The rectoral tithes are commuted for £85. 15s. 3d., and the vicarial for £19. 15s. The township is intersected by the London and Chester and the Whitchurch and Drayton turnpike roads. There is a school at Lower Heath, in this township, supported by Viscount and Lady Hill. About 200 children attend for instruction, and are also partly clothed. The teacher has a fixed salary, and resides in a good residence adjoining the school. There is a noted coursing meeting held annually at the White Lion Inn.
Adams Abraham, tailor
Adams Thomas, farmer
Adams William, farmer
Dickin Joseph, farmer, and dispenser of medicine
Dickin William, farmer and butcher
Dickin John, butcher
Goffin Robert, schoolmaster
Hartley Timothy, gentleman
Machon William, blacksmith, and collector of tolls
Morris George, farmer
Powell John, shopkeeper and wheelwright
Ruscoe John, farmer, Heath-gate
Shingler Thomas, tailor
Sutton John, shoemaker
Titley Jacob, wheelwright
Watkins John, victualler, White Lion
FAULS,
a township with a scattered population, contains 886a. 0r. 34p. of land, and at the census of 1841 had 22 houses and 102 inhabitants. The soil is mostly a strong clay. Viscount Hill is lord of the manor, impropriator, and principal landowner. Mr. Thomas Ruscoe is also a proprietor. The rectoral tithes are commuted for £116. 15s., and the vicarial tithes payable to the incumbent of Prees for £25. 1s. 3d. The turnpike road to Drayton crosses this township.
Directory.—Richard Benbow, farmer; Abraham Ford, farmer, Northwood; Wm. Hares, farmer, Fauls Green; Thomas Hatton, farmer and collector of revenue taxes; William Hudson, farmer, Northwood; George Oakley, gamekeeper, The Green; Elizabeth Powell, farmer; Thomas Ruscoe, farmer and victualler, The Talbot; George Williams, brick and tile agent; Thomas Williams, brick and tile agent.
MICKLEY,
a small township in the parish of Prees, in 1841 had four houses and a population of 36 souls. The township contains 575a. 2r. 36p. of land, chiefly the property of Viscount Hill. Rateable value, £744. 7s. The tithes were commuted in 1841, when £72. 9s. were apportioned to Viscount Hill, and £16. 0s. 4d. to the Vicar of Prees. The farmers are Martha Churton, Richard Edgerley, George Robinson, and Thomas Ash Wilkinson.
MILLEN HEATH,
a township with only one house and ten residents, contains 359a. 3r. 17p. of land, which is the property of Lord Kilmorey. Rateable value, £268. 10s. The tithes have been commuted, and £33. 3s. 2d. apportioned to Viscount Hill, and £9. 6s. 3d. to the Vicar of Prees. Mr. Thomas Hares is the resident farmer.
SANDFORD,
a township with a scattered population, five miles and a half N.E. from Wem, contains 1,213a. 3r. 21p. of land. The soil is a mixture of sand and loam, with a portion of clay. The land is chiefly used for grazing purposes; and there is a considerable extent covered with woods and plantations. The tithes were commuted in 1841, when £151. 13s. 1d. was apportioned to Viscount Hill, and £36. 5s. to the Vicar of Prees. At the census of 1841 there were nine houses and 76 inhabitants. The rateable value of this township, with that of Darliston and Fauls, is £4,354. 3s. Thomas Hugh Sandford, Esq., is the principal landowner. Mr. Thomas Ebrey is also a proprietor.
Directory.—Sarah Bather, farmer; John Fox, farmer; Robert Garmstone, wheelwright and victualler, The Mill House; Ann Hales, farmer; Mary Humphreys, farmer; William Rogers, blacksmith; Thomas Steventon, farmer and corn miller; Joseph Woolrich, farmer, Morton Wood; Stephen Worthen, farmer.
STEELE,
a township in the parish of Prees, at the census of 1841 had 12 houses and a population of 65 souls. The township contains 436a. 3r. 36p. of land. Viscount Hill is the impropriator and the principal landowner. The rectoral tithes are commuted for £54. 12s. 6d., and the vicarial for £13. 14s. 6d. The principal residents in Steele are John Bradshaw, shopkeeper, The Heath; John Heatley, glazier; Ann Hodgskin, farmer; Thomas Hodgskin, farmer; Daniel Holding, tailor; Richard Holding, farmer; Joseph Hussey, farmer.
WHIXALL
is a township, chapelry, and populous village, in the parish of Prees, four miles N. from Wem, which at the census in 1841 contained 211 houses and 978 inhabitants. The township comprises 3,361a. 1r. 32p. of land. Interspersed with gentle undulations, there is some good meadow and pasture land, which produces a fine herbage, and cheese is made to a considerable extent. The houses are chiefly cottage residences, with a small portion of land to each, and the residents are in many instances freeholders. The houses are built of brick, and slated, and have a comfortable appearance. The inhabitants are chiefly employed in cutting the moss, which they dry, and then take it to distant parts of the country for sale. The moss, usually called Whixall Moss, covers a surface of upwards of 5,000 acres, and extends into the several townships of Northwood, Whixall, Bettisfield, and Fenswood. It is cut to a depth of from sixteen to thirty feet, and in some instances to a greater depth. The moss is mostly submerged in water. A company of gentlemen have recently taken a lease for a term of years of a considerable tract of the moss, and are about to erect works for converting this hitherto comparatively useless commodity into articles of appliance for useful purposes. It is said to be superior to the Irish moss for some particular uses. Sir John Hanmer is the owner of about two-thirds of the moss; the other principal landowners are Lord Kenyon, W. P. Poole, Esq., James Foster, Esq., John C. Coham, Esq., John Bowen, Esq., Mr. George Hutchinson, Mr. John Phillips, Mr. John Keay, William F. Dickin, Esq., Mr. William Furber, Rev. John Evans, Mrs. Weaver, Mr. William Cartwright, Mr. Thomas Clay, John Taylor, Esq., Robert Salmon, Esq., Mr. Thomas Jones, Mrs. Hazledine, Mr. Thomas Salt, A. Duff, Esq., Mr. Benjamin Sandbrook, Mr. Jarvis, Rev. R. Young, Mrs. Cooper, Joshua Lee, Esq., Mr. James Rodenhurst, Mr. Thomas Sadler, Mr. William Whitfield, Mr. John Whitfield; besides whom there are many smaller proprietors.
The Church is a plain unpresuming edifice of brick, erected in the form of a cross, and has the date of 1640 upon it. It was enlarged and beautified in 1826, when 155 free sittings were added. The living is a perpetual curacy, valued at £107, subordinate to the vicarage of Prees, and enjoyed by the Rev. John Evans, M.A., whose income arises from certain lands, £5 yearly from the Lord of the Manor, and £4 per annum from the Vicar of Prees. The Parsonage is a pleasantly situated residence near the church. The National School, a commodious structure, with a residence for the teacher, was built during the years 1848 and 1849. The cost of the structure was £655. 13s. 6d., of which the Committee of Council on Education gave £100, and £50 towards the master’s residence; the National Society £50; the Diocesan Society £40, and £10 for fittings; and the sum of £405. 18s. 6d. was raised by subscriptions and donations, of which £276. 18s. 6d. was given by the Incumbent of Whixall. About 100 children attend the school. The Independents have a neat chapel here, which is numerously attended. The Primitive Methodists have also a small chapel here. The Llanymynech, Ellesmere, Whitchurch, and Quina Brook canals intersect the township. Whixall Hall and Bostock Hall are two ancient residences, now occupied as farm houses. James Foster, Esq., is lord of the manor, and holds a court leet and baron. The poor have a yearly sum of 5s., the gift of Mr. Minshull, which is paid out of land in the parish of Wem.
Brookes Thomas, blacksmith
Butler Richard, shoemaker
Callcott Samuel, farmer
Cureton William, shopkeeper
Dawson Thomas, farmer
Eales James, schoolmaster
Evans Rev. John, M.A., incumbent of Whixall, and domestic chaplain to Viscount Combermere, The Parsonage
Forrester Arthur, farmer
Furber Widow, farmer
Furber William, Well Farm
Green James, tailor
Green Joseph, shopkeeper
Hales Walter, The Hall Farm
Hall Richard, beerhouse
Hall William, shopkeeper
Heath Elizabeth, farmer
Heath John, joiner and upholsterer
Hinton Henry, farmer
Hinton John, farmer and butcher
Hughes George, blacksmith
Hunley John, farmer
Jarvis Widow, farmer
Jarvis William, farmer and beerhouse
Jones Richard, Bostock Hall Farm
Jones Samuel, farmer
Jones William, farmer
Keay John, vict., Chapel House, cattle dealer and farmer
Newbrook Richard, shopkeeper & shoemaker
Newbrook Samuel, farmer
Newbrook Thomas, farmer
Newbrook Thomas, shopkeeper
Newbrook William, wheelwright
Parsons William, farmer
Pitt William, shopkeeper and farmer
Poole William Price, maltster and farmer
Powell Samuel, farmer
Powell Thomas, shopkeeper, Waterloo
Powell Thomas, farmer
Powell Widow, shopkeeper
Powell William, farmer
Preston Ellis, farmer
Reeves William, blacksmith
Roberts John, brick and tile manufacturer
Rodenherst Mr. James
Shaw Edward, shoemaker
Shingler Thomas, farmer and corn miller
Sparkes John, farmer
Vardy James, Esq.
Vardy and Co., The Betisfield Moss Works
Walters Sarah, Manor House Farm
Weever William, tailor
Whitfield Frederick, farmer
Williams Henry, farmer
Williams William, farmer
Woolham Thomas, jailor
William Price Poole, coal, lime, slate, and brick dealer, Whixall Wharf
WILLASTON,
a small township in the parish of Prees, contains 767 acres of land, and in 1841 had 18 houses and 101 inhabitants. The soil in some parts is clayey, and in other places it is a mixture of sand and loam. Viscount Hill and John Whitehall Dod, Esq., are the landowners, the former is also the impropriator, and receives the large tithes, which are commuted for £109. 18s. 6d. The vicarial tithes are commuted for £21. 8s. 4d.
The principal residents are John Hussey, farmer, Cloverley; Robert Wilkinson, farmer, The Lawn; James Simons, farmer, and James Simon, jun., farmer.
SHAWBURY
is an extensive parish comprehending the townships of Acton Reynold, Besford, Edgebolton, Muckleton, Shawbury, Wytheford Magna, and Wytheford Parva, which together have an area of 7,222 acres of land, of which 600 acres are in woods and plantations. Rateable value, £8,486. 1s. Rent charge, £838. This parish, although chiefly in the North Bradford hundred, extends into the Shrewsbury liberty, and the hundred of Pimhill. In 1801 the parish had a population of 948 souls; 1831, 915, and in 1841 there were 212 inhabited houses and 1062 inhabitants. The soil, to a considerable extent, is a mixture of loam and sand, in other places a strong soil mixed with gravel prevails. The land has generally an undulating surface, and on the northern verge there are considerable eminences, in which is found a red grit stone. Shawbury is a delightfully situated village, containing some good residences on the Shrewsbury, Market Drayton, Wem, and Whitchurch turnpike roads, six miles S.S. by E. from Wem, and seven miles N.E. by N. from Shrewsbury. In the centre of the village there is a commodious hotel and family boarding house occupied by Mr. Welling, which is much frequented during the summer months by respectable families. The township contains 1,605a. 0r. 37p. of land, and in 1841 there were 55 houses and 279 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,854. 16s. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., is lord of the manor and principal land owner; Rev. W. S. Marvin and Mr. Samuel Winnall are also owners.
The Church, dedicated to St. Mary, is an ancient structure exhibiting some beautiful workmanship, and consists of nave, chancel, and side aisles, with a lofty square tower ornamented with twelve pinnacles; the tower contains six bells, has a clock and sun dial; in the chancel are two windows beautifully ornamented with stained glass; the altar piece and reading desk are of oak, elaborately carved, and there is an ancient font. There is a beautiful tablet of marble in memory of Philip Charlton, who died in 1845, and another commemorative of John Minor, Esq., and his wife, with the date of 1836. The living is a vicarage valued in the king’s book at £7. 1s. 5½d. in the patronage of Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., and incumbency of the Rev. William S. Marvin, M.A.; curate, Rev. William Howell, M.A.; clerk, William Wright. The vicarial tithes are commuted for £397. 12s. and of the rectorial £247. 18s. was apportioned to Sir Andrew V. Corbet, Bart., £181. 10s. to Mr. Charlton, and £11 to Captain Horner. The vicarage is a pleasantly situated residence a little north from the church. There is a free school in the village which has an attendance of about thirty children. Shawbury heath contains 270a. 2r. 7p. of land, and Shawbury woods contain an area of 159a. 2r. 32p. Charlton Grange is situated in this township, and contains 433a. 3r. 27p.
Charities.—Elizabeth Corbet, by will, October 29th, 1702, bequeathed the sum of £200, and directed the amount to be laid out in land, and the yearly proceeds to be applied in feeding or clothing the poor, or in apprentice fees, as the vicar for the time being and her heirs should think fit. The amount was laid out as directed by the donor, and now produces a yearly rental of £45 which is divided into three equal parts, one portion applied in clothing the children of the national school, another in apprentice fees, and the remainder in a weekly distribution of bread.
Robert Wood gave £20, the interest to be distributed among the poor on St. Thomas’s day. Andrew Peplow gave £16 towards clothing the poor. Richard Wood £40, and Andrew Syth £10, for the benefit of the poor. Ralph Collins gave £80 towards the maintenance of a schoolmaster in Shawbury, and if there should be no schoolmaster then to the poor of the parish during each vacancy. Dame Rachael Corbet left £10, Sarah Venables £20, and an unknown donor £17 for the benefit of the poor. These several sums amounting to £213, are in the hands of Sir Andrew V. Corbet, bart., secured by two bonds. Of the interest amounting to £9. 6s. 6d., at four per cent, 14s. is paid annually in purchasing a coat for one poor man, £4 in respect of Collins’ charity to a schoolmaster, and the remainder is distributed on St. Thomas’s day amongst the poor, with some voluntary donations, in sums varying from 1s. to 3s. 6d.
John Minor gave £20, the interest to be distributed on St. Andrew’s day. This sum, together with £26. 5s. given by Sir Andrew Corbet, is in the hands of the Rev. W. S. Marvin, and £20 collected many years ago towards building a school house, making together £66. 5s., for which he gave a promissory note to the churchwardens, bearing date 2nd February, 1830, with interest at four and a half per cent. Of the interest, £1 is given away as Minor’s charity, 18s. are added to the subscriptions collected for the school, and the remainder is distributed on Candlemas day among the poor of the parish.
Mrs. Charlotte Corbet left £100, the interest to be given among the most indigent inhabitants of this parish yearly, as the minister and churchwardens should think fit. This sum is in the hands of Mr. John Kilvert, who pays £4 as the interest thereof.
Thomas Downes left £5, the interest to be given in bread to the old labourers at Shawbury Park, yearly, on St. Thomas’s day. This sum was in the hands of Mr. John Harris, who paid 5s. as interest, when the charity commissioners published their report.
Post Office.—At Mr. William Wright’s. Letters arrive at 9 A.M., and are despatched at 5 P.M.
Armson Charles, cattle salesman
Bayley Mary, straw bonnet maker
Bayley Samuel, butcher
Bayley William, beerhouse keeper
Cartwright Samuel, saddler and harness maker
Clowes Job, cooper and shopkeeper
Davies John, cashier and clerk to William Wyley, Esq.
Deakin Peter, baker
Dickin John, farmer, the Grove
Downes Thomas, tailor
Drury Joseph, farmer and brickmaker
Drury and Rayner, surgeons
Drury Thomas, Esq., Roden villa
Friend James, shoemaker
Hewes Ann, laundress
Hollis Benjamin, farmer, the Heath
Hopwood Peter, farmer
Howell Rev. Alfred, curate
Mainwaring Richard, bricklayer
Marvin Rev. William S., Vicarage
Oswell Thomas, farmer
Owen Edward, blacksmith
Owen Thomas, whitesmith
Pascall William, farmer, the Heath
Pickford Thomas, farmer
Pickford William, farmer, the Park
Powell John, farmer
Plummer John, mole catcher
Rayner Alfred Philip, Esq., the Castle
Southerton Edward, farmer, the Heath
Trevor Samuel, carrier to Shrewsbury
Webb John, coachman
Wellings Joseph, farmer, maltster, and vict., Elephant and Castle Hotel, and posting house
West Thomas, seedsman and green grocer
Wildblood George, gentleman, the Cottage
Williams William, shopkeeper
Winnall Samuel, farmer, Heath Grove
Woodvine James, farmer, the Heath
Wright Robert, wood ranger
Wright William, post master
ACTON REYNALD,
a pleasantly situated township, contains 1,448 acres of land, of which 381a. 3r. 21p. are in park grounds and plantations. In 1841 there were 37 houses and 159 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,854. 16s. Acton Reynald Hall, the seat of Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., is a stately pile of building in the Elizabethan style of architecture, erected of white freestone, got from quarries on the estate. The mansion exhibits the characteristic style of the period in which it was erected, and has from time to time had improvements and additions made to it, up to the year 1848. The drawing room and other apartments are magnificently furnished. It stands on a gentle eminence, and commands a most delightful view over a luxuriant and richly wooded country; the pleasure grounds are extensive, and laid out with great taste; the choicest shrubs and the most beautiful flowers are scattered in the greatest profusion, and planted in designs most admirably executed. The conservatories and greenhouses are extensive, and kept in the most beautiful order. These gardens are highly creditable to the taste and superior management of Mr. Francis Bell, the gardener. The Corbets have been seated in this county from the time of the conquest, when Roger Corbet held large possessions under the Earl of Shrewsbury, “comprising the manors of Huelbeck, Hundeslet, Actun, Terneley, and Preston. Robert, his brother, held of the same the earl manors of Ulestan, Ratlinghope, Branton, Udecote, Langedunin, Weymore, Rorenton, Middleton, and Meredon. Sir Vincent Corbet was created baronet in 1641. His widow, Sarah, daughter of Sir Robert Monson, was created Viscountess Corbet and Linchlade in 1679. Moreton Corbet afterwards became the property of Richard Corbet, Esq., of Shawbury Park, whose descendant, Sir Andrew Corbet, was created baronet 24th September, 1808.” Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., is the principal landowner: Viscount Hill, and William Embrey Wood, Esq., are also proprietors.
Corbet Sir Richard Vincent, Bart., Acton Reynald
Corbet Vincent Rowland, Esq.
Acton James, house steward
Bell Francis, head gardener and bailiff
Blantern Robert Hardwick
Evans Thomas, coachman
Fowler John, farmer, Acton Reynald farm
Gough John, gardener
Lee Francis, farmer, New House
Lee William, farmer, Painsbrook
Minton Samuel, farmer, Woodstyle
Ratcliffe Joseph, game and park keeper
Wildblood George, steward
BESFORD,
a small township situated two miles north-west from Shawbury, contains 707a. 2r. 19p. of land, the soil of which is highly fertile, and produces good barley and wheat. In 1841 this township is returned as containing 35 houses and 167 inhabitants. It extends into the parish of Moreton Corbet, in the hundred of Pimhill. Rateable value, £1,263. 9s. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet is lord of the manor, and owner of the whole township.
The principal residents are Joseph Taylor Reynolds Ogle, Esq.; John Powell, farmer; and William Powell, farmer.
EDGEBOLTON
is a small village pleasantly situated six miles south-east from Wem. The township contains 617a. 3r. 33p. of land, mostly an undulating district, diversified with picturesque scenery. Rateable value, £710. 14s. At the census in 1841 there were 37 houses and 199 inhabitants. The farms here are much smaller than in the neighbouring townships. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., St. J. C. Charlton, Mrs. Bayley, Mr. Harris, and Mr. Thomas Onslow, are the chief landowners.
The resident farmers are Samuel Alltree, William Astley, George Cartwright, John Dickin, George Done, Charles Green, John Henshaw, Thomas Onslow (and licensed victualler), Thomas Richmond, William Shuker, William Spencer, and William Tudor; John Buttery, blacksmith; John Onslow, Pool Cottage; and Thomas Ward, maltster.
MUCKLETON,
a village and township in the parish of Shawbury, seven miles south-east from Wem, contains 1,033a. 3r. 14p. of land. In 1841 there were 20 houses, and a population of 113 souls. Rateable value, £955. 1s. St. J. C. Charlton, Esq., is the landowner.
The principal residents are Richard Higginson, farmer, the Moss; Henry Lawley, farmer, the Moss; Thomas Phillips, farmer, the Moss; Richard Powell, farmer, the Hall; Richard Powell, farmer, Pool House; Thomas Pritchard, boot and shoemaker; Thomas Wellings, the Farm; and John Wright, farmer.
WYTHEFORD MAGNA
is a township and village pleasantly situated on the turnpike road from Shawbury to Wellington, seven miles north-east from Wem. The township contains 955a. 1r. 7p. of land, the soil of which is a mixture of sand and loam, or red earth. There are woods and plantations, which cover 207a. 1r. 27p. of land. In 1841 there were 18 houses and 101 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,114. 10s. Wytheford House is an ancient brick structure of considerable antiquity, now in the occupancy of Mr. William Taylor, as a farm residence. St. J. C. Charlton, Esq., and Miss Cooke, are the principal landowners.
Directory.—William Bayley, farmer and maltster; Robert Davies, farmer; Robert Hampton, farmer; Thomas Humphreys, farmer; John Stockton, farmer; and William Taylor, farmer, the Hall.
WYTHEFORD PARVA,
a small township two and a quarter miles N.E. by N. from Shawbury, contains 334 acres of land, and in 1841 had 10 houses and 44 inhabitants. Rateable value, £354. 18s. The landowners are Captain Horner, St. J. C. Charlton, Esq., and Miss Steedman.
The principal residents are Samuel Davies, wheelwright; William Davies, farmer; David Ferrington, farmer; John Jones, farmer; Peter Light, farmer; Richard Owen, farmer; Joseph Powell, farmer; and Eleanor Wainwright, farmer.
STOKE-UPON-TERN
is a parish which comprehends the townships of Stoke-upon-Tern, Eaton, Ollerton, and Wistanswick, and contains 5,602a. 2r. 26p. of land, of which 328a. 3r. 12p. are in woods and plantations, and 74a. 2r. 3p. in roads and waste. At the census in 1801 there were 626 inhabitants; 1831, 1,031; and in 1841, 1,000. Rateable value, £6,703. 4s. The village of Stoke-upon-Tern is pleasantly situated five miles S.S. by W. from Market Drayton. In 1841 the township contained 106 houses and 528 inhabitants. A. C. Heber Percy, Esq., and Richard Corbet, Esq., are the most considerable landowners in this township; Mr. William Taylor, Mr. William Meakin, Mr. Richard Whitfield, Mr. Thomas Goodall, Mr. John Heatley, Mr. Thomas Heatley, Mr. William Palmer, Sir R. Leicester, Rev. Thomas H. Jones, William Barber, Esq., John Tayleur, Esq., are also landowners. Rateable value of the township, £4,429. 7s. 6d. Stoke-upon-Terne was anciently the manor and estate of the Verdon family, and was in after times carried by marriage to the Ferrers. The village takes its name from its situation on the river Tern. The Church is an ancient structure, dedicated to St. Peter, consisting of nave, south aisle, side chapel, and chancel, with a castellated tower, ornamented with grotesque figures, and containing five bells. The side aisle is separated by pointed arches rising from octagonal pillars. At the east end of the side aisle is the Corbet chapel, built in 1782. It contains a magnificent altar tomb of alabaster, elaborately ornamented with two full length figures in the costume of the times of Sir Reginald Corbet and his lady, lying in a recumbent posture. On the sides of the tomb are figures of eleven children, six sons and five daughters, with the date when each child was born; but several of the figures have been mutilated. The children were all born between the years 1549 and 1564. Sir Reginald Corbet was a judge of the Common Pleas in the time of Queen Elizabeth. A beautiful marble tablet, very chastely designed, has been erected against the north wall, in memory of the Cotton family. The living is a rectory, valued in the king’s book at £20; incumbent, Rev. John Gladstone, who resides at the Rectory, a good residence, a little east by north from the church, rebuilt in 1844 upon the site of the old rectory. The tithes have been commuted for the sum of £949. 10s. A short distance west by south from the church, near the banks of the Tern, is an antique house, composed of timber and plaster, called Petsey; in one of the windows is the date 1511. The Grange, an extensive farm of between 600 and 700 acres, is the property of Richard Corbet, Esq., and residence of Mrs. Charlotte Lea. The Tern takes its course a little south from the church, and at the distance of about a quarter of a mile turns a corn mill.
Charities.—Andrew Turner left £20, the yearly interest to be expended in bread, and distributed to the poor of the parish the first Sunday in every month, after Christmas day, Easter day, and Whit-Sunday. James Talbot directed twelve penny loaves to be distributed on the same day as Turner’s charity. In respect of this gift there is 15s. per annum paid out of an estate in Stoke, called The Mount. There is also paid the yearly sum of 10s., from an estate called Stoke Park, which is also distributed in bread. The parish officers are in possession of a parcel of ground, containing between two and three acres, on which a workhouse has been built, and also of about half an acre of ground, with six small tenements, and gardens attached to each. It is not known how the parish became possessed of these premises; but it is supposed that they may have been purchased with the benefactions of Thomas Burrowes, William Burrowes, and Henry Bunbury, each of whom formerly gave £50 to the poor.
EATON
is a small township, two miles and a quarter S. from Stoke-upon-Tern, which in 1841 contained 28 houses and 127 inhabitants. Rateable value, £916. 16s. The principal landowners are Mr. Robert Heatley, Mr. John Heatley, Mr. Richard Heatley, and Mr. John Topham.
OLLERTON,
a small township in Stoke-upon-Tern parish, one mile and a half S.E. from the church, in 1841 had 31 houses and a population of 135 souls. Rateable value, £735. 13s. The landowners are Viscount Hill, Mrs. Whitfield, Mr. Palmer, Mr. Pointon, and Mr. Freeman. There is a small Independent Chapel here, erected in 1838. The congregation is under the pastoral care of the Rev. John Parker.
WISTANSWICK,
a township and small village, two miles N.E. from Stoke, and four miles S.W. from Market Drayton, had in 1841, 46 houses and 200 inhabitants. Rateable value, £621. 7s. The principal landowners are William Taylor, Esq., Mr. Thomas Goodall, Mr. W. Adams, Mr. William Corfield, and Mr. Robert Dawes; there are also a few smaller proprietors. The Independents have a small chapel here, of which the Rev. D. Dawes is the pastor.
Stoke-upon-Tern, Eaton, Ollerton, and Wistanswick Directories.
Adams Thomas, farmer, Petsey Stoke
Benbow William, farmer, Ollerton
Blainey James, tailor, Ollerton
Dawes Robert, farmer, Wistanswick
Davies Robert, shoemaker, Stoke
Dutton James, shoemaker, Stoke
Evenson John, butcher, Wistanwick
Gladstone Rev. John, The Rectory, Stoke
Goodall John, farmer, Wistanswick
Goodall Thomas, farmer, Wistanswick
Goodall William, farmer, Wistanswick
Gosnell Edward, farmer, Wistanswick
Gosnell Thomas, farmer, Wistanswick
Green Francis, saddler and harness maker, Ollerton
Griffiths Joseph, shoemaker, Ollerton
Harding George, farmer, Stoke
Hardy Daniel, wheelwright, Ollerton
Heatley John, farmer, maltster, and corn miller, Eaton
Heatley Robert, farmer, Eaton
Heatley Richard, farmer, Eaton
Jenkins Samuel, farmer, Stoke
Juckes Henry, farmer, Stoke
Keay George, blacksmith, Ollerton
Latham Thomas, blacksmith, Stoke
Lea Charlotte, farmer, The Grange, Stoke
Lea William, farmer, Stoke
Lester Robert, farmer, Ollerton
Massey James, wheelwright, Stoke
Massey John, farmer, Ollerton
Meakin George, farmer, The Bendles, Stoke
Meakin William, farmer, Woodhouse, Stoke
Mullock William, farmer, Stoke
Palmer William, farmer, Ollerton
Parker Rev. John, Independent, Ollerton
Pears William, shoemaker and shopkeeper, Wistanswick
Phillips Thomas, farmer, Wistanswick
Pitchford Joseph, weaver, Wistanswick
Powell Edward, farmer, Stoke
Powell John, farmer, Stoke
Powell Thomas, corn miller, Stoke
Preston George, farmer, Ollerton
Preston William, farmer, Stoke
Rodgers Elizabeth, shopkeeper, Eaton
Shaw Stephen, beerhouse-keeper, Wistanswick
Simon John, farmer, Stoke
Talbot Richard, tailor, Wistanswick
Taylor William, farmer, Heathcote, Stoke
Topham John, farmer, Eaton
Walley Samuel, farmer, Stoke
Whitfield Richard, farmer, The Manor, Stoke
Williams Ann, shopkeeper, Ollerton
STANTON-UPON-HINE HEATH
is a considerable parish, which comprehends the townships of Booley, Harcourt, High Hatton, Moston, and Stanton-upon-Hine Heath, and comprises 5,490 acres of land, of which 263a. 2r. 3p. are in woods and plantations, and 35 acres in roads and waste. The soil for the most part is a mixture of sand and loam, in some parts highly fertile. The northern verge of the parish presents a bold undulating surface, and in some instances the hills rise to a considerable elevation, from which a fine view of the country is seen. The farm houses are in general well built, and provided with commodious out-premises. In 1801 the parish contained 579 inhabitants; 1831, 722; and in 1841 there were 127 houses and 669 inhabitants. The tithes are commuted for £258. 15s. The village of Stanton is pleasantly situated nine and a half miles N.E. by N. from Shrewsbury, and at the census of 1841 had 50 houses and 264 inhabitants. The township contains 1,698a. 3r. 28p. of land, of which 120a. 0r. 32p. are in plantations. Rateable value, £1,655. 2s. When the tithes were commuted for this township, £73 were apportioned to the vicar, £27. 15s. to Sir Andrew V. Corbet, Bart., and £8. to Rowland Hill. The Church, dedicated to St. Andrew, is an ancient Norman structure, with a square embattled tower at the west end, of later date, containing five bells; the pews are of oak, and have a very primitive appearance. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king’s book at £5. 10s. l0d.; now returned at £205.; in the patronage of Viscount Hill, and enjoyed by the Rev. D. Holloway, B.A., who resides at the vicarage, a plain brick structure, near the outskirts of the village. The Woodlands, a delightfully situated mansion, surrounded with pleasure gardens and park-like grounds, is the residence of Mrs. F. Wood. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., is lord of the manor, and the principal landowner. Viscount Hill, John F. Wood, Esq., and the Rev. D. Holloway, are also proprietors. Stanton was the birth place of John Boydell, Esq., the liberal and spirited patron of talented engravers. His father was a farmer, and his son was intended for a land surveyor; when, however, about twenty years of age, he was put apprentice to an engraver, in which art he soon excelled, and from the profits derived from the sale of a book of 152 prints, engraved by himself, he began to encourage the best English engravers, and presented the public with a series of engravings of the works of the best masters, which soon laid the foundation of an ample fortune. He was elected an alderman in 1782, sheriff in 1785, lord mayor of London in 1790, and in the same year master of the Stationers’ Company. He was the greatest encourager of the art that this country ever had, and the English engravings, which before were considered much inferior to those of foreign nations, began from that time to be highly prized; and the exportation of them became a valuable branch of commerce. He also was a great encourager of the art of painting, and to this effect he undertook the superb edition of the Shakspeare gallery, the expense of which was enormous, and more perhaps than any individual had ever before embarked for such an object. Mr. Boydell, in a letter to Sir John Anderson, says, “I have laid out, with my brethren, in promoting the commerce of the fine arts, £350,000.” To the charitable and benevolent institutions he was a generous benefactor, and an attentive guardian. He died December 12th, 1804, and his remains were interred in great funeral state, in the church of St. Olave, Jewry.
Charities.—Stanton School was endowed with £5 per annum by Mrs. Baddiley, in 1721, who also left £40 towards the erection of the school house. The site was given by Sir Rowland Hill, and nine other persons subscribed towards the building of the school the sum of £14. 11s. 6d. About twenty children now attend. The £5 per annum is paid out of lands called Chealey Meadows and Chealey Wood, in Cheshire. Mrs. Baddiley left £2. 12s. per annum for a distribution of bread to the poor. The amount is paid out of the same land, and twelve penny loaves are given in the church every Sunday.
Richard Colley, in 1717, left £50; Joseph Smith left the interest of £20; Richard Smith, clerk of the parish, £2. 2s.; and Sir Andrew Corbet, in 1817, gave 25 guineas. These several sums, amounting to £98. 7s., together with £1. 13s. advanced from the poor rates, were placed in the hands of Sir Rowland Hill, who gave a promissory note for the amount to the churchwardens and overseers. Of the interest, £2 is laid out in bread, which is distributed every Sunday, in respect of Colley’s charity, 9s. is laid out on Christmas day, and the same sum on Good Friday, as the gifts of Richard and Joseph Smith. The remainder is given away in small sums on St. Andrew’s day.
Thomas Harper, in 1828, gave £150, upon trust, and directed the interest of £50 to be distributed among poor widows on St. Thomas’s day; the interest of £50 among poor men; and the profits of the remaining £50 to be paid to the master or mistress of the Sunday school at Stanton. This sum was placed in the hands of Sir John Hill, and secured by bond, bearing date September 29th, 1813. The interest is divided into three shares, and distributed according to the donor’s intentions.
Alford William, shoemaker
Astley William, farmer, Sowhatch
Besford Thomas, farmer, the Heath
Buttery William, farmer, the Heath
Faulkes William, farmer, the Heath
Ferrington James, shoemaker
Gollins William, shopkeeper, the Heath
Griffiths Thomas, farmer, the Heath
Hamer James, farmer, the Hazles
Hanmer Samuel, accountant
Hilditch John, farmer
Hollins John, vict., Lord Hill’s Arms
Holloway Rev. Dr. Jas. Thos., B.A., Vicarage
Jackson James, farmer, the Heath
Jeffries Jonas, farmer and corn miller, the Wood Mill
Jeffries William, corn miller, Stanton Mill
Lewis John, farmer, the Lodge
Massey Charles, farmer
Podmore Edward, Greenfields farm
Powell Samuel, farmer
Powell William, farmer, the Heath
Taylor John, blacksmith
Taylor Charles, shopkeeper, the Heath
Taylor John, shoemaker and shopkeeper
Thomason Richard, farmer
Tudor John, shoemaker, the Heath
Wood Mrs., Woodlands
Wood Thomas F., land and estate agent and valuer
BOOLEY, OR BOWLEY,
a township two and a quarter miles N.E. by N. from Stanton, contains, conjointly with High Hatton and Greenfields, 2,978a. 3r. 11p. of land: the soil is a mixture of sand and loam. The land in this locality has generally a bold and irregular surface; the scenery is beautifully diversified. The rateable value of Booley is £2,247, 9s. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart., is the principal landowner, who, with St. John C. Charlton, Esq., are the impropriators of the large tithes, which are commuted for £20 for the above townships; the vicarial tithes are commuted for £78. 10s. Mr. George Dale is also a freeholder.
The principal residents are Mrs. Ann Betton; Thomas Betton, farmer; James Cadman, farmer; John Hendley, farmer; Thomas Lewis, quarry master; William Phillips, farmer; Benjamin Powell, farmer.
HARCOURT
is a small township with a few houses, picturesquely situated one and a half mile north from Stanton. The township contains 234a. 3r. 34p. of land, the owners of which are John Faulkner Wood, Esq.; Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart; and Mrs. Wood. Rateable value, £373. 16s. The rectoral tithes have been commuted for £55. 10s., of which £48 are paid to the impropriators, John F. Wood, Esq., and Sir A. V. Corbet, Bart. The vicar of Stanton receives £7. 10s. Harcourt Park House is a good building of stone.
The principal residents here are William Dale, farmer; The Park farm; and John Powell, The Mill.
HIGH HATTON,
a township and pleasant village, situated two and a half miles east from Stanton-upon-Hine Heath, in 1841 contained 34 houses and 201 inhabitants. The area of this township, conjointly with Booley, is 2,837a. 1r. 4p. The land is generally fertile, and there is some strong soil; in other places there is a mixture of sand and loam. Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet is lord of the manor and the principal landowner. The rent charge of this township is included in the return for Booley. Rateable value, £2,095, 1s. St. John Charlton, Esq., is the landowner.
Directory.—William Betteney, farmer; John Espley, blacksmith; John Gollins, farmer, Greenhurst; Ann Heatley, farmer; William Heatley, farmer, the Hall; William Stephen Hoole, farmer, the Wood; Ibbs Margery, farmer; Richard Rodenhurst, farmer, the Heath; Charles Taylor, farmer and shopkeeper.
MOSTON
township is situated two miles north from Stanton, and contains 639a. 0r. 23p. of land, which is the property of Viscount Hill, who is also lord of the manor. The tithes have been commuted for the sum of £16. At the census of 1841 there were 11 houses and 61 inhabitants. Rateable value £960.
The principal residents in Moston are Robert Cartwright, beerhouse keeper; Thomas Chidley, farmer; George Dale, farmer and maltster; Samuel Forrester, boot and shoemaker; William Harris, farmer; William Ikin, farmer, Pool farm.
WEM
is a market town and considerable parish, which embraces the chapelries of Edstaston and Newtown, and the townships of Ashton, Cotton, Horton, Lacon Lowe and Ditches, Northwood, part of Sleap, Soulton, Tilley and Trench, Wem and Wolverley, which together contain an area of 13,841a. 1r. 10p. of land, of which 193a. 2r. 6p. are in roads and waste. Gross estimated rental, £26,594; rateable value, £24,944. In 1841 there was a population of 3,919 souls, of whom 1,952 were males and 1,967 females, at which period there were 832 inhabited houses, 40 uninhabited, and two houses building. The tithes have been commuted for £2,100. The town of Wem is pleasantly situated near the banks of the river Roden, 11 miles north from Shrewsbury; the streets are irregularly formed, and many of the houses have an ancient appearance; there are, however, many good houses and shops, and several respectable private residences of more modern erection, particularly in those parts of the town called New-street and Islington. The township contains 1,202a. 3r. 30p. of land, of which 14a, 3r. 24p. are in roads and waste. Rateable value, £6,428. 5s. Wem is a place of considerable antiquity, and was anciently written Wemme. At the Domesday survey it was held by William Pantulph, or Pantulf, of Earl Roger, when there were “four geldable hides and an airy of hawks.” At this time most of the land about Wem lay waste, covered with a vast pool, or overgrown with woods. When William the Conqueror deprived the English of their estates he gave the greatest part of Shropshire to Roger de Montgomery, and he shared it out among the principal officers that commanded under him, on condition that they should pay him homage, fight for him, not dispose of their daughters in marriage, nor their goods by will without his leave; that their heirs whilst minors should be in wardship to him, and pay a relief for admission to their estates when they came of age. On these terms Earl Roger granted to William Pantulph 28 towns or manors in the county of Salop, whereof Wem being one of the chief places Pantulph made it his seat, and the head of his barony. In the 7th of King John, A.D. 1205, Warin Fitzgerald procured the grant of a market to be held weekly, and a fair yearly at his manor of Wemme. It has therefore been a market town 646 years. The market was then held on Sunday, as was then commonly done in other places. This continued till the 24th of Edward III, when Simon Islip, archdeacon of Canterbury, forbid the going to market on the Lord’s day for the future, and the market was subsequently held on Thursday, on which day it still continues to be held, and is numerously attended by the farmers who reside in the surrounding district. Fairs are held on the first Thursday in March, May 6th, Holy Thursday, June 29, last Thursday in September, and November 22nd.
The barony of Wem was of considerable extent; on the north it stretched to Whitchurch, on the east it took in Tilley and Cresswell, in Staffordshire, on the south it bordered on the Clive, and on the west on the parish of Ellesmere. The first baron was William Pantulph, who had great estates in Normandy, which he held of his superior lord Roger de Montgomery, a relation of one of the generals of William the Conqueror. By his tenure he was obliged to attend this Roger in war, and came over with him in the expedition against England. Shortly after the battle of Hastings Roger de Montgomery bestowed 28 manors in this county upon the said Pantulph, to be held by military service. These manors consisted of as many knight’s fees as composed a barony, the head of which Pantulph fixed at Wem, which he chose for the place of his residence. The Earl of Shrewsbury, A.D. 1102, engaged in a rebellion against the king, and required William Pantulph, his vassal, to aid him with such a number of men as he was obliged to furnish by his tenure. On his refusing he disinherited him of all his lands and possessions in Shropshire, upon which the king made him governor of Stafford Castle. The king having resolved to beseige Shrewsbury, William Pantulph attended the king on this expedition, and finding the roads bad and narrow and the country full of woods lined with archers, the king employed 6,000 soldiers in cutting down the woods and opening the roads. On the royal troops appearing before Shrewsbury the king threatened to hang all that he should take therein, and shortly after the town was surrendered. The Earl of Shrewsbury by his treason having forfeited his honour and estate to the crown the barony of Wem was henceforth held immediately by the king, and hence the lords thereof had a right to sit in the great councils of the realm. William Pantulph lived to a great age and died beyond sea. The last of this family who held the barony was William Pantulph, who died in the 7th of Henry III., A.D. 1233. About this period a perambulation was made to settle the boundaries of the manor of Wem and that of Prees; the latter belonged to the bishop of Lichfield and Coventry. On the death of the above William Pantulph, his father-in-law, Fulk Warine, gave the king 6,000 marks for the wardship of his lands and heir, with the benefit of her marriage. This Fulk was one of the barons that in 1214 confederated against King John, and who was subsequently excommunicated by the pope. On the marriage of Maud, the heiress of William Pantulph, with Ralph de Boteler, he settled at Wem, and in 1370 the barony was carried by an heiress of the Botelers into the family of Ferrars, and afterwards in like manner to the Greystocks, a noble family whose principal seat was Greystock Castle, in the county of Cumberland. Ralph Lord Greystock, the second baron of this family, left a granddaughter, who married Thomas Lord Dacre; this family had their chief seat at Dacre Castle in Cumberland. The fourth baron of this name, George Lord Dacre, being a minor at the death of his father, Thomas Duke of Norfolk obtained the wardship of him, but had not enjoyed it long before this young lord died, and his three sisters became co-heiresses. Ann married Phillip Earl of Arundle, and Elizabeth Lord William Howard, son of the Duke of Norfolk, but Mary died unmarried. Thomas Duke of Norfolk, on the death of his third wife, formed the project of marrying Mary Queen of Scotts. In the 15th of Elizabeth, however, he was beheaded for what his peers adjudged to be treason. By his attainder his eldest son Philip, having lost his titles of honour that were to have descended to him from his father, assumed the style of Earl of Arundle in right of his mother, who was daughter to Henry Fitzallan, the last Earl of Arundle of that family. In the 25th of Elizabeth the court of Wem was first called in the name of Philip Earl of Arundle, and of lady Ann, his wife. His zeal for popery, and the resentment he was supposed to entertain for the hard usage of his family, rendered him suspected by the government, and he was eventually condemned to imprisonment during the queen’s pleasure, and fined £10,000. In the 31st of Elizabeth the court at Wem was first called in the name of the queen, on account of the attainder of Philip Earl of Arundle, but as he had held the barony and manor of Wem in right of his wife, by his attainder he forfeited them only during his own life, so that on his decease they reverted to the Countess Dowager Ann, on whose death, Thomas Howard, her only son, succeeded to the dignity of baron of Wem. On the accession of James I. to the throne, this Thomas was restored in blood, with the title of Earl of Arundle and Surrey, and put in possession of the estates forfeited by his grandfather’s attainder, thus he had a great fortune by descent, and a much larger one with his wife, who was the heiress of the great house of Shrewsbury. In 1611 he was made knight of the garter, and in 1621 he was created Earl Marshall of England, with a pension of £2,000 per annum. In the 8th of Charles I. we find the court baron of Wem called in the name of the Right Honourable Thomas, Earl of Arundle and Surrey, premier, Earl of England, Lord Howard, Fitzallans, Maltravers, Mowbray, Segrave, Bruse, and Wem, Earl Marshall of England, knight of the most noble order of the garter, and one of the lords of the king’s honourable privy council. He is said to have been a proud man, and his expenses always exceeded his revenue; he was the greatest encourager of painting, sculpture, designs, carving, and building that the age produced, and he employed persons many years in Italy and Greece to collect rarities for him; his statues and paintings were equal in number and value to those in the houses of most princes, and he provided the most sumptuous and magnificent entertainments. The barony was subsequently held by the Playters, Onslows, Wycherleys, and Jeffreys. On the death of John Lord Jeffreys, in 1720, the barony and manor of Wem descended to his daughter, then a minor, and shortly after the barony of Wem and the manors of Wem and Loppington, and the land and tenements thereto, were sold to Henry Lord Newport, afterwards Earl of Bradford, for £12,000. In 1730, Lord Newport, by will, devised all his real estate, in trust, for Mrs. Ann Smith, and his natural son by her, John Harrison. He took the name of Newport; but losing the use of his reason, his mother conveyed the estate after his death to William Pulteney, Earl of Bath, from whom it has descended to the present proprietor, the Duke of Cleveland. A court leet and baron is held yearly in October. Jonathan Scarth, Esq., steward; Thomas Griffiths, bailiff. Formerly at these courts causes were tried for debts or trespass in actions under 40s.
The freeholders at Wem are numerous, among whom are William Egerton Jeffreys, Colonel Wynn, Thomas Dickin, Esq., the Trustees of Wem Free School, Jonathan Forgham, Mr. John Jenks, Mr. Craig, Mr. John Rodgers, Mary Llewellin, Mr. Wilkinson, Mr. Phillips, William Owen, Esq., William Barber, Esq., Mr. James, Mr. Leek, Mrs. Kynaston, H. J. Barker, Esq., Mrs. Burd, Mrs. Gwynn, John Everall, Esq., Mr. George Clay, Mr: Glazebrook, Mr. Ashley, Mr. Holding, Mr. Robert Gough, Mrs. Tyler, Mr. John Basnet, Mr. Snape, Mr. Edward Broomfield, Mr. Breakspear, Mr. Drury, J. H. Walford, Esq., Mr. John Boughey, Mr. Poole, and upwards of forty others.
The Church is a venerable structure dedicated to St. Peter and St. Paul, consisting of nave, chancel, and side aisles, with a heavy square tower sixty-nine feet high, in which are six musical bells; on the west side stands the statue of a man, as large as life, with a truncheon in his hand, supposed to represent Ralph, lord Greystock, baron of Wem, who probably was at the charge of building the steeple; on the east side is the statue of a lady, with the model of the church in her right hand, and a cross in her left hand. The north porch, and the lower part of the walls are built of red sand stone, coarsely worked, and are perhaps the remains of the first church erected here in Saxon times. The tower and upper part of the walls, and most of the buttresses are of the Grinshill free stone. The vestry was built before the great fire which burnt the roof, then covered with shingles, the gallery, and all the timber work, damaged the walls and melted the bells. The west window and the tower were built in 1667, and the west end of the church, the roof, and the pews, in 1678. The chancel was built about the year 1680: since that period the frequent reparations and alterations have left but little of the ancient character of the church remaining. The bells were cast in the same year, and a clock and chimes added in 1726. The communion plate are of large size, and consist of chalice, pattin, flagon, and basin, which were the gift of Gerrard Shelley, and Cicely his wife in 1707. The accommodation in the church was increased by building two new galleries, one on the north and another on the south side, and altering the pews in the old gallery at the west end in 1840, when 274 additional sittings were obtained, which are free and unappropriated, in consequence of a grant from the incorporated society for building and enlarging churches. There are also 703 appropriated sittings. There are tablets to the Smiths, Wycherleys, Fields, Traceys, and others. The living is a rectory, valued in the king’s book at £26. 4s. 4½d.; in the patronage of the Duke of Cleveland, and incumbency of the Rev. John Charles D. Merest, M.A., who resides at the rectory, a pleasantly situated mansion, built by the late rector, who exchanged the old rectory, and obtained a grant from Queen Anne’s bounty, towards the erection of the present structure. Dr. Henry Aldrich, an eminent divine and polite scholar, was rector of Wem. He was born at Westminster, in 1647, and educated under the famous Busby. In 1662 he was admitted into Christ Church College, Oxford and having passed through the gradations of bachelor of arts in 1666, and master in 1669, he took orders and became an eminent tutor in his college. In 1681 he was installed canon of Christ Church, and in the same year took the degrees of bachelor and doctor of divinity. During the reign of James II. he published several tracts on the popish controversy, which are said to have shown a clearness of arguing and depth of learning far beyond anything that had at that time appeared in our language. In order to excite and cherish a taste for polite literature, he annually published some piece of an ancient Greek author, as a new year’s gift for the students of the college. He wrote a system of logic, entitled “Artis Logicæ Compendium,” Oxon, 1691, 8vo.; and “Elements of Geometry,” in Latin, never published. He was also concerned in Gregory’s Greek Testament, printed at Oxford in 1703, folio; and Havercamp’s edition of Josephus. By his skill in architecture he improved the buildings of the college; and that part of it called Peckwater quadrangle, deservedly admired, was designed by him. His abilities as a musician rank him, in the opinion of competent judges, among the masters of the science; and although he chiefly applied himself to the composition of sacred music, yet he occasionally diverted himself by producing pieces of a lighter kind. For the entertainment of smokers, to which fraternity he belonged, he composed a smoking catch, to be sung by four persons while they were smoking; and he was also the author of “Hark! the merry Christ church bells.” He died at his college in 1710, leaving an order to be buried, without any memorial, in the cathedral. “His modesty and humility, his easy pleasantry, his attention to academic business, and to the credit of his college, his exertions for the encouragement of learning, and the proofs which his memoirs afford of reputable talents, various accomplishments, and amiable qualities, unite to transmit his name with honour to posterity.” The Independent Chapel, situated in Chapel street, is a considerable building of brick, fronted with freestone. The interior has a neat and chaste appearance, and is provided with a circular gallery. It was built in 1834, and will accommodate five hundred hearers. The congregation is under the pastoral care of the Rev. Joseph Pattison. There is a Sunday school in connection with the chapel, with about 150 scholars. The Independents have another chapel in Noble street, where the Rev. John Saddler is the pastor. The Primitive Methodist Chapel is a neat structure in Chapel street; and the Baptists have a chapel in Cripple street. The Irvingites have a meeting house in Noble street.
The Grammar School.—Sir Thomas Adams, the founder of the free school at Wem, was born in the year 1586; he was the son of Thomas Adams, a respectable tanner at Wem, who had his tan pits where the school now stands. His son received a liberal education at the university of Cambridge, and was afterwards brought up a draper in London. In 1639 he was elected sheriff of London, on which he gave up business, and devoted his time entirely to the duties of his office, and the good of the citizens. He was elected Lord Mayor of London 1645, which office he filled with the greatest disinterestedness. About this time the enemies of Charles I., who were then coming into power, thought proper to search his house, in pursuit of that unfortunate monarch, knowing his strong attachment to the royal cause; in the year 1647 he was committed to the tower, where he remained some time. He, however, continued his attachment to the royal cause, and is said to have carried his zeal so far as to have remitted ten thousand pounds to Charles II. while in exile. On the accession of that monarch to the throne, Sir Thomas was advanced to the dignity of baronet. Amongst the documents belonging to the free school there is a copy of the orders and statutes prescribed by him for the government of the same, purporting to have been made March 4, 1650. By these orders it is declared Rowland Hill, Esq., and fourteen others, should be enfeoffed of the lands and hereditaments appertaining to the school. That the said school should be for all children within the parish of Wem, except the children of those parents who being of ability should not have contributed towards the advancement of the said school. The statutes also contain regulations for the internal management of the school, and directions that prayers should be read every morning and evening, and the scholars catechised in the principles of the Christian religion. The gross annual income derived from the school property when the charity commissioners published their report amounted to £336. 15s., out of which the head master received a salary of £160 per annum, the second master £70, and the third master £70 per annum. The school is free to all boys of the parish of Wem for instruction in classics and English grammar; each scholar pays a small entrance fee, and if they learn writing or accounts they pay for such instruction from 7s. 6d. to 10s. 6d. per quarter. A portion of the income of the school arises from lands purchased by the first Feoffees of the school, who were instrumental in raising upwards of £370, which sum was laid out in the purchase of land for the general benefit of the school. The principal object of the foundation was evidently the instruction of free scholars, but when the charity commissioners published their report there were only two on the foundation, and there were only six when our agent visited Wem. The Rev. William Boulton is the head master.
The British School, a neat brick structure pleasantly situated, was erected in 1839, at the cost of about £800; it is capable of accommodating 200 boys and 200 girls, and consists of an upper and lower room; the latter is occupied by the boys, and the entrance is from Dark-lane, and the former by the girls, who have an entrance from Chapel street. At the present time 130 boys and 90 girls attend the school, which is chiefly self-supporting. The Privy Council on Education gave the sum of £200 towards the erection of the school. Thomas H. Taylor and Mrs. Taylor are the teachers.
The National School, a commodious brick building situated in an open situation, consists of two spacious rooms, which were erected at an expense of about £1,000, including the cost of the site. Thomas Grainge and Mary Ebrey are the teachers.
The Infant School, situated in Chapel-street, has an attendance of about 120. Mary Green is the teacher.
The Wem Union House, situated on the Whitchurch road, near to Islington, is a spacious brick structure erected to accommodate 200 inmates. The union comprehends twelve parishes, and has an area of eighty square miles. The average annual expenditure of the three, preceding the formation of the union, was £4,018. The following are the parishes in the union, viz.:—Wem, Broughton, Clive, Grinshill, Ightfield, Lee Brockhurst, Loppington, Moreton Corbet, Prees, Shawbury, Stanton upon Hine Heath, Weston under Red Castle, and Whixall. Clerk and Superintendent Registrar, William Owen, Esq.; Relieving Officer, Thomas Hanmer; Master and Matron, Mr. and Mrs. Rowley.
The County Court for law proceedings on actions and claims not exceeding £50 comprehends the following places, viz.:—Wem 4, Preston Brockhurst 3, Grinshill 4, Clive or Cliff 3, Yorton 4, Tilley 1, Sleap 2, Nunnerley 2, Loppington 3, Northwood 5, part of Whixall 8, Newtown 4, Ightfield 8, Corra 8, Prees 5, Darliston 6, Marchamley 6, Weston under Red Castle 4, Lee 3, Aston 1, Lacon 1, Edgboulton 6, Stanton 6, Shawbury 6, and Burton 6. The figures refer to the mileage from Wem. Judge, Uvedale Corbet, Esq., Aston Hall, near Shiffnal; Treasurer, William B. Collis, Esq.; Clerk, Henry John Barker, Esq.; High Bailiff, Mr. Thomas Griffiths, jun.
The Lock-up is a small brick structure situated in Grove-street; prisoners on committal are sent to Shrewsbury. William Freeman is the superintendent.
The Market House is a brick fabric with stone finishings, supported by arches and pillars in the front. The county court is held in the spacious room over the market. Mr. Thomas Griffiths is clerk of the markets.
The Stamp Office is in Market-street. Mr. George W. Poole, distributor.
The Excise Office is at Mrs. Sand’s, the White Lion Inn, High-street.
The Court House for magisterial purposes is situated in Noble-street; the magistrates who usually attend the petty sessions here are Sir Robert Chambre Hill, Bart.; Sir Andrew Vincent Corbet, Bart.; A. C. Heber Percy, Esq.; Thomas Dickin, Esq., and George Bowen, Esq. William Lucas, Esq., is clerk to the magistrates.
The Gas Works are situated in Grove-street; they were established in 1835 by Messrs. Thomas and Burton, since which they have been transferred to the mortgagee, Mr. Craig. The gasometer will hold 4,000 cubic feet of gas. A charge of 10s. per 1,000 cubic feet is made to the consumer for this luminous vapour. Mr. John Brown is the secretary and manager.
The National Provincial Bank of England has a branch bank here, situated in High-street. Mr. John Daniel Lloyd is the manager.
The traffic of Wem is facilitated by a branch of the Ellesmere canal, which terminates near to Edstaston, about two miles from Wem. It is chiefly used for the conveyance of coal. Mr. John Brown, coal, slate, lime, and guano merchant, has a wharf here.
The Wem corn mill is an extensive modern erection of brick, situated on the river Roden; the machinery is of a superior construction; it is occasionally worked by steam power, but the water power is constructed so as to work the machinery without any delay after the rise of the water. Mr. J. Boughey is the proprietor.
The following account of the state of Wem during the civil war is chiefly extracted from Garbet’s interesting history of that town. When the war broke out in 1642 the populace were in general in favour of royalty; the persons of most distinction in the county who supported the parliament were Mr. Mitton, Mr. Mackworth, and Thomas Hunt, Esq., M.P. for Shrewsbury. The above gentlemen, attended by Richard Baxter, a famous dissenting minister, having got a small body of troops about the latter end of August, 1643, settled a garrison at Wem, being the first which the parliament had in this county. To fortify the town a rampart or wall of earth was thrown up, which began at Drayton gate, and ran along the side of Sandland’s yard, and about fourscore yards into Cordwell, where it formed an angle, defended by a wooden tower; then it turned towards the mill, crossing a meadow and a road just below Oliver’s well, and passed along the side of the parsonage garden, till it came to the Shrewsbury gate. It then crossed the alleys to the corner of the school garden, whence it turned through the tan pits on the east side of the brook to Ellesmere gate. Thence it extended along the Noble-street garden to two houses, then in the fields where a guard was kept, and from those houses to the Whitchurch gate, and thence over Shenton’s field it came up to Drayton gate. The ditch was about four yards wide and of a proportionate depth, but probably narrower in those places where the land could be flooded, for the low grounds were laid under water from Woodhouse’s croft to Cordwell. The earth thrown out of the ditch made the wall or rampart, which was strengthened by palisades placed so thick that a whole coppice in Lacon was cut down for this purpose. All the houses and buildings without the rampart were burnt to prevent their giving shelter to the enemy. As soon as the king had notice of a garrison having been placed at Wem, he sent Lord Capel to Shrewsbury, as lieutenant-general of Shropshire; the parliament sent Sir William Brereton, a Cheshire gentleman, to oppose him. Lord Capel, at the head of 5,000 men, made an attack upon Wem before its works were finished. At the same time Sir William Brereton, with his Cheshire forces, drew near the town to support and defend it. By a manœuvre Lord Capel induced General Brereton to return to Nantwich, and in the meantime he attacked Wem, which was but ill provided against an assault, the gates were without hinges, being only reared up, and only forty soldiers remained in the town, the rest of the forces consisted of the rabble of the town, among whom a number of women particularly distinguished themselves, and gave occasion for the following rhyme:—
“The women of Wem and a few musketeers,
Beat the Lord Capel and all his cavaliers.”
The principal attack was made at Drayton gate; and old Vicars, in his “God’s Ark overtopping the World’s Waters,” says, “The great slaughter and execution which were performed upon the enemy when they set upon Wem, there being six cart loads of dead men carried away at one time, besides the wounded; and as it is said, there were fifteen found buried in one grave. Little execution was done upon our men; we lost not above three in the town—Major Marcow, one soldier, and one boy.” Of the king’s party he enumerates Colonel Wynn, slain; Major Vaughan, wounded; one of Winter’s captains shot in the back; Captain Davison, taken prisoner, since dead; Captain Manley, Captain Ellis, and Colonel Scriven, wounded. As the troops of Brereton approached, Lord Capel drew off his forces and returned to Shrewsbury. In 1644 the garrison of Wem seems to have been better provided for their defence. Prince Rupert, on his march to Chester, seemed determined to attack Wem; but having taken a view of the place from the Trench farm, he slighted it, saying, “It is a crow’s nest that will not afford each of my men a piece of bread.” At this time the greater part of Shropshire was for the king; but after the fatal battle of Naseby he lost ground in almost every part of the kingdom. Major-general Mytton was governor of Wem, the garrison whereof took Ercall House, belonging to Lord Newport; Apley Castle, belonging to Mr. Charlton; Moreton Corbet House, belonging to Sir Andrew Corbet; and Shrawardine Castle, the seat of the Bromleys. The plunder brought into Wem during these unhappy disturbances contributed greatly to induce an appearance of prosperity.
The dreadful fire which happened March 3rd, 1677, is a remarkable era in the history of Wem. It was occasioned by a girl suffering a lighted caudle to ignite the thatch of her parents’ dwelling. The season being dry and the wind boisterous, the devouring flames were speedily carried along the High street, Cripple street, and the Horse Fair, consuming every edifice except the free school. In Noble street it extended as far as the Draw well house, and in Milk street as far as the Rector’s barn. The church, the market house, seven score houses, and treble the number of outbuildings were burnt. The wind blew the burning thatch and shingles to a vast distance, so that in one hour the town was completely enveloped in flames. The loss of the property consumed was estimated at £23,677. 3s. 1d.
Among the eminent individuals of which Wem has been the birth place or residence, may be enumerated the benevolent Sir Thomas Adams, before mentioned, the founder of the Grammar School. Wycherley, one of the most eminent wits and comic poets of his day, was born here in 1640; he married the Countess of Drogheda, but after her death, from law suits with her relatives, he became embarrassed in his circumstances. He married a second wife a few days before his death, which happened in September, 1815. John Astley, Esq.: This artist, from the peculiarity of his good fortune, rather than by his exertions as an artist, has obtained a memorial in biographical history. He was born at Wem, and when of age to assume a profession he was sent to London, and placed as a pupil under Mr. Hudson; when he left him he visited Rome, and on his return from thence he went to Dublin, where he practised as a painter for about three years, and in that time acquired three thousand pounds by his pencil. On his coming over to England, and painting his way back to London, in his own post chaise, with an outrider, he loitered, with a little pardonable vanity, in his native neighbourhood, and visiting Knutsford assembly with another gentleman, Lady Daniel, a widow then present, was at once so won by his appearance, that she made arrangements to sit for her portrait, and then made him the offer of her hand; a boon which he did not think it prudent to refuse. This lady, by marriage articles, settled the whole of the Duckinfield estate upon him, after the death of her daughter by Sir William Daniel. Mr. Astley eventually became possessed of these estates, and died at his house, Duckinfield Lodge, Cheshire, November 13th, 1787, and was buried at the church in that village. John Ireland, the author of “Illustrations of Hogarth,” and other esteemed works, was also born at Wem.
Charities.—Francis Chambre, by his will, dated December 26th, 1676, charged certain lands with the payment of 40s. per annum, to be disposed of for the benefit and repairs of the chapel at Newton, or for the augmentation of the salary of the third school-master at Wem, or to both, at the discretion of his kinsman, George Chambre of Loppington, and the Rev. William Chettoe, and their heirs for ever. The premises charged with this payment are now the property of Mr. Dickin, who pays £2 to the schoolmaster and chapel warden every alternate year.
In 1703 Richard Corbet, Esq. granted a yearly rent charge issuing out of two farms at High Hatton, and directed that £4 thereof should be laid out every alternate year in buying six cloth coats or gowns for six poor people, four to be chosen from the parish of Wem, and two from Loppington; the said persons to be housekeepers reduced to poverty by misfortune; that £4 should be laid out every alternate year in clothing three poor boys of the parish of Wem, to be set out apprentices to husbandry; that 20s. per annum be paid to a writing master for teaching four poor boys writing and arithmetic. And he further directed, that every alternate year the said rent charge of £10 should be laid out in binding two boys, of the parish of Wem, apprentices to handicraft trades. The sum of £9 to be disposed of in one year, and £11 the next year, and so on from year to year. The yearly sum of £10, with some additions thereto, varying according to circumstances, is paid by Sir Andrew Corbet, the owner of the estate at Hatton. The objects of the charity are selected by the trustees, who meet about February every alternate year for the purpose, and 21s. is paid on that day towards the expenses of such meeting.
William Hinton, and Dorothy, his wife, in consideration of £101. 1s. 6d., conveyed to certain trustees and their successors two pieces of land in Whixall, called the Stanley End Pieces, to the use of the poor of the parish of Wem. Of the above, £50 was the gift of Thomas Spendelow during his lifetime, who directed the proceeds thereof should be laid out in bread every Lord’s day for the poor inhabitants of the parish. There has been no subsequent conveyance to trustees, and the churchwardens have from time to time let the property, which consists of two fields, containing rather more than seven acres, now let at a good rent of £12 per annum. There is also an allotment on Whixall Moss, given in lieu of a right of turbury, which is let for 5s. per annum. The rents are carried to the account of the churchwardens of Wem quarter, and out of this account there is paid, in respect of the rents above mentioned, and for Sir Andrew Corbet’s charity hereafter mentioned, 4s. a week, amounting to £10. 8s. per annum, which is disposed of in bread, and £3 of which is distributed in money. The sum of £3 is divided by the churchwardens and vestry clerk, together with £2 paid in respect of the Hon. Richard Hill’s charity, in small sums among the poor.
The Hon. Richard Hill, in 1726, bequeathed £100 to the poor of the parish of Wem, to be applied as the minister and churchwardens should think fit.—Rowland Whittingham, in the same year, bequeathed £10 for the objects of the said charity. With these two sums, and £2 advanced by the overseers, three messuages were purchased adjoining the church-yard. These premises were pulled down in the year 1822, and the site added to the church-yard. Before this period, the rents never exceeded £5 or £6 a year. The sum of £2 has been since paid out of the church-rate collected for Wem quarter, and £1 out of the rate collected for each of the other three quarters. When the charity commissioners published their report there was a sum of £40 in the hands of Thomas Wilkinson, which is understood to have been left many years ago by Mr. Minshull of Tilley. Mr. Wilkinson pays 40s. yearly as the interest thereof, of which 20s. is paid to the minister of Whixall, 10s. among the poor of Wem, 5s. among the poor of Tilley and Trench, and 5s. to the poor of Hollingwood End.
Sir Richard Hill, by his will bearing date January 1st, 1808, bequeathed £300 in trust to pay the interest of £100 to the poor of each of the parishes of Hodnet, Prees, and Wem, in such proportions as his brother John Hill, during his life, and after his decease, the owners of his mansion house, at Hawkstone, should think fit. The interest on the sum of £100 is paid by Sir Rowland Hill to the poor of each of the parishes of Hodnet and Prees. Nothing however was paid when the charity commissioners visited Wem, in respect of the legacy for Wem, nor had they any evidence to show the principal had ever been paid. If the payment of the principal cannot be proved, we apprehend that Sir Rowland Hill is accountable for it as the representative of the testator.
Sir Andrew Corbet, in 1817, gave the sum of 25 guineas, the interest to be given to the poor of the parish. This sum was applied in rebuilding the church, and the sum of 25s. is paid out of the church-rate as the interest thereof, which sum is expended in bread for the poor.
Mary Hankey, by will 1818, bequeathed £40, to be placed out at interest, and laid out in bread, to be distributed every Easter Sunday among poor housekeepers of the parish of Wem, at the discretion of the churchwardens.
Upwards of two hundred years ago there were three common fields belonging the town: they consisted of arable land, and were divided by stones or other land marks, so that each proprietor knew his own ground, which he ploughed and sowed, but when harvest was gathered in, their cattle ranged in common and fed promiscuously. The cross field took its name from a cross erected on that road, as was usual in popish countries. The chapel field extended towards Horton, and the middle field towards Edstaston road.
A LIST OF
STREETS, LANES, AND PLACES IN THE PARISH OF WEM.
Back street, High street
Bank house, Ireland
Bow street, Market street
Brunswick house, Islington
Brunswick row, Islington
Chapel street, Market street
Church street, Mill street
Court house, Market street
Cripple street, Noble street
Crown street, Back street
Dark lane, High street
Draw well lane, Back street
Ellesmere road, Ireland
Grove house, Grove street
Grove street, Bow street
High street, May pole end
Hibernia cottages, May poll end
Ireland, Grove street
Islington, Whitchurch road
Islington cottages, Islington
Islington crescent, Islington
Islington house, Islington
Islington row, Islington
Maiden lane, High street
Market street, High street
Market house, Market street
May pole end, Drayton and Aston road
Mill street, Salop road
New street, Islington
Noble street, Back street
Roden lodge, Mill street
Rose cottage, New street
Salop road, Tilley
Union Buildings, Market st
Wembrook place, Islington
Well house lane, Dark lane
Whixall road, Ireland
Post Office.—At Miss Jane Deakin’s, Market-street. Letters arrive at 6 20 A.M. and are despatched at 7 20 P.M.
Aston John, gentleman, Market street
Barker Henry John, Esq., Salop road
Barker Charles Frederick, Esq., Market st
Barker Mr. Thomas, Salop road
Barlow Henry, tallow chandler and soap boiler, Market street
Beetenson Charles, Esq., Noble street
Boughey John, Salop road
Boulton Rev. William, Grove street
Brown Thomas Dickin, Esq., New street
Burd Mrs., Bow street
Cartwright Miss, Church street
Cotgrave Miss, Chapel street
Clay George, gentleman, New street
Deakin Miss Jane, Market street
Dickin Roger Spencer, Esq., Grove street
Dickin Thomas, Esq., Noble street
Dickin Mr. Thomas, Grove street
Dickin Mr. Richard Parker, Grove street
Dixon Rev. Wm., Noble street terrace
Edwards Edward, bookkeeper, Market st
Everall John, gentleman, Grove street
Ferrett Henry, inland revenue officer, Back st
Forgham Mrs., Noble street
France Thomas, Noble street
Gough Mrs., Back street
Gough Robert, gentleman, Back street
Gough Mr. Samuel, Market street
Greenwood Joseph, gentleman, Chapel st
Griffiths Henry, porter dealer, Market street
Griffiths Richard, draper, High street
Gwynn Edward, Esq., Noble street
Gwynn Samuel Betten, Esq., Noble street
Gwynn Miss, Grove house
Hanmer Thos., relieving officer, Wem union
Heatley William, Esq., Market street
Ireland Mrs., Islington house
Jones William, Chapel street
Jones Miss, Chapel street
Jones Samuel, cattle salesman, Back street
Kindillow Wm. Nail, governor union house
Kynaston Mrs. Mary, High street
Lee Henry, Esq., Chapel street
Lee Mrs. Mary, Chapel street
Leeke Miss Mary Ann, New street
Littlehales Fred., clerk, county court office
Lloyd John Daniel, gentleman, High street
Lucas William, Esq., Noble street
Mason John, skinner, Ireland
Meredith Charles David, registrar, Islington
Meredith Mrs., Islington
Meredith Rev. Charles David, Crescent
Merest Rev. John William D., The Rectory
Morris Henry, gentleman, Islington Crescent
Morris Mrs., Islington Crescent
Nickson Mrs., Chapel street
Oldham Charles, Esq., Tilley house
Owen William, Esq., New street
Parkes Mrs., The Crescent
Parkes Mr. Richard, Islington Crescent
Pattinson Rev. Joseph, Islington villa
Pearson Mrs. Sarah, Grove street
Phillips Mr. George, May pole end
Poole Mr. George Wright, Market street
Prince Captain Charles, Market street
Pritchard Rev. Mr., Chapel street
Ravenshaw Richard, bank clerk, New street
Sadler Rev. John, Islington
Smith Mrs. Wycherley, New street
Smith John, tea dealer, Noble street
Snape Walter, gentleman, Creamore road villa
Stockhall Henry, attorney’s clerk, Market st
Thomas Thomas, gentleman, Islington
Walford John Henshaw, Esq., Roden lodge
Walker Mrs., Back street
Walmsley Thomas, Esq., Cripple street
Walmsley George, gentleman, Hawkstone rd
Walmsley Mr. John, Hibernia cottage
Wilkinson Mr. William, Ellesmere road
Williams Sir John Bickerton, Knight, The Hall
Wilson Joseph, Esq., New street
Academies.
Marked * take boarders.
British School, Dark lane, Thomas Hickson Taylor, master; T. H. Taylor, mistress
* Cooke Miss, Noble street
* Foncier Miss, Noble street
* Grammar, Grove street, Rev. William Boulton, M.A., principal; Benjamin Burd, English master
Infants’, Chapel street, Mary Green
* Meredith Mrs. Hannah, Bow street
National, Back street, Thos. Grainge, master; Mary Ebrey, mistress
* Strutt Miss, Noble street
Accountants.
Burd John, Mill street
Wycherley Thomas, Noble st
Attorneys.
Barker Charles Frederick, Market street
Barker Henry John, clerk to county court; office, Market street
Brown Thomas Dickin, New street
Burd Jonathan, Market st
Lucas William, clerk to magistrates, Noble street
Owen William, clerk to the Wem union, and superintendent registrar, New street
Auctioneers & Valuers.
Burd John, Mill street
Franklin Josiah, Market st
Wycherley Thomas, and appraiser for the Wem county court, Noble street
Bakers & Flour Dealers.
Astley Mary, Back street
Harris George, Grove street
Kynaston Charles, Market st
Vaughan Thomas, High st
Watkin Sarah, High street
Weever George, Market st
Bankers.
The National Provincial Bank of England Company, draw on the London Joint Stock Bank, John Daniel Lloyd, manager
Blacksmiths.
Humphreys Wm., Noble st
Rogers Robert, Ireland
Watkin Thomas, Dark lane
Watkin William, Grove st
Wilkinson John, Market st
Booksellers, Bookbinders, and Stationers.
Cooke Mary, Draw well ter
Franklin Josiah, & printer, Market street
Boot & Shoemakers.
Marked * dealers only.
Bannister John, Back street
Forgham Jonathan, May pole end
Higgins Williams, Rookery, Ireland
Jenkins George, Grove st
Jenks John, Market street
* Owen Miss Ann, High st
Robins Henry, Market st
* Tomlins Charles, Market st
Watkin Richard, Chapel st
Weaver John, High street
* Wilkinson Thomas, Market street
Braziers & Tin Plate Workers.
Barlow Henry, Market street
Edge Samuel, Union place
Brewer.
Cooke Joseph, Draw well brewery
Bricklayers.
Beckett William, Cripple st
Hewes William, Back street
Morris John, New street
Richards William, Back st
Tomey Jonathan, Back st
Brick and Tile Merchants.
Barker Henry John, Northwood
Brown John, Grove street
Maddocks Samuel, Barker’s green
Builders.
Beddoe John, Wem brook pl
France Thomas and Son, Noble street
Prince Frederick and Son, Church street
Walton Thomas, Salop road
Butchers.
Astley Thomas, Noble street
Davies Benjamin, Grove st
Deakin Henry, Market street
Elkes George, Market street
Hales William, Bow street
Parkes John, High street
Watkin James, High street
Weaver Charles, High street
Weaver George, High street
Weever Frederick, Market st
Cabinet Makers.
Broomhall John, foreman, Cripple street
France Thomas, Noble st
France Thomas, jun., Noble street
Lee John, New street
Prince Frederick and Son, Church street
Carriage Builders.
Eaton George, May pole end
Prince John, Church street
Cheese Factors.
Richards John, Market st
Vaughan Thomas, High st
Chemists and Druggists.
Bickerton Samuel, High st
Lee Thomas, Market street
Micklewright George, Market street
Onslow Richard, & dispensing, Cripple street
Clothes Dealer.
Huntington John, Market st
Coal Agent.
Brown John, Grove street, and Edstaston wharf
Coal Dealers.
Jenkins George, Grove street
Ralphs Jane, Noble street
Wilkinson Thos., Dark lane
Confectioners.
Kynaston Charles, Bow st
Stockall John, Market street
Vaughan Thomas, High st
Watkin Elizabeth, High st
Weaver George, High street
Coopers, Turners, and Dealer in Bendware.
Crewe Joseph, High street
Drury William, Noble street
Corn Factor.
Richards John, Market street
Curriers & Leather Cutters.
Everall John, Grove street
Gough Robert, Noble street
Gough Samuel, Market st
Dyer—Silk, Woollen, & Cotton.
Yoad Samuel, High street
Farmers.
Barber Wm., May-pole-end
Clay George, New street
Cooke Joseph, Draw-well lane
Everall John, Lowe-hill lane
Forgham Thomas, Foxley
Forgham Wm., Well-house farm
Griffiths Thomas, Soulton lane
Jenks John, Market street
Jones John, Noble street
Parkes John, Market street
Richards John, Market street
Snape Walter, Creamore road
Farm Tillage Dealers.
Brown John, Edstaston wharf, and guano merchant
Lowe Thomas, New street
Richards John, Market street
Fire and Life-office Agents.
The Agriculturists Cattle Insurance Compy., Benjamin Burds, Market street
Legal and Commercial, John Everall, Grove street
Pelican, Family Endowment and Manchester Fire, Wm. Owen, New street
Salop Fire, Josiah Franklin, Market street
Shropshire and North Wales, Messrs. Barker, Market st
Fishmonger.
Salt William, Market street
Glass, China, and Earthenware Dealers.
Franklin Josiah, Market st
Green Jane Charlotte, High street
Robins Henry, Market street
Grocers and Tea Dealers.
Heatley Wm., Market street
Kynaston Charles, High st
Kynaston Henry, Market st
Lee Thomas, Market street
Onslow Richard, Cripple st
Poole & Wilkinson, Market st
Richards John, Market street
Vaughan Thomas, High st
Wilkinson Andrew, High st
Hairdressers.
Green Samuel, Bow street
* Jenkins Richard, and perfumer, Market street
Hatter.
Howard Andrew, High street
Hosier & Berlin Repository.
Russell Lucy, Noble street
Hotels, Inns, and Taverns.
Black Lion, Thomas Nevett, Market street
Buck’s Head, Martha Higley, Church street
Bull’s Head, James Russell, Bow street
Castle, Commercial & Posting House, Robt. Higley, High street
Corbet Arms, John Lewis, Chapel street
Crown, Frederick Wycherley, Market street
Dickins’ Arms, John Jones, Back street
Fox Robert Rogers, Ireland
Hawkstone Arms, Richard Wire, Islington
Horse and Jockey, Robert Davies, Bow street
Lord Hill’s Arms, Thomas Lloyd, High street
Plough, Thomas Griffiths, Market street
Royal Oak, Mary Llewellin, May-pole end
Seven Stars, John Jenks, Market street
Shropshire Arms, Oliver Snape, Bow street
Talbot, Richard Darlington, High street
White Horse Hotel, Commercial & Posting House, Thomas Griffiths, Market street
White Lion, Ann Sands, and Excise-office, High street
Ironmongers.
Kynaston Henry, Market st
Wilkinson Andrew, Market street
Joiners and Builders.
Beddow John, Islington
Francis Thomas and Son, Noble street
Prince Frederick and Son, Church street
Walton Thomas, Market st
Jewellery & Cutlery Dealers.
Franklin Josiah, Market st
Jenkins Richard, Market st
Land & House Agent.
Francis Thomas, Noble st
Lime Dealer.
Brown John, Grove street
Linen & Woollen Drapers Silk Mercers.
Heatley William, Market st
Huntington John, Market st
Poole & Wilkinson, Market st
Livery Stable-keepers.
Marked * are Licensed to Let Post Horses.
* Burd Benjamin, Noble st
Griffiths Thomas, Market st
Higley Robert, High street
* Owen Joseph, High street
Maltsters.
Abbott William, Noble street
Barber John, High street
Barber William, May-pole end
Cooke Joseph, Draw-well terrace
Elkes John, Ireland
Higley Robert, High street
Wilkinson Sarah, High street
Merchants.
Francis Thomas (timber), Noble street
Onslow Rd. (hop), Cripple st
Miller and Corn Factor.
Boughey John, Wem Steam and Water Mills
Milliners and Dressmakers.
Green Sarah, New street
Phillips Eliza, Union Buildings
Williams Ann, Chapel street
Painter, Glazier, and Paper-Hanger.
Worrall George, High street
Plumbers, Glaziers, & Painters.
Davies Samuel, Mill street
Parsonage Frederick, New st
Shenton William, High st
Shenton William, Market st
Rope Makers.
Green John, High street
Fowles James, Bow street
Saddlers and Harness Makers.
Stockall John, Market street
Tomlins Charley, Market st
Seedsmen and Gardeners.
Bickerton Samuel, Market st
Llewellin Mary, High street
Newnes John, Back street
Richards John, Market street
Shopkeepers and Provision Dealers.
Green Jane Charlotte, High street
Harris Ellen, High street
Harris George, Grove street
Jackson Sarah, Bow street
Jones Richard, High street
Owen Joseph, Market street
Stockall John, Market street
Sherratt William, New street
Vaughan Thomas, High st
Watkin Sarah, High street
Skinners & Leather Dressers.
Everall John, Grove street
Mason John, Ireland
Slaters and Plasterers.
Hughes William, Back street
Richards William, Back st
Smallware Dealers.
Burd Benjamin, Market st
Harris Ellen, Market street
Spirit Vaults.
Griffiths Thomas, Market st
Ireland Richard, Market st
Onslow Richard, Cripple st
Stays Makers.
Owen Mrs. & Miss, Market st
Surgeons.
Gwynn Edward, Noble street
Gwynn Samuel Betten, Noble street
Lee Henry, Chapel street
Walmsley Thomas, Market street
Wilson Joseph Green, New street
Surveyor (Land).
Burd John, Mill street
Tailors.
Butter Richard, Market street
Cartwright John, Backstreet
Cartwright William, New st
Drury John, Noble street
Edwards John, Backstreet
Parsonage John, New street
Powell Joseph, High street
Tallow Chandler.
Barlow Richard, May-pole end
Tanners.
Everall John, Grove street
Gough Robert, Noble street
Veterinary Surgeon.
Burd Benjamin, Market st
Burd William, Noble street
Upholsterers.
Francis Thos., Noble street
Prince Frederick and Son, Church street
Watch and Clock Makers.
Butler Henry, High street
Hill Thomas, Market street
Wheelwrights.
Eaton George, May-pole end
Phillips Samuel, Bow street
Watkin John, May-pole end
Wine and Spirit Merchants and Porter Agents.
Ireland Richard, Market st
Onslow Richard, Cripple st
Carriers.
To Shrewsbury—Thomas Harris and Joseph Owen, Wednesdays & Saturdays.
ASTON
is a scattered village and township one mile E. from Wem, which contains 1,460a. 0r. 25p. of land, the soil of which in some parts is clay, in other parts a mixture of mould, gravel, and sand prevails; the strong soils produce excellent wheat. At the census in 1841 there were 47 houses and 212 inhabitants. Rateable value, £2,107. There are 15a. 3r. 37p. in roads and waste. The principal landowners are Viscount Hill, Major Dickin, John H. Walford, Esq., and Thomas Holly Cooke, Mrs. James, Mrs. Nickson, the Duke of Cleveland, Sir Andrew Corbet, Bart., Mrs. Griffiths, Mr. Caleb Powell, and the executors of the late Mr. Gwynn and Mr. Hassall are also proprietors; Major Dickin is lord of the manor. At the survey in 1561 there was only one estate that was freehold in the township, and that was the property of John Astley. The river Roden intersects the township, and is crossed by bridges to Lee Brockhurst and Aston. Barker’s Green in this township is noted for clay which makes a superior kind of bricks. Hill Cop Bank is also in this township. Aston Hall, an ancient structure built of timber and plaster, is now occupied as a farm homestead. At the Domesday survey the Astleys were seated here, from whom are descended the Astleys, of Ashton; the estate was then of much larger extent. It was afterwards sold to the Wilkinsons, and about the year 1680 Lord Chancellor Jeffreys purchased this estate; it is now the property of Mr. Thomas Holley Cooke. It is stated on the table of benefactions that Ralph Wilkiss, of Aston, left to the poor housekeepers of that township four nobles a year, charged on Shaw’s land in the said township. The yearly sum of £1. 6s. 8d. is paid out of the said land now vested in the executors of Mr. Hassall, and is distributed in small sums among the poor.
Directory.—Farmers, Thomas Holly Cooke, The Hall Farm; Thomas Harris, The Old Hall Farm; Thomas Kempster, Brook Farm; Edward Morgan, Moat House; Thomas Powell Brookhouse, and John Woodfin; Thomas Abbott, shopkeeper; William Hewes, maltster and beerhouse keeper; Edward Williams, blacksmith and agricultural implement maker.
COTTON,
a pleasantly situated village and township three miles N. from Wem, is variously written in ancient records as Cotton, Coton, and Cooton, being derived from the Saxon, cot, a small house, and ton, a town. The name may import that it was a town consisting chiefly of small houses, such as were usually built about woods by the poorer sort of people for the conveniency of fuel. The township contains 1,703a. 3r. 7p. of land, and is separated by four small brooks from the townships that border on it; there are 30 acres in roads and waste. At the census in 1841 there were 95 houses and a population of 439 souls. Rateable value, £2,774. The soil is a mixture of mould and clay, naturally poor, but of late years has been much improved by draining and superior cultivation; marl abounds in the township, which is much used for top dressing the land. This was one of the 28 lordships which Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Shrewsbury, gave to William Pantulph. Cotton wood was one of the five woods within the lordship of Wem. It is about three miles in circumference, and still retains the name of wood, although there is scarce a tree left on it. The chief landowners are Viscount Hill, George Bowen, Esq., Mrs. Cooper, V. Dolphin, Esq., the trustees of Wem school, Mr. Robert Sandland, Mr. John Rodenhurst, Mr. Thomas Ashley, and Mr. William Ikin. Cotton Hall in the time of Edward IV. belonged to the Maddox family, and in the reign of Elizabeth we find it possessed by Richard Ward, who in 1614 obtained license to eat flesh in Lent. The following is a copy of the indulgence granted by Richard Sankey, rector of Wem, as found in the parish register:—“For that Richard Ward, of Cotton, in the parish of Wem, and county of Salop, gentleman, is notoriously sick, and enforced for the recovery of his health to eat flesh for the time of his sickness. Therefore I, Richard Sankey, parson of the said parish, forasmuch as in me lieth by force of authority to me given by the statute in the fifth year of our late sovereign lady Elizabeth, do license the said Richard Ward to eat flesh according to the contents of the said statute, by me, Richard Sankey, rector of Wem. Registered according to the statute in presence, and with the consent of the churchwardens for the time being, March 22nd of the same month, by reason of the continuance of the forementioned sickness.” Cotton Hall is now a good brick mansion, the residence and property of George Bowen, Esq., J.P. On the west side of Hill-lane stands the ancient residence of the Cotons, who took their name from this township, and are branched out into several families of respectability. Ralph Coton, a draper, and lord mayor of London in the 1st. of Charles I., was of this family.
Bowen George, Esq., J.P., Cotton Hall
Ashley James, shopkeeper
Ashley Thomas, farmer
Bather Thomas, farmer, Wood End House
Bather Wm., farmer, Rookery
Bather William, farmer and corn miller
Bennett Benjamin, farmer
Boote William, farm bailiff, The Hall
Calcott John, watch & clock maker
Cartwright Joseph, farmer
Cooper Henry, farmer, Bank Farm
Cooper Mrs., farmer, Bank House
Cotton Thomas, farmer
Davies Abraham, bailiff to V. Dolphin, Esq.
Dickin Thomas, farmer, Common
Dickin William, farmer and butcher
Hall Richard, shoemaker
Higgins John, farmer, Common
Rodenhurst John, farmer
Ruscoe George, farmer, shopkeeper, & wharfinger
Ruscoe Messrs., lime works
Sandland Robert, farmer
Sparks John, farmer, The Brook
Tasker Francis, vict., Bull and Dog
Williams Thos., blacksmith
EDSTASTON,
anciently written Edstanton, signifying the town of Edstan. This Edstan may probably have been the founder of the chapel here, and had his seat on the north side of it, where the site of an ancient building is still visible. The fine north door of the chapel is opposite it, and was probably made for the convenience of the family that resided there. Edstaston is a township, chapelry, and considerable but scattered village, two miles N.N. by E. from Wem, having in 1841 95 houses and 452 inhabitants; in 1821 there was a population of 397 souls. The township contains 2,018a. 1r. 2p. of land, of which 28a. 3r. 36p. are in roads and waste. Rateable value, £3,385. 5s. The soil for the most part is a cold clay, it has been greatly improved by draining, and there is some good land for grazing purposes. The tithes are commuted for £298. 9s. 10d., payable to the rector of Wem. The township is intersected by the Wem and Whitchurch turnpike road, and a branch of the Ellesmere and Quino brook canal. The principal landowners are Daniel Boote, Esq., V. Dolphin, Esq., E. H. Chamberlain, Esq., Misses Knights, Mr. Edward Holding, Mr. Edward Groom, Mr. Godfrey Lewin, Mr. Samuel and James Lea, Mr. Walter Snape, Sir John Williams Bickerton, Knight, Mr. John Walmsley, Henry John Barker, Esq., Mr. Samuel Calcott, Mr. Phillips, Mr. Nickson, and others; the Duke of Cleveland is lord of the manor. The new park was formerly reckoned one of the five woods within the bounds of this township, but it has been so well cleared of trees that no remains of a wood are left. It was formerly enclosed with pales and stocked with wild beast of chase. Chetal wood in 1561 was held by Arthur Mainwaring, at the rate of 6s. per annum. There were formerly three common fields, the greater part of which was enclosed upwards of two hundred years ago.
The Chapel, which is dedicated to the Virgin Mary, in ancient writings is usually called our Lady’s chapel of Edstaston. The festival of the nativity of the blessed Virgin being on the 8th of September, is the day appointed for holding the feast or wake, if that day happen on Sunday; if not, on the Sunday following. Mr. Garbet is of opinion that this was a free chapel built by Edstan, for the health and welfare of his own soul, as it lost its endowment at the time of the general suppression of religious houses in the reign of Henry VIII. In the times of popery mass was sung here every day for the advantage of the deceased, and on Sunday the usual church service was performed for the living. It was not only independent of the rector of Wem, but also free from the visitation of the bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, who neither instituted nor inducted the incumbent, so that in this respect it was much on the same footing as a donative. The structure has a very ancient appearance, and is 23 feet wide and 82 feet in length. It is entered by a spacious porch of elaborate workmanship, built in 1710, exhibiting the Norman style of architecture. It is neatly pewed with oak sittings, and there is a gallery at the west end, erected by private subscriptions and a grant from the Diocesan Society amounting to £84. 4s., in consequence of which the sittings are free and unappropriated for ever. There are some relics in the chancel of the superstition of popish times; on each side of the altar are stands cut in stone, to bear the tapers that usually burn there; on the east wall is a stone jutting out, on which stood the image of the blessed Virgin, the patroness of the chapel; near the altar is a recess probably used for the preservation of the consecrated host, and in each of the side walls is a stone basin to hold holy water. On the north side of the altar there formerly stood a sacristy, or vestry where the sacred utensils and priestly vestments are kept. In 1723 a part of the west end wall of the chapel fell down, and the roof was so much decayed that it was found necessary to take the greatest part of it down. To lessen the charge, a license was obtained from the bishop, to make the chapel ten or eleven feet shorter than it had been. On the south side is a window beautifully foliated and ornamented with the family arms in stained glass, in memory of Admiral George Bowen and his wife, of Cotton Hall. In the chancel is an ancient mural tablet in memory of Richard Goldisborough; another to John Knight, Esq., and one to Thomas Payne, gentleman, with the date of 1760; a brass memorial remembers Richard Chambre, Esq. The living is a curacy annexed to the rectory of Wem. The Rev. John Stewart is the incumbent, and resides at Edstaston House, a handsome mansion of brick, delightfully situated, and beautified with pleasure grounds and shrubberries.
Creamore House is a good residence, occupied by John Unsworth, Esq. In Saxon times it belonged to a person of consideration, whose mansion house stood at some distance from the present dwelling, the site of which is overgrown with brushwood; but the broad and deep moat that surrounded it may still be traced. Edstaston Hall, a residence of considerable antiquity, formerly the seat and property of the Mainwarings, is now the residence of Daniel Boote, Esq. There are several other respectable houses, which our limits will not allow us to notice. The Independents have a chapel at Quino Brook, and at Quino Brook Wharf there are extensive lime works, and a coal depôt.
Boote Daniel, Esq., the Hall
Brown John, coal merchant, Park Bridge wharf
Chamberlain, E. H., Esq., the Park
Cliff Thomas, vict., Canal Tavern, Quino Brook
Cowley John, farm bailiff to Sir John Bickerton, Knight, Foxholes Farm
Davies Abraham, farm bailiff to Vernon Dolphin, Esq.
Dickin Edward, farmer, the Park
Groome Edward, farmer and shopkeeper
Hayward John, coal agent
Holding Daniel, tailor
Holding Thomas, shopkeeper, Quino Brook
Hope Thomas, wheelwright
Jebb William Thomas, Creamore cottage
Jebb and Son, farmers and corn millers
Kynaston John, Bank house
Lea James, farmer, High field
Lea Joseph, farmer, High field
Lea Samuel, farmer, High field
Matthews John, farmer, Rye bank
Nicholas Edward, shopkeeper
Richards Thomas, vict., Duke of Wellington, and agent and canal clerk for the Shropshire Union Railway and Canal Company
Rogers Edward, blacksmith and vict., the Harp
Ruscoe George and Abraham, dealers in coal, slate, tile, brick, lime, and general tillage merchants’ warehouse, Quino Brook
Stewart Rev. John, curate
Taylor William, farmer, Pepper street
Unsworth John, Esq., Creamore house
Unsworth William, Esq., Creamore farm
Walmsley John, farmer and maltster, Creamore bank
Walmsley Thomas, Rye bank farm
Wallace William, farm bailiff to E. H. Chamberlain, Esq.
Wilkinson William, farmer, Pepper street
Withington George, Foxholes farm
HORTON,
a small township one and a half mile north-west from Wem, contains 496a. 1r. 20p. of land, of which 8a. 3r. 34p. are in roads and waste. Rateable value, £725. 5s. In 1841 there were 20 houses and 86 inhabitants. The principal landowners are Thomas Dickin, Esq.; Mrs. Lawrence; Mrs. Young; and the devisees of the late Mr. Nickson; and Mr. Ireland. The Duke of Cleveland is lord of the manor. The tithes are commuted for £88. 13s. 2d. About the middle of the sixteenth century the Husseys were the largest landowners here; the Moodies were the next considerable family; the Chettoes, Allens, and Tylers, were also families of consequence. The Ellesmere and Wem turnpike road crosses this township.
Directory.—Farmers: Ann Kynaston, John Onslow, Caleb Powell, and Philip Ratcliff.
LACON,
a small township one and a half mile north-east from Wem, in 1841 had 12 houses and 84 inhabitants. It contains 398a. 3r. 5p. of land, of which 5a. 0r. 36p. are in roads and waste. The soil is various; in some places sandy, in other parts clayey; with portions of moss land prevailing in other places. From the latter large quantities of oak and fir timber have been raised, from a depth of from sixteen to twenty feet below the surface. The Wem and Market Drayton turnpike road intersects this township. The Duke of Cleveland is lord of the manor and sole owner. Rateable value, £1,017. 15s. The tithes are commuted for the sum of £122. 5s. Ralph Bannister was lord of the manor of Lacon in the reigns of Edward IV. and Richard III. He had been brought up by Humphrey Stafford, the great Duke of Buckingham, and put in places of trust above all his servants. To his house the duke retreated when he was deserted by his army in 1483. He was proclaimed a traitor by the king, and lands of the value of one hundred pounds a year; and a thousand pounds in ready money were offered for his discovery. This no doubt tempted the cupidity of Bannister to betray his master, and John Mytton, Esq., sheriff of the county, coming suddenly with a strong body of armed men, apprehended the duke, disguised in the garb of a peasant. Tradition says that the duke, falling on his knees, cursed Bannister to the tenth generation. Sir Thomas Moore, in his history of these times, takes notice of the vengeance of heaven which soon after fell on this family, and observes, “Bannister’s son and heir lost his senses, and died mad in a hog-stye; his eldest daughter, of excellent beauty, was suddenly stricken with foul leprosy; his second son became a deformed cripple; a younger son was drowned in a small puddle; he himself, in his old age, was arraigned and found guilty of murder, and saved only by his clergy.” Joseph Bannister, Esq., was the last of the family that resided here, or was possessed of this lordship, which he sold to Sir Richard Newport, from whom it has descended, with other estates, to the present proprietor, the Duke of Cleveland.
The resident farmers are William Cooke, William Holding, Abraham Ruscoe, and Thomas Woodfin, Lacon Hall.
LOWE AND DITCHES,
a township one mile north-west from Wem, contains 668a. 2r. 38p. of land, of which 10a. 0r. 36p. are in roads and waste. In 1841 there were 16 houses and 98 inhabitants. Rateable value £992. 15s. This place takes its name from its situation on rising ground; low, in Saxon, signifying a little hill; hence the tumuli, or mounds which the Danes raised over the dead bodies of their famous men were called “lowes.” The name of “Ditches” may have arisen from some remarkable fosses or ditches, of which there are no remains or certain tradition. The soil is a reddish clay or marl, with a mixture of mould. The principal landowners are Lewin Jeffreys, Esq.; Mr. James Lea; Mr. George Craig; Mr. John Richards; Mrs. Langford; Mrs. Nickson; Mr. Forgham; Rev. Mr. Parkes; and the devisees of the late Mr. Watson. The Duke of Cleveland is lord of the manor. The Ditches Hall, an antique erection chiefly composed of wood, was the seat of the Twyfords, a family of consequence upwards of two centuries ago. It is a commodious, lofty structure, now in the occupancy of Mr. Edward Elkes, farmer. The Lowe Hall, formerly a place of consideration, was the residence of the Baron family. The coat of arms, still in good preservation, has the date of 1489. In the 5th of Henry VII., William Baron of the Lowe was of the Homage extra barram, or country jury. The Pym Farm takes its name from the circumstance of one Pym, at the beginning of the civil war, having been murdered in a field a little below the house, which was then covered with brushwood. He was the tenant of this farm, which will probably bear his name when all the ancient landlords are forgotten. This township is crossed by the Wem, Ellesmere, and Loppington turnpike road.
Directory.—Farmers: Edward Elkes, Ditches Hall; Thomas Elkes, Lowe Hall; George Greaves, Pym Farm; Thomas Hamlet; James Lea; Ann Kynaston; John Richards, Lowe farm.
NEWTOWN
is a chapelry and small village, four miles N.W. from Wem, which in 1841 contained 16 houses and 79 inhabitants. The township contains 639a. 0r. 26p. of land, of which 12a. 1r. 20p. are in roads and waste. Rateable value, £844. 15s. The Rector of Wem receives the tithes, which are commuted for £87. 14s. 6d. The chief landowners are Mrs. Maddocks, Henry John Barker, Esq., Thomas Dickin, Esq., and Arthur Dickin, Esq.; besides whom are several smaller proprietors. The Duke of Cleveland claims the manorial rights. The roads to Whixall, Northwood, Edstaston, and Wem, intersect the township. About two centuries ago, the inhabitants of Newtown, Wolverley, and Northwood, being at a great distance from the parish church, agreed to have a Chapel of Ease, and for this purpose purchased a private house, which was fitted up for divine worship, and procured a minister, to whom the Rector of Wem gave a liberal stipend. The register of Wem mentions the baptism of a child in Newtown chapel, April 17th, 1659. In 1665 the owners of land consented to settle £10 per annum on a minister, and charged that sum on their lands for ever. The Governors of Queen Anne’s Bounty, in 1754, made a grant of £200 to this chapel, which was subsequently laid out in the purchase of freehold lands. It is remarkable, that Andrew Barton, who was the last person born here when it was a private house, was the first person that was buried here when it became a consecrated chapel. He died, November 10th, 1666. In the year 1836, the ancient structure was taken down, and a neat edifice of brick erected on the site, at a cost of £417. 12s. raised by subscriptions, which sum includes the expense of fittings. It consists of nave, transepts, and square tower, in which is one bell. The patronage is vested in the inhabitants of the above townships which form the chapelry. The living is returned at £50 per annum, and is enjoyed by the Rev. William Dixon, of Wem.
Charities.—There is an estate at Newtown, charged with the payment of £2. 10s. yearly, to be given in bread to the poor attending divine service at the chapel there. The donor of this gift is unknown. Arthur Harper, in 1787, bequeathed £90, upon trust, to place the same out at interest, and apply the produce of £50 thereof in the relief of industrious housekeepers of the townships of Newtown, Wolverley, and Northwood; and the produce of £40, the residue thereof to be distributed by the churchwardens and overseers of the parish of Prees, in the township of Darliston, on St. Thomas’s day. This legacy had never been invested as directed by the testator, but was in the hands of William Matthews, the surviving executor, when the charity commissioners published their report. Mr. Matthews pays interest for it at the rate of 4½ per cent.
Directory.—Francis Burd, gentleman; Farmers: John Hales; Mrs. Matthews, The Hall; John Matthews; Thomas Parks; John Tagg; and Samuel Wollan.
NORTHWOOD
is a small rural village, on the borders of Flintshire, four miles N.W. from Wem, which takes its name from the large wood that was formerly here and its situation in respect of Lineal Wood, which was south of it. The township contains 1,409a. 1r. 16p. of land, and in 1841 had 47 houses and 233 inhabitants. There are 21a. 1r. 14p. of land in roads and waste. Rateable value, £1,824. The tithes are commuted for £181. 15s. The soil in some places is sandy, with a mixture of gravel; in other places a clay soil prevails, and there is a small portion of moss. In 1561 the township contained six small tenements and four cottages. The great wood was cut down during the reigns of Henry VIII. and Elizabeth, so that nothing remains of it now but the name. The principal landowners are Lord Kenyon, George Bowen, Esq., Mr. James Rodenhurst, Mrs. Wilkinson, Mr. Bickerton, Mr. Lewis, Mr. Groome, John Barker, Esq., the Devisees of the late Mr. Watson, the Trustees of Wem School, Mrs. Maddocks, Mrs. Hassel, Mr. Edward Dickin, Mr. Edward Phillips, Mr. Thomas Windsor, and Mr. Walter Hales; others are also proprietors. The Duke of Cleveland is lord of the manor. This township lies contiguous to the Betchfield and Whixall mosses, where many of the labouring population are employed in cutting the moss and raising the submerged timber, which they carry to the surrounding towns for fuel; immense quantities of oak and fir trees are constantly got up. This and the neighbouring townships are noted for producing fine dairies of cheese, and the farms are occupied by practical and intelligent agriculturists. Considerable flocks of sheep are kept on the borders of Flintshire. The Redfellis brook has its rise on the fens of Whixall moss, passes through Northwood, and enters Newtown with a considerable stream, which, after heavy rains, overflows its banks, and covers the adjacent meadows. The Blackford brook divides Northwood from Flintshire. Northwood Lawns, the residence of Mrs. Wilkinson, is a pleasantly situated house, surrounded with tasteful pleasure grounds. The Hall is occupied as a farm residence.
Post Office—At Mr. Joseph Davies’s. Letters arrive from Ellesmere by gig mail at 7.30 A.M., and are despatched at 6.45 P.M.
Bowen George, farmer, The Pinfold
Brown Mr. John
Clay George, farmer
Darlington Thomas, farmer
Davies Elizabeth, grocer and shopkeeper
Davies John, farmer
Davies Joseph, victualler, Horse and Jockey Inn, and postmaster
Davies J. and Son, boot and shoemakers
Davies Thomas, blacksmith
Dobel John, cheesefactor and farmer
Dobel Thomas, cheesefactor
Ebrey John, farmer
Groom Edward, shopkeeper
Haycocks Richard, gamekeeper
Heighway John, farmer
Kynaston Arthur, butcher
Law Robert, The Border Farm
Madeley Wm., butcher and farmer
Madeley Wm., sen., farmer
Phillips Edward, Esq., agent to Lord Kenyon
Stocks James, farmer
Stocks John, wheelwright
Windsor Edwd., shopkeeper
Wilkinson Mrs., Northwood lawn
Wilkinson Mr. John
Wilkinson Rchd., gentleman
Williams John, Pinfold house
SLEAP,
a small township, two miles and a half S.W. from Wem, contains 407a. 3r. 32p. of land, of which 6a. 1r. are in roads. In 1841 there were seven houses and 57 inhabitants. Rateable value, £580. 10s. Of the above, one house and eleven persons were returned at the census of 1841 as in the parish of Middle and in the Pimhill hundred. The tithes have been commuted for £72. 4s. 10d., and apportioned to the rector of Wem. The trustees of the late Duke of Bridgewater are lords of the manor. The principal landowners are William Groom, Esq., Henry John Barker, Esq., Mrs. Thomas Betton, and the representatives of Miss Lloyd. The soil is for the most part sandy or peaty earth on a gravelly sub-soil. In the reign of Henry II. Richard de Sleap had a grant of all the village at a fee-farm rent of 16s. per annum. The vassals of the said Richard de Sleap and his heirs were obliged to grind their corn at the lord of the manor’s mill at Wem, to assist at drawing the mill stones, and cleansing the pond, and to help Hugo Pantulph, then the lord, to make his castle. The reserved rent of 16s. is still paid; but homage ceased with the forest, the repair of the castle at its demolition, working at the mill upon its alienation, and the serving the king in his wars, upon the change of all tenures by knights’ service into common socage. In 1738, Sleap was laid in ashes by a sudden fire, which spread with such rapidity, that three houses and all the outbuildings were consumed. A brief was obtained for the unfortunate sufferers.
The resident farmers are Benjamin Adams, John Chidlow, Thomas Kent, John Phillips, and Robert Whall.
SOULTON,
a small township two miles north-east from Wem, contains 672a. 0r. 15p. of land, and at the census of 1841 had 3 houses and 34 inhabitants. Rateable value, £796. The soil in some parts is of a sandy nature; in other places a clayey soil prevails. There are five and a half acres in roads and waste. The tithes have been commuted for £96. 9s. 5d., and apportioned to the rector of Wem. Viscount Hill is lord of the manor, and sole proprietor. There are several thriving plantations here, covering upwards of thirty acres of land. The Wem and Market Drayton turnpike road intersects the township. Soulton Hall is a brick structure of considerable extent, exhibiting a fine specimen of antique architecture; the exterior has an imposing aspect, and the summit is surrounded by a parapet. It was formerly a seat of the Corbets, whose arms are carved over the entrance: it is now occupied as a farm residence, and near it are extensive farm premises, chiefly of modern erection, and on the granary is the date 1783.
The residents are George Bell, farmer, the Brook; Henry Dakin, farmer, the Hall; and Thomas Williams, farmer, Dairy House.
TILLEY AND TRENCH
is a considerable village and township, situated one mile south-west from Wem, which contains 1,636a. 3r. 36p. of land; and in 1841 had 80 houses and 352 inhabitants. Rateable value, £2,418. 5s. The rent charge payable to the rector of Wem amounts to £263. 15s. 1d. The roads and waste in this township occupy 25a. 2r. The soil is various: the Trench farms are generally of a cold, reddish clay; in other parts a loam and gravelly soil predominates. Marl of a superior quality is found here in great abundance. This place no doubt took its name from Sire Tillie, who is mentioned in the list of great men who came into this country with William the Conqueror. In the Trench farm there is a close called the Castle Stead, that is, the place of the castle, whence it appears a castle had been built there, which must have been in Saxon times, for Pantulph the Norman fixed on Wem for the site of his castle, and no other was built in this parish by his ancestors. On an eminence a little above Tilley Green are the remains of a Roman camp: it is an oblong square, and contains about two acres of ground; the rampart and trench on every side may still be traced. This was probably the site of the manor house, for the Saxon lords frequently built their castles on Roman camps, on account of the strength of such places and the fortifications already raised. No doubt the Roman vallum occasioned this to be called the Trench farm. The river Roden bounds the township, and is crossed by a substantial bridge at Wem Mills. The Duke of Cleveland is lord of the manor. The principal landowners are William E. Jeffreys, Esq.; Sir Andrew Corbet, Bart.; C. Howard, Esq.; Mr. John Boughey; Colonel Wynn; A. D. Watkiss, Esq.; William Groom, Esq.; Mr. George Kynaston; Charles Oldham, Esq.; Mr. Samuel Heatley; Mr. William Kilvert; Mr. Bowers; Mr. Thomas Davies; Mr. Thomas Wood; Mr. William Evans; Mrs. Richards; the executors of S. Wycherley; and William Brooks, Esq. There is a noted mineral spring in this township, which is reckoned good for sore eyes and all cutaneous eruptions. William Price, a mason, is said to have flagged the well in consideration of having been cured of rheumatism by bathing in it. The old park, Roowood, the property of Lord Hill, and Palm’s Hill, are in this township. The poor of this township have 28s. yearly, from the bequest of Sarah Higginson, in 1727, who left £28, which was laid out in the purchase of a rent charge of 28s. per annum: the amount is now paid from land the property of Major Dickin.
Abbot Alfred, farmer
Barnet Thomas, farmer
Burgess Ed., farmer, Trench
Davies William, farmer, Park
Dowler Richard, farmer
Ebrey Thos., farmer, Trench
Evans William, farmer, Palm’s hill
Heatley Samuel, farmer
Jones Thomas, farmer
Kilvert Richard, farmer, Palm’s hill house
Kynaston William, farmer, Woodhouse
Leeke Wm., farmer, Roowood
Lewis Robert, farmer
Lloyd Miss Ann, Trench
Lloyd Wm., farmer, Trench
Menlove Mrs. Mary
Morris Rd., vict., New Inn
Oldham Charles, Esq., Tilley house
Owen James, farmer
Simons Stephen, Wain house farm
Wood Charles, gentleman
WOLVERLEY,
anciently written Wolfordeley, took its name from the proprietor of it in Saxon times. It is a pleasantly situated village and township on the road from Wem to Ellesmere, three miles north-east from the former place. The township contains 716a. 0r. 20p. of land, of which 8a. 1r. 9p. are in roads and waste. Rateable value, £1,050. 5s. The tithes are commuted for £104. 10s. 2d. The river Roden intersects the township, on the banks of which is some fine meadow land, enriched by that river occasionally overflowing its banks. The Duke of Cleveland is lord of the manor. The principal landowners are Thomas Dickin, Esq.; Mrs. Maddocks; Mr. Edward Windsor; and Edward Dickin, Esq. Wolverley Hall, in the year 1404, was the residence of William de Wolferdeley. In 1561 it was the seat of Thomas Sturry, Esq., and it subsequently came into the possession of the Corbets and Menloves. There was anciently a small domestic chapel attached to the hall. Woodlands House, the residence of Mrs. Maddocks, is a square brick structure, pleasantly situated, and beautified with pleasure grounds and shrubberies, tastefully laid out, and ornamented with choice flowers.
Directory.—Joseph Cooke, farmer, Wolverley Hall; Lewis Cook, farmer, the Leys; Joseph Harper, farmer; Mrs. Mary Maddocks, Woodlands House; John Pitchford, farmer; William Williams, farmer.
WHITCHURCH
is a parish and respectable market town salubriously situated in a picturesque country, twenty miles N.N. by E. from Shrewsbury, and 161 miles N.W. from London. The town is well built, and stands on a gentle eminence, embracing many fine points of view in the vicinity; there are many good inns and shops and respectable private residences, but some of the cottages have a mean appearance. The principal traffic is in grain and malt, and commercial intercourse is facilitated by the Ellesmere and Chester canal, and its contiguity to the Chester and Crewe railway. The fairs and markets are well attended by the agriculturists of the surrounding neighbourhood, both of Shropshire and Cheshire. The populous township of Dodington, of which a separate directory is given, may be considered a suburb to Whitchurch. From the ancient name of this place, which was Album Monasterium, or Blancminster, it is supposed that a monastery formerly existed here. Of this no account has been handed down, and no traces of the building have ever been discovered. Bishop Tanner says, “Here was an hospital of several poor brethren, to which John le Strange in the reign of Henry III., gave the town of Winelecote, which, together with the hospital, was afterwards annexed to the abbey of Haughmon.” Whether this refers to a hospital at this place or at Oswestry (since the Fitzallans, lords of Oswestry, were founders of the abbey of Haughmon) is submitted to the reader’s determination. In the 7th of Edward III., John le Strange had the liberty of free warren here, and in the 36th of the same reign a fair was granted to John, son of John le Strange de Whitchurch, on the vigil, the feast, and the morrow of the apostles St. Simon and St. Jude.
The parish of Whitchurch comprehends the townships of Alkington, Ash Magna, Ash Parva, Black Park, Brougnall, Chinnel, Dodington, Edgeley, Hinton, Hollyhurst, Tilstock, Whitchurch, Woodhouses New, and Woodhouses Old, which together in 1801 contained a population of 4,618 souls; 1831, 5,902, and in 1841 there were 1,243 houses and 6,373 inhabitants. Acres, 14,237. The parish is divided into four quarters or divisions, viz., Whitchurch quarter, which contains 2,033 acres; rateable value, £6,196. Dodington quarter, 3,186 acres; rateable value, £5,281. Tilstock quarter, 5,558 acres; rateable value, £5,809, Broughall quarter, 3,497 acres; rateable value, £3,089. The tithes of Whitchurch are commuted for £1,351, and of Marbury, Norbury, and Wirswell an appendage to the rectory of Whitchurch for £398, making a total of £1,749. The township of Wirswell, although in the county of Cheshire, is in the parish of Whitchurch. The town has a high steward, and inferior officers; the former is appointed by the lord of the manor, and holds a court leet and court baron. The land in general has a gentle undulating surface, and there is a considerable extent of pasture land in this locality of a superior quality, which produces fine dairies of cheese, and is generally considered as good as the celebrated Cheshire cheese of the neighbouring county. The soil is various, on the low grounds it is of a peaty nature, in some places a sand and gravelly soil prevails, and in other parts a strong clay predominates; marl is found in some places, which is used for improving the surface soil. The township of Whitchurch contains 2,867 acres of land, and in 1841 had 668 houses and 3,403 inhabitants. Rateable value, £5,698. 10s. The tithes of this township are commuted for £247. 16s. The principal landowners are the trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater; Thomas Boycott, Esq.; George Harper, Esq.; R. Parry Jones, Esq.; Thomas Jebb, Esq.; William Halstead Poole, Esq.; Archibald Worthington, Esq., besides whom there are upwards of two hundred small freeholders. The trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater are lords of the manor. The market is held on Friday, when the town is well supplied with butchers’ meat, butter, poultry, and other provisions, of excellent quality and abundant in quantity. The corn market is very numerously and respectably attended by the farmers of North Shropshire, Cheshire, and the county of Flint, the town lying on the verge of Shropshire is central for an extensive and fine agricultural district in the three counties. Fairs are held the second Friday in April, Whit-Monday, Friday after the 2nd of August, February 23rd, and December 1st.
The Church is a noble structure of the Tuscan order, built in the reign of Queen Anne, at an expense of about £4,000, and will accommodate about 2,000 hearers. It is dedicated to St. Alkmund, and considered by the best judges to be almost a perfect model of what a church ought to be; it consists of nave, chancel, side aisles, and lofty square tower adorned with pinnacles, and is built of red free stone; the tower contains a peal of eight musical bells, and is ornamented with a clock and sun dial,—the whole has an imposing appearance, and for elaborate workmanship and chasteness of design, is seldom equalled. The side aisles are separated from the nave by arches rising from circular pillars. The chancel is lofty and supported by fluted columns, and paved with black and white marble. The communion table is of mottled alabaster, with an oak frame beautifully carved. The organ is a fine toned instrument, which was renovated and greatly improved in the year 1849 by public subscription. The sittings are neat and appropriate, and admirably arranged, so that almost every member of the congregation has a view of the officiating minister. The church stands on the site of a former edifice, which was in the gothic style of architecture, and which fell down from age and decay, on July 31st, 1711. The monuments of the Talbots were removed from the ruins of the old structure into the present edifice, which was completed in the year 1713. Among the most remarkable of these monuments is that to our English Achilles, Sir John Talbot, the first Earl of Shrewsbury of this family, who was so renowned in France that no man in that kingdom dared to encounter him single handed. The venerable old warrior is represented in a recumbent posture, clad in armour, partly covered by his mantle of the garter; his hands are closed and uplifted, as if in prayer; his feet rest on a tablet, while his head, encircled by a coronet, reposes on his brassart. Around the tomb is the following inscription in black letter:—
“Orate pro anima prænobilis viri, Domini Joanis Talbot quandam Comitis Salopæ; Domini Furnival, Domini Verdun, Domini Strange de Blackmere et Marechalli Franciæ; qui obiit in bello apud Berdews. 7 Julii, MCCCCLIII.”
The earl was buried on this spot by his own express desire, and tradition gives the following interesting story for the circumstance:—In one of his battles in France, he was struck by an arrow from one of the cross-bows, and fell severely wounded from his horse. As he was some distance from any considerable body of his troops, the French soldiers rushed furiously to seize as a prisoner their most formidable and most dreaded enemy; him alone whose name carried terror into every castle and cottage through the broad realm of France;—or, if foiled in that, to finish if possible the campaign and his career at one blow. His faithful body guard, however, which was composed of his own immediate followers, those who held lands of him in Shropshire by feudal service, seeing the danger of their beloved chief, flew like roused lions to the rescue. A terrific conflict ensued around, and even over the old warrior who was still lying on the field. The struggle was maintained with undiminished fury for a considerable period. The shout of “St. George for Merry Englande,” was fiercely answered back by the cry of “St. Denis for France.” Each party fought hand to hand; the casques of the combatants rang with the heavy blows of the battle-axe. Not only the fate of the present battle, but of the whole campaign, the war itself depended on the result of the isolated combat. Many a stalwart Shropshire yeoman shouted from his hoarse throat his leader’s war cry, “A Talbot, to the rescue!” threw aside his weapon, which in the thronged melee he had not space to use, and springing furiously at his adversary, seized him with an iron grip, from which death alone could liberate him. The conflict ended at last in the entire defeat of the French; and the earl, to show his gratitude to his brave followers, many of whom had lost their lives in defending his, told the survivors that in memory of their courage and devotedness that day, his body should be buried in the porch of their church; that, as they had fought and strode over it while living, so should they and their children for ever pass over and guard it when dead. Sir John Talbot was created Earl of Shrewsbury by King Henry VI. He was twenty years in the king’s service abroad, and for his valour had many signal honours bestowed on him. At the siege of Chastillion his horse was shot under him, and he being dangerously wounded, died July 20th, 1453, and was buried at Roan in Normandy, but afterwards removed to Whitchurch.
There is an altar tomb, with a full length alabaster figure in clerical robes, in memory of Sir John Talbot, rector of Whitchurch, which was also taken out of the old church. There are various memorials and tablets, elegantly designed, which our limits will not allow us to notice, in memory of the Boycotts, Fowlers, Balls, Chetwoods, Sandfords, Longs, and others. A mural monument remembers Philip Henry, M.A., father of Matthew Henry, the commentator. The font is of curious workmanship, and dated 1661. The Book of Martyrs, chained to the wall, was the gift of Mr. Thomas Yates, in the year 1701, for the instruction and use of the public. An oil painting of the royal arms of England is very ancient; and there is a fine specimen of embroidery of the arms of England, with a portrait of Queen Anne, beautifully executed in needlework. The church is heated by a most perfect hot water apparatus, admirably contrived. The living is a rectory, with that of Marbury annexed; valued in the king’s book at £44. 11s. 8d.; now returned at £2,004; in the patronage of the trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater, and incumbency of the Rev. William Egerton, M.A.; curates, Rev. Edward Pickering, Rev. John Thomas Nash, and Rev. Robert R. Turnbull; clerk, Richard Crosse. The rectory is a commodious and pleasantly situated residence, a short distance from the church, with pleasure grounds and shrubberies tastefully laid out. There are 35a. 0r. 17p. of glebe land.
The Baptist Chapel stands a little back from the road, near to Greenend street, and will hold about three hundred hearers. The interior is neatly pewed, and provided with a gallery. This place of worship is respectably attended. The Methodist Chapel, situate in St. Mary’s street, is a commodious structure which will hold six hundred worshippers. It is neatly pewed and fitted up with galleries. There is a Sunday school in connection with this place of worship, which is numerously attended. The Baptists have also a Sunday school in connection with their chapel.
The Free Grammar School and residence for the master is a noble pile of buildings, situated in Bargates street, and was erected in the year 1548. The school is a chaste and elegant structure, ornamental to the town, and highly creditable to the feoffees under whose auspices it was erected. The school was founded in 1550, and we find in the preamble to the schedule of a deed of feoffment, bearing date 16th September, 1550, that Sir John Talbot, late parson of Whitchurch, was resolved to have founded in his lifetime a free school in the town of Whitchurch, at his own expense, for the bringing up of youth in virtue and learning; and that he had delivered into the hands of Thomas Cotton the sum of £200 towards the erection and establishment of the said school, but that the said Sir John Talbot died before the accomplishment of the same; and that with the said sum and other moneys given by charitably disposed persons, there had been purchased a messuage called Cow Hall, to the intent that they should observe the several articles contained in the deed of feoffment. The substance of the statutes contained in this deed is,—That the feoffees, with the parson of the parish, if he should be inhabiting there, should within six weeks after the death, departure, or removal of any schoolmaster appoint another unmarried man, if he could be conveniently provided, and if not a married man—honest, virtuous, and well learned in Latin and literature—to be schoolmaster there, such schoolmaster to be presented, within eight days after his election, to the diocesan or his chancellor to be examined, and if he should be thought competent on such examination, then to be admitted. That if the feoffees and parson should not appoint within six weeks, the Earl of Shrewsbury should appoint a master. That if any of the feoffees should depart out of the parish and reside elsewhere, he should release his interest to the other feoffees. The master was to receive £10 per annum, and to have the appointment of the usher, who was to receive five marks yearly. That the feoffees should not demise any of the premises for more than ten years, and that they should yearly account in the parish church of Whitchurch for the rents and profits of the same. If the rents and profits should at any time exceed the sum before appointed to be paid to the schoolmaster and usher, the feoffees should deliver the overplus to the churchwardens, to be kept in a chest in the said church, for the repairs of the schoolhouse, and for the relief of such schoolmaster as should have laudably taught in the said school, until by sickness or age he should have given over, or have been removed from his place, and for the relief of poor fatherless and friendless scholars. That after the death or removal of a schoolmaster, the usher should be elected in his place if he should be thought by the parson and feoffees learned and meet for the same. That there should be taught in the school children of “all countries that will come.” William Thomas, in 1662, conveyed 16 acres of land in the parish of Ubley, in the County of Somerset; two thirds of the rent to be paid to the master of this school and one third to the usher. Edward Beddon and Ann, his wife, left certain lands, the rents to be employed to the sole use of the school at Whitchurch. All the real estates above-mentioned, with the school and other premises held therewith, have from time to time been conveyed to new trustees. In 1725 proceedings in Chancery took place between the master and usher and the then trustees. The matters in dispute were the amount of the salaries to which the schoolmaster and usher were entitled, the right of the master to take any payments from the scholars, and the right of the trustees to remove the master from his office. By a decree, made 16th December, 1725, it was ordered that the schoolmaster should have only £10 per annum, and the usher five marks from the Cowhall estate; that the rest of the profits should go to the uses mentioned in the statutes; that the rents of the Ubley estate should be divided as directed by the donor; and the rent of the Beddow estate in like manner; and it was declared that it was the intention of the donor that all people’s children should be taught in the said school gratis, and that the rector and feoffees had power to remove the master. In a subsequent cause, between the Attorney-General, at the relation of the Bishop of Hereford, it was decreed, on March 21st, 1747, that there should be paid to the head master £13. 6s. 8d., and to the usher £6. 13s. 4d. in addition to their former salaries, and so much as should remain after the payment of repairs and other incidental expenses relating to the school should be deposited in the chest; that whenever £100 should have arisen from such surplus, the same might be placed out on government securities for the augmentation of the salaries of the master and usher, in the proportions of two thirds to the former and one third to the latter, until such time as there should be a decayed master or poor scholar entitled to a subsistance according to the donor’s intention. The Cowhall estate is situate at Backford, in Cheshire, and consists of 153a. 3r. 37p. of land, with a farm house and suitable outbuildings, let at a yearly rent of £200, but the trustees, in 1822, agreed to allow the tenant £20 per annum, to be laid out in manure. In the year 1822, timber was cut from this farm and sold for £200, which was partly applied in repairing the farm premises: the residue, £80 13s. 10d., was paid to the trustees. The Ubley estate, near Bristol, consists of 26a. 1r. 4p. of land, and is let for £30 a year. There is also a yearly sum of £52 arising from lands the gift of Edward Beddow. The trustees, when the charity commissioners published their report, were possessed of £6,400 in three per cent. consols, which has arisen from the investment of surplus rents, in accordance with the decree of Chancery. The gross annual income amounts to £454, from which the master had a salary of £210. 8s. 6d., and the usher £97 per annum. Upon application being made to the trustees, on behalf of orphan or friendless children, such as are considered fit objects, are appointed at a meeting of the trustees, they also receive clothing and are supplied with books. The Rev. James R. Peake, M.A., is the master.
The National School is situated in New street, Dodington. The British School is also in Dodington, where they will be found noticed. The Church Sunday School is a modern erection of brick, situated near the church. The Infant School, in Claypit street, is a neat building, erected in 1848.
The Savings’ Bank is situated in St. Mary’s street. The capital stock of the bank on November 20th, 1850, amounted to £52,954. 0s. 4d., at which period there were 1,489 separate accounts, of which nine were charitable societies, having deposits amounting to £518. 3s. 4d., and nineteen friendly societies, with deposits amounting to the sum of £6,898. 2s. 10d. Of the total number of accounts there were 790 depositors, whose respective balances did not exceed £20; 385 were above £20, and not exceeding £50; 187 were between £50 and £100; 62 above £100 and not exceeding £150; 33 above that sum, and not exceeding £200; and four above £200. President: The Right Hon. George Lord Kenyon. Secretary and Actuary: Mr. S. H. Parker. The bank was established in the year 1818.
The House of Industry, situate on Deer Moss, was established in 1794, and is under the management of twelve directors or guardians, who nominate a chairman. They constitute a board for the regulation of the house and the paupers belonging to the fourteen townships of the parish of Whitchurch, which are embraced in the jurisdiction of the board. The house will accommodate 150 inmates; the present number on the books is 63. Chairman: Archibald Worthington. Vice-Chairman: Mr. Thomas Andrews. Treasurer: George Corser, Esq. Surgeon: Mr. Thomas Groom. Clerk: Mr. Robert B. Jones. Governor: Thomas Huxley. Matron: Mrs. Huxley. Relieving Officer and Assistant Overseer: Thomas Huxley. Schoolmistress: Mary Price.
The County Court Office for the recovery of debts, not exceeding £50, is situated in St. Mary’s street. The court embraces within its jurisdiction the following townships and places, viz.:—Whitchurch, Alkington 2, Ash Magna 3, Ash Parva 3, Dodington 1, Black Park 2, Broughall 3, Edgeley 2, Hinton 2, Hollyhurst and Chinnell 2, Tilstock 3, New Woodhouses 4, Old Woodhouses 4, Ightfield 4, Hanmer 7, Betisfield 8, Bronington 6, Halghton 9, Tybroughton 6, Wellington 9, Iscoyd 6, Agden 4, Chidlow 4, Chorlton 8, Cuddington 8, Malpas 5, Newton by Malpas 7, Old Castle 7, Overton 7, Church Shocklach 11, Shocklach Oviatt 11, Stockton 6, Whichaugh 7, Wigland 5, Threapwood 10, Audlem 10, Bickley 6, Buerton 11, Dodcot and Wilkesley 8, Hampton 7, Macefen 4, Marbury with Quoisly 3, Norbury 5, Tushingham with Grindley 3, and Wirswall 3. Judge: Uvedale Corbet, Esq., Aston Hall, near Shiffnal. Clerk: Mr. Benjamin Lakin. Assistant Clerk: Charles Foulkes. High Bailiff: Mr. Thomas Whittingham, jun. Bailiff: William Baxter, Auctioneer and Broker: Mr. William Lakin. The figures refer to the mileage from Whitchurch.
The News and Reading Room is held in a commodious and neatly fitted up room in the Market Hall; it is under the management of a committee of gentlemen, and supported by annual subscriptions.
The Market Hall, situate in High street or Market street, is a spacious building of brick, with stone finishings and supported by stone pillars. Underneath the hall is a spacious area, where the corn-market is held. Here the farmers assemble in considerable numbers on the market day, which has a business-like and animated appearance while the market continues.
The Assembly Rooms is at the Victoria Inn, High street.
The Theatre is a small structure, situated in Mill street.
The Stamp Office is in High street, Mr. Thomas Joyce distributor.
The Excise Office is at the Lord Hill Hotel, in Watergate street. The Pensioners’ and Corn Returns Offices are at the same place.
The Gas Works were established in 1826, by Messrs. Edwards and Smith, and are now the property of Mr. William Smith, engineer. There are two small gasometers, which will hold conjointly 3,600 cubic feet of gas. A charge of about 10s. per 1,000 cubic feet is made to the consumer.
The Circulating Library is at Mr. Robert Barrow Jones’s, in High street
Petty Sessions are held for the Whitchurch division on the last Friday in every month. Magisterial business is also transacted at the office in St. Mary’s street, on Mondays at nine o’clock, A.M., and on Fridays at eleven, A.M. The magistrates who usually attend are Sir Robert Chambre Hill, Bart., John W. Dod, Esq., M.P., William H. Poole, Esq., and George Bowen, Esq. Clerk: Benjamin Lakin. Deputy Clerk: Charles Foulkes.
The religious and charitable institutions, which have for their object the promotion of Christian knowledge and to ameliorate suffering humanity, are liberally supported in Whitchurch. The members of the Established Church and the various sectarian communities have their respective Bible, Missionary, and Tract Societies. The Depository of the British and Foreign Bible Society is at Mrs. Clutton’s, in Bargate street. The Dispensary is at the Market Hall. The Depôt for Coals for the poor is in Watergate street. There is a Library of Miscellaneous Works at the National School, which has been established for the benefit of the humbler classes of society. For Benefit and Sick Societies the town stands pre-eminent; they are efficiently conducted, the members are very numerous, and several of the societies have a very considerable accumulated capital. The Whitchurch Old Friendly Society, established in 1754, in 1850 had 264 members and a capital stock of £1,667. 17s. 11½d. Mr. John Fowles is secretary, and Mr. Henry Corser treasurer.
The Lock-up and Police-office, situated in Clay-pit street, was built in 1850. It consists of two cells for the reception of prisoners before committal by the magistrates; and also a residence for the superintendent constable.
The Bowling Green, in St. John’s lane, affords healthful and amusing recreation to the residents of the town, is supported by subscription, and under the management of a committee of gentlemen and tradesmen.
There is an Almshouse for six poor decayed housekeepers, liberally endowed, as will be seen on reference to the charities of the parish. A School-house adjoins the almshouse, and here about fifty children are instructed.
The commodious premises, formerly occupied as a silk-mill here, have been purchased by Mr. Thomas Burgess, an extensive cheese-factor and corn-merchant, and are now converted into a warehouse. There is a wharf at the bottom of Mill street, on the banks of the Chester and Ellesmere canal, which is now the property of the Shropshire Union Canal and Railway Company. Goods are forwarded to London, Manchester, Liverpool, and Chester by the company; who are also general carriers to all parts of England. Of the Castle at Whitchurch, which stood upon Castle-hill, not a vestige remains. Some portion of the walls are said to have been standing in the year 1760.
During the years 1830 and 1831, the inhabitants of Whitchurch and the neighbourhood were held in constant alarm by a succession of incendiary fires. On the 14th of December the first fire commenced on the premises of a poor man of the name of Heath. On the following day the out-buildings of the Swan Inn burst into flames; and on the 21st the out-premises belonging to Mr. Nunnerley, of Prees Heath, were destroyed. On the 7th of January, 1831, Mr. Moss, of Heath lane, had a stack burnt; and on the day following the barn of Mr. G. T. Whitfield and two cottages were destroyed. On the 12th, a barn belonging to the same gentleman was discovered to be on fire. A stack was fired belonging to Mr. Huxley on the 2nd of February. On the 10th of March, a second fire broke out on the premises of Mr. Nunnerley, of Prees Heath, and so rapid were the flames that the whole of the out-buildings were entirely destroyed before the arrival of the fire-engines from Whitchurch. Five cows, two horses, and ten pigs, were also destroyed. The next fires which took place were the stacks of Mr. Bradbury. On the 4th of April, the farm buildings of Mr. Huxley, of Tilstock, and a great quantity of grain, were entirely consumed. The same evening, a range of buildings, on the road from Prees Heath to Tilstock, burst into flames, and the fire proceeded with so much rapidity that no efforts could check them. On the 13th of September, a stack belonging to Mr. Nunnerley, of Prees Heath, was consumed. The stack-yard and out buildings of Mr. Booth, and the stacks of Mr. Darlington, were in flames at the same time, and very great damage sustained. Shortly after this the incendiaries were brought to justice, and Richard Whitfield, a farmer and maltster, was transported for life, at the Shropshire Spring Assizes of 1832, and James Lea and Joseph Grindley were executed.
Whitchurch was the birth place of Dr. Tylston, an eminent physician in 1663. He was admitted into Trinity College, Oxford, and his brilliant talents adorned by a deportment in all respects exemplary soon attracted the notice of Dr. Bathurst, then president of the college, whose able directions much assisted him. When about Bachelor’s standing, his inclinations suggested the study of physic, as the employment for life, and having by an acquaintance with natural philosophy laid a good foundation for medical enquiries, he speedily turned the course of his reading into that channel. After he had left college he removed to London, where he studied industriously under Sir Richard Blackmore. On his return he commenced his professional career at Whitchurch, and though young, quickly obtained celebrity. At the request of many friends in Chester he quitted his native town for that city in the year 1690, and by successful practice continued to increase in fame. His mental powers rose above the ordinary standard, and in the prosecution of an enquiry he regarded the opinions of others rather as guides to direct than authoratitives to govern the efforts of his own mind. After his attainments had become considerable, such was his thirst for knowledge that he redeemed for study all the time his professional engagements would allow. The writings of antiquity, especially those of Cicero, Seneca, and Plutarch, afforded him great delight. In the works of Pliny he took much pleasure, and shortly before his death read with great satisfaction the writings of Lactantius. Passages which illustrated any portion of Scripture he transcribed into an interleaved Bible, or other repository. In his professional pursuits he was as remarkable for charity to the poor as for diligence, fidelity, and concern for his patients. The Scriptures he perused with unfeigned delight, and was influenced by their authority as a supreme rule. By frequent meditation he became conversant in an unusual degree with the instructive doctrines and sublime mysteries of the Gospel. When a subject particularly interesting filled his attention, he clothed his conceptions in writing; these have survived him, and not only show the evidences of erudition, but of an experimental acquaintance with revealed religion. He died on the 8th of April, 1699, in the 36th year of his age. The celebrated Matthew Henry bears honourable testimony to his worth, in a letter to a friend shortly after his death, from which the following is an extract:—“I find it easy to say a great deal to aggravate the affliction we are under in the death of Dr. Tylston, whom we miss daily. What improvement I have made in learning of late years has been owing as much to my converse with him as to any one thing. He was the ornament of our congregation, and a great reputation to us.”
This town was the residence of Nicholas Barnard, a man of great learning, chaplain to Archbishop Usher, and Dean of Armagh. In the time of the rebellion in Ireland he was a great sufferer, and often in danger of his life; he consequently fled to England, and was presented with the rectory of Whitchurch, where he lived till his death in 1661. Abraham Wheloch, a person of great learning, and noted as a linguist of distinguished abilities, was born in this town. He was author of a Persian translation of the New Testament, which task he undertook in the hope that it might open the way for the conversion of the natives of Persia to Christianity. He greatly assisted Dr. Brian Walton in his Polyglot Bible, and published an edition of the works of the venerable Bede. He was fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge, library keeper, Arabic professor, and minister of St. Sepulchre’s. His death took place in 1654.
There are 333a. 3r. 0p. of waste land called Whitchurch Heath, which has a barren and sterile appearance. It has a flat surface, covered with gravel, and incapable of cultivation.
Charities.—Samuel Higginson, by will, bearing date 28th September, 1697, devised certain lands in Whixall, and gave the sum of £200 in trust, for the erection of an almshouse, and the benefit of poor persons appointed as inmates; and if any poor relations of the family or kin should apply, he directed that they should be first admitted to receive the benefit thereof. Jane Higginson, widow of the above Samuel Higginson, by her will, in 1707, gave £5 per annum to five decayed tradesmen’s widows in Ludlow, in consideration that the five poor widows should take care to keep the chancel in Ludlow church clean. She also gave to the rector of Ludlow and his successors £5 per annum. And she gave all her lands and tenements in the counties of Salop, Flint, and Chester, in trust, and after payment of certain legacies, she gave for the use of her own and her husband’s almhouse in Whitchurch £12 per annum, charged upon her estate at Ash, in the county of Chester, the necessary repairs of the almshouse to be first deducted thereout; and she directed that the sum of £7. 10s. per annum, given by her daughter for the support of the said almshouse, should also be paid out of her estate at Ash. She also gave to the poorest and most necessitous children of the parish of Hanmer the sum of £6, payable once in five years, whereof 20s. was designed for their clothing, and the rest to be bestowed for the benefit of the children, and £6 in like manner to the parish of Ellesmere. And she gave the debts due to her to build a schoolhouse upon the piece of ground lying between her almshouses and those of the town, and bequeathed £10 per annum to the teacher, and 20s. yearly to buy English books. She directed her trustees to meet on the 24th June, yearly, to settle the accounts, and left 30s. yearly for their expenses, and 10s. to the minister to preach a sermon on the same day.
Under the will of Samuel Higginson, an almshouse was built consisting of six tenements, and also a schoolhouse. These premises, with small gardens attached to the almshouses, comprise the whole of the property devised by him in Whitchurch, except a small parcel which was sold to the parish for £10, for the purpose of building other almhouses thereon. The Whixall estate consists of about 22 acres of land, producing a yearly rental of £42. The property devised by Mrs. Higginson consists of a messuage and land containing 110a. 2r. 20p. let at a rent of £140. Certain lands and a house at Milton Green, comprising in the whole 40a. 3r. 30p., producing a yearly rental of £40. The trustees took no estate at Ash in the county of Chester, and the yearly sum of £12 left as payable out of the Ash estate to the almspeople is considered as payable out of her other estates. The rents above mentioned amounts to £252 per annum, out of which each of the almspeople receive £4. 4s. yearly at Midsummer, and £2. 2s. on each of the other quarter days. The sum of £6 is transmitted every fifth year to Hanmer; and a yearly stipend of £10 and an allowance of £2 for coal is paid to the master of the national school, who teaches the boys in a school erected by subscriptions for that purpose; the girls are taught in the school adjoining the almshouse, built according to the directions of Mrs. Higginson. Out of the residue £15. 15s. is distributed among the poor of Great Ash, Little Ash, and Tilstock, and a considerable amount is given in small sums to the poor of Whitchurch and the vicinity.
Thomas Benyon, in 1707, charged certain premises in the township of Alkington with the payment of 40s. per annum, for the benefit of the preaching minister of the then new erected Presbyterian meeting house in Dodington, to continue so long as such minister should officiate there and no longer, and that the residue of the yearly rents should be applied in educating so many poor children of the parish of Whitchurch as could be conveniently taught therein; and he directed that if preaching at the said meeting house should cease, or none be there by a Presbyterian minister, the said payment of 40s. should cease, and be applied for educating the said poor children. The property devised by Mr. Benyon contains 22a. 1r. 14p., and is let for £50 per annum. The nomination of the free scholars is left to the members of the Presbyterian congregation, instead of being appointed by the trustees, as directed by the testator.
Mary Whetton, by her will, bearing date March, 1811, gave to the rector of Whitchurch £100, navy five per cents., in trust, to pay the interest half yearly among the widows of Higginson’s almshouses. A portion of this stock having been sold for the payment of the legacy duty, and the navy five per cents. having been converted into new four per cents., there is now in respect of this charity £94. 10s. new four per cents., standing in the name of certain trustees. The dividends, amounting to £3. 15s. 6d., are distributed as directed by the donor.
Phillip’s Charity.—The particulars of James Phillip’s charity for the providing a lecture every Thursday in the parish church of Whitchurch, and for the supplying the poor with flannel, will be found in the account of the charities for the town of Shrewsbury.
John Gossage, by will, 1671, gave to the poor of the parish of Whitchurch the sum of £2. 12s. per annum, to provide twelve pennyworth of bread every Lord’s day. He also gave a similar bequest to the poor of the parish of Plumstead, in Kent, and for the payment of the same he charged his lands in Plumstead and Erith, and gave the residue of the proceeds to St. Thomas’s Hospital. This rent charge is received from the treasurer of St. Thomas’s Hospital, and distributed to the poor in bread.
Ralph Brereton, haberdasher, of London, by his will, date May 1st, 1630, among other charities bequeathed £250 to purchase a yearly dole for ever for the poor of Whitchurch. In 1635 this bequest was laid out in the purchase of 21 acres of land in Edgeley, and this land was sold in the year 1804 for the sum of £1,230. This sale was supposed to have been authorized by an act of parliament, passed 32nd George III., for building a house of industry at Whitchurch, whereby it was enacted that all lands, rents, hereditaments, and sums of money, and all charitable gifts, legacies, and benefactions belonging to the parish of Whitchurch, and applicable to the relief of the poor, not being directed by the donors to be applied to any private person, or for the relief of any particular poor, should be invested in the directors who were thereby incorporated. And it was thereby declared that it should be lawful for them to dispose of the same, and apply the money for carrying on the purposes of the act, or otherwise in aid of the poor’s rate. At the time the property was sold it was let for £17 a year, and this sum has been paid annually by the directors of the house of industry to the churchwardens, to be disposed of as the charity of Ralph Brereton. The amount is added to the yearly sums of £2 12s. paid from Gossages charity, £1 from Griffith’s charity, and £8 from the church rate, probably in respect of some benefactions which were applied many years ago in rebuilding the church. From this fund eleven dozen penny loaves are distributed every Sunday, ten penny loaves in Tilstock chapel, and the remainder in the parish church.
A yearly sum of £1, left by Morris Griffith, is charged on land called the Green Field, an estate belonging to Mrs. Ann Brown, whose tenants pay the amount, which is added to the produce of Brereton’s charity. Several sums of money left at different periods and by various donors, amounting in the whole to £340, were held by the church-wardens and overseers for the use of the poor; of this sum £300 was laid out in the purchase of a rent charge issuing out of certain land in Alkington. The yearly sum of £15 is paid to the treasurer of the house of industry, and it is applied for the general purposes of that establishment in pursuance of the provisions contained in the act of 32nd George III., already noticed in the account of Brereton’s charity. Of the above sum £55 was the gift of John Taylor, in consideration of which one dozen of penny loaves are distributed every Sunday, according to the intentions of the donor. The residue of the sum of £340 was probably laid out with other money, as hereafter mentioned.
The churchwardens and overseers of the poor, in the year 1699, purchased an estate in Broughall, with the sum of £100, the gift of Edward Williams, and a further sum of £110, part of the poors’ money. It does not appear what specific benefactions were comprised in the sum of £110 above mentioned. There are, however, a great number of gifts and legacies recorded in the church, to the amount of £492; and in the purchase of the Broughall and Alkington estates, before mentioned, £410 is accounted for. It is probable that the residue, with some other money, was laid out in re-building the church, and was the origin of the payment of the sum of £8 from the church rates, which is distributed in bread, as already mentioned under the head of Brereton’s charity. The estate at Broughall consists of 14 acres, and is let at a rent of £21 per annum, one-fourth of which has always been paid to the master of the grammar school, and three-fourths to the account of the directors of the house of industry, under the provisions of an act to which we have before alluded.
At a court held for the manor of Whitchurch, 26th January, 1630, John Rawlinson D.D., and Catherine his wife, surrendered certain lands to the use of Richard Alport, and Joyce his wife, in tail, and for want of issue, to the use of Richard Alport and his heirs, they paying £12 yearly out of the said lands to the churchwardens of Whitchurch, to the use of the poor of the said parish. The estate thus charged with the yearly payment of £12 lies near the town of Whitchurch, and is now called Alport’s land. It was in the possession of the assignees of Samuel Fowles, when the charity commissioners published their report. The amount is distributed among the poor of the parish on St. Thomas’s day. It is stated in the parliamentary returns of 1786, that a Mr. Cotton left a rent charge of £4 yearly to the poor of Whitchurch. The sum of £4 is now paid in respect of this charity from the Alkington hall estate. The churchwardens receive £9 annually, about November, from the Company of Drapers in London, as the amount of the gifts of Roger Cotton, William Cotton, and Sir Allen Cotton. Thirty-two sixpenny loaves are given away to poor persons as the charity of Mr. Evans, on Good Friday.
Clement Sankey, D.D., rector of Whitchurch, by his will bearing date 27th September, 1706, gave to the poor of this parish the sum of £100, to continue under the care of the overseers of the poor and their successors; half the interest to be disposed of in bread every Lord’s day, at their discretion, and the remainder to be distributed on St. Thomas’s day. The amount of this legacy was paid to the churchwardens in 1714, and applied towards the building of the church; half the interest is paid from the church rate, and the other half from the poors’ rate.
Elizabeth Turton, in 1794, bequeathed £500 in trust, to be laid out in government or other securities, as her trustees should think fit, the profits thereof to be distributed among poor persons belonging to the parish of Whitchurch. By a codicil to her will, dated 1796, the testatrix directed that the residue of her estate and effects, subject to the payment of her debts and legacies, should be converted into money, and the produce paid to the same trustees, for the benefit of the poor. John Hand, one of the trustees named in her will, gave £200 upon the same trusts, and in augmentation of the charity. From the legacy of £500 bequeathed, £30 was deducted as legacy duty, and the residue was invested in 1801, in the purchase of £839. 8s. 4d. three per cent. consols. The following stock has been subsequently purchased, with the produce of the residuary estate, viz., November, 1801, £200; January, 1805, £800; July, 1816, £100; November, 1816, £200; and in 1818, in order to make £2,200, £60. 11s. 8d. was purchased. For the distribution of these charities, the trustees meet annually, three weeks or a month before the 19th of January, and select such poor widows, poor housekeepers, and other poor persons belonging to the parish of Whitchurch, and not receiving parochial relief, as they think the most fit objects of charity. Each poor person receives from 5s. to 20s., according to the necessities of the case.
Richard Woollam, by his will, bearing date June 23rd, 1801, bequeathed £500 in trust, to place the same out on real or personal security, and to dispose of the produce weekly in threepenny loaves, to be distributed by the churchwardens every Sunday morning, after divine service, in the parish church. When the trustees, by death or removal from the parish, should be reduced to two, the testator directed the survivors to assign the trust money to three other persons resident in the parish of Whitchurch. This legacy has been invested in the funds, and the dividends are disposed of as directed by the donor.
Brereton Grafton, in 1811, bequeathed £300 stock in the three per cent. consols, upon trust, to apply the produce weekly in the purchase of threepenny loaves, to be disposed of in like manner with Woollam’s charity. In respect of this and Woollam’s gift, there is £1,120. 2s, 7d. three per cent. consols standing in the name of trustees, and the dividends, amounting to £33. 12s. per annum, are disposed of in the purchase of bread, which is given away every Sunday.
Francis Henry Egerton, Earl of Bridgewater, by his will, bearing date 29th August, 1828, bequeathed to the overseers and churchwardens of Whitchurch-cum-Marbury, £2,000, to be by them laid out in the public funds, and the dividends thereof to be expended by the rector for the time being, according to his sole will and pleasure, without being subject to any control whatsoever, for the use, benefit and relief of the poor of the said parish.
Post Office, St. Mary’s street. Mr. Richard Crosse, postmaster. Letters arrive from London and various parts of England at 5.30 A.M., and are despatched at 7 P.M.; letters from Chester and the west of England arrive at 7 A.M., and are despatched at 7.30 P.M.
Ackers Ann, shopkeeper, Watergate street
Allen Benjamin, builder, Newtown
Allen Charles, butcher, Watergate street
Allenson William, shoemaker, Claypit street
Allwood and Andrews, drapers and silk mercers, High street
Amson John, blacksmith, Grindley brook
Arden Edwin, coach proprietor, High street
Arrowsmith Thomas, cabinet maker, Green-end street
Baker Thomas, straw-bonnet dealer, High st
Barber William, hosier, Watergate street
Bass Charles, draper, High street
Bate John, flour dealer, High street
Bather John, beerhouse, Watergate street
Batho George, shopkeeper, Bargates street
Baxter William, shopkeeper, Green-end st
Beacall Mrs., Watergate street
Bebbington John, shopkeeper, Newtown st
Beck Edward, chemist, Watergate street
Bolas Susannah, milliner, Back street
Bottwood William, hairdresser, Watergate st
Boughey Elizabeth, dressmaker, Castle hill
Boughey William, cabinet maker, Newtown
Bradbury Thomas, cattle dealer, Claypit st
Bradbury Francis, victualler, Coach and Horses, High street
Bradshaw George, victualler, Swan Hotel and Commercial House, Watergate street
Bradshaw John, watchmaker, High street
Bradshaw John, shopkeeper, High street
Breeze William, shopkeeper, Newtown
Brereton George, currier, Watergate street
Bright William, confectioner, High street
Brookes and Lee, solicitors, Dodington
Brookes Miss, Green-end street
Bromfield John, surgeon, Green-end street
Broster John, shopkeeper, Green-end
Brown John, surgeon, Claypit street
Brown Sml., victualler, Eight Bells, High st
Brown William, grocer, High street
Burgess Ralph W., factor, Newtown
Burgess and Son, corn and cheese factors
Burgess Thomas, Esq., Small-brook Lodge
Caldecott Thomas, seedsman, High street
Cartwright Mary, stay-maker, Sherrunans, High street
Cartwright William Andrew, registrar and veterinary surgeon, Watergate street
Carver William, fish & game dealer, High st
Churton George, timber merchant, High st
Churton John, cabinet maker, High street
Churton William Parker, auctioneer, High st
Clay Charles, Esq., Newtown
Clay Charles, jun., solicitor, Newtown
Clay Mrs. Broughton, Claypit street
Clutton Mrs., Missionary Bible Repository
Clutton Thomas, whitesmith, Green-end st
Colclough Sarah, pot dealer, High street
Cooke George, Josh., and Henry, coopers, High street
Cooke Miss, boarding-school, St. Mary’s st
Cooper Edward, shopkeeper, High street
Corser George, Esq., St. Mary’s street
Corser Henry, gentleman, High street
Corser Miss Letitia, St. Mary’s street
Corser, the Misses, St. Mary’s street
Corser The Misses, Green end
Cotgreave Richard, saddler, High street
Cotton Captain, R.N., Allport Cottage
Cox John, wheelwright, Mill street
Crosse George, tailor & draper, St. Mary’s st
Crosse Richard, postmaster, St. Mary’s street
Crosse Thos., tailor and draper, Claypit st
Crosse Thomas, painter, Bargates street
Davy The Misses Mary & Betsey, St. Mary’s street
Davies William, shopkeeper, Newtown
Dawson Thomas, victualler, Fox and Goose, Green-end street
Dimmock The Misses, Bargates
Dodd George, plumber, High street
Done James, draper, High street
Dunning John, shopkeeper, Watergate street
Eastham Rev. Theophilus, M.A., St. Mary’s street
Edge John, woodturner, Green end
Edge John, clog and patten maker, Pepper st
Edge William, beerhouse, Newtown
Edwards John, Brick-kiln lane farm
Edwards Thomas, plumber, High street
Egerton Rev. William Henry, M.A., The Rectory
Elliott James, Allport farm
Elliott Thomas, cheese factor, Tarporley road
Etches James Goulburn, solicitor, St. Mary’s street
Evans William, currier, Green-end street
Evans Thomas, blacksmith, Carlow’s yard
Evanson late, (Simms John, manager,) chemist and druggist, High street
Farrell Edward, fishmonger, Pepper street
Fenna Thomas, Wickstead farm
Foulkes Charles, clerk, County Court
France William, The Moss farm
Gaskin Miss Ann, Chester road
Godsal P. L., Esq., Iscoid Park
Goodall Mr. John, Belvedere house
Gorse James, grocer, High street
Grafton John, shoemaker, Castle hill
Green Charles, victualler, Victoria Hotel, High street
Green Thomas Fallows, shoemaker, High st
Griffiths Samuel, confectioner, Newtown
Griffiths Thomas, baker, Green-end street
Griffiths William, beerhouse, Yardington
Groom Samuel, surveyor, Claypit street
Groom Thomas, surgeon, St. Mary’s street
Hanmer Sir John, M.A., Bettisfield Hall
Hales Philip, Denston’s farm
Harper George, grocer and glover, Watergate street
Harper and Parry Jones, solicitors, St. Mary’s street
Harris Thomas, victualler, Bull’s Head, Watergate street
Harrison Robert, inland revenue officer, Green end
Hassall John and William, High street
Hassall Thomas, Hadley farm
Hassall William, maltster, Castle hill
Henshall Robert, victualler, Greyhound, Bargates street
Hesketh John, shoemaker, Green-end street
Hesketh William, patten maker, Green-end st
Hewitt Ann, shopkeeper, Claypit street
Hewitt Ann, school, St. John’s street
Hewlett Richard, shoemaker, High street
Hinton Catherine, Watergate street
Hinton Elizabeth, milliner, Green-end street
Hogan John, fruiterer, Claypit street
Hort Edward, horse-breaker, Claypit street
Howell Edward, brazier, High street
Hughes Richard, gentleman, Beech cottage
Humpstone John, canal clerk, Wharf
Huxley Thomas, Deer-moss house
Jackson Lucy, seminary, Dodington street
Jarvis James, victualler, George and Dragon, Green-end street
Jarvis John, clockmaker, Green-end street
Jarvis William, victualler, Golden Ball, Pepper street
Jebb Thomas, Corn miller, Wrexham road
Jenkins George, architect, Green-end street
Johnson Robert, china and glass dealer, High street
Joinson John, coach builder, Green-end
Jones Barrow, wine merchant, Pepper street
Jones Edward, wine merchant, St. Mary’s st
Jones Edward, shopkeeper, Green-end street
Jones John, gunmaker, Watergate street
Jones John, victualler, Star Inn, Watergate street
Jones Miss Ann, Watergate street
Jones Mrs. Honor, hotel-keeper, Watergate street
Jones Robert Barrow, gentleman, Pepper st
Jones Robert Barrow, printer, High street
Jones Richard Parry, Esq., Church street
Jones Thomas, butcher, High street
Jones William, shoemaker, Yardington
Joyce Thomas and Son, jeweller, High street
Keable Wm. Clarke, commercial academy, Chester road
Keay Samuel, veterinary surgeon, Green-end street
Kempster Benjamin, hairdresser, Watergate street
Kempster Mr. Thomas, Claypit street
Kent Martha, victualler, Red Cow, Pepper st
Kent William, gentleman, Green-end street
Kent William Corbet, Esq., Green-end street
Kenyon Lord, Gredington Hall
Lakin Benjamin, solicitor, St. Mary’s street
Lakin William, auctioneer, High street
Large James, victualler, Black Bear, High st
Lee Joseph, Esq., Red-brook house
Lee John, Clap-gates farm
Lee John, victualler, Black Lion, High street
Lee Thomas Wood, Esq., Oak bank
Lewis Edward, shoemaker, High street
Lewis William, chandler, Watergate street
Lomax John, Laurel-bank house
Lowe John, Esq., bank, High street
Lowe John, draper, High street
Lowe Thomas, bone and coal dealer, Pepper street
Maddocks John, plumber, Green-end street
Maddocks Thomas, The Lodge farm
Mellor Thomas, flour dealer, High street
Milnes Joseph, butcher, Bull ring
Miller Mrs., Girls’ Free School
Morris Henry, bank accountant, High street
Morris John Harper, High street
Moyle Richard, draper, High street
Nash Rev. John, St. John’s street
Newling Henry, printer, Bull ring
Nokes Thomas, clothier, High street
Nunnerley Thomas, The Fields farm
Ormiston William, bank clerk, High street
Oulston Eliza, milliner, Bargates
Oulton Samuel, builder, Bargates
Overton Charles Griffiths, grocer, High street
Overton Thomas, Mill-bank farm
Parker Samuel H., bank manager, St. Mary’s street
Parton Jeremiah and William, wire workers, Pepper street
Peake Rev. James Roome, M.A., Grammar School
Pearson Mr. Henry, St. Mary’s street
Peak Thomas, shoemaker, High street
Peters John, marble and stone mason, Old Wharf
Phillips Ann, confectioner, Bull ring
Piggott Mrs., Chester road
Poole Mary, flour dealer, Watergate street
Poole William, Esq., county magistrate, Jerrick Hall
Porter George, saddler, Green-end street
Porter Richard, shopkeeper, Green-end street
Poston John, whitesmith, Watergate street
Price Ann, vict., Lord Hill Hotel, Mill street
Price John, farmer, Watergate street
Price Robert, grocer, High street
Purcell John, tailor, Bargates
Rawson Robert Wm., schoolmaster, Bargates
Read Thomas, tailor, Bargates
Reddrop Mrs., Claypit street
Roberts John, bone merchant, Canal Wharf
Roberts Thos., steam corn mill, Canal Wharf
Roberts Thomas, vict., Lamb Inn, High st
Robinson Jonathan, brazier, Bargates
Rogers Ann, shopkeeper, Watergate street
Rogers William, painter, Watergate street
Roome Mrs., Chester street
Ruscoe Eliza, shopkeeper, Pepper street
Ruscoe John, victualler, George & Commercial Hotel, High street
Ruscoe Thomas, confectioner, High street
Sadler Peter, The Mount farm
Sadler John, beerhouse, Watergate street
Sandford Elizabeth, victualler, Horse and Jockey, Claypit street
Sandford Holland, Bargates
Sandford The Misses, Church street
Savage Josh., blacksmith, Green-end street
Saxton William Charles, professor of music, Dodington street
Shone John, draper, Green-end street
Shone Joseph, ropemaker, Green-end street
Skidmore James, painter, High street
Smith Joseph, innkeeper, Green-end
Smith Mr. Charles, Green-end street
Stevens Rev. George Henry, Bargates street
Summer William and Daniel, pumpmakers, Dodington street
Tetlow John Richard, Grove Cottage
Thelwall Thomas, hosier, High street
Tilston, Smith, and Co., dealers in tillage, salt, slates, &c., &c., Canal
Totherick Robert, methodist minister, St. Mary’s street
Tudman Edward, spirit dealer, High street
Turnbull Rev. Robert, M.A., Allport Cottage
Venables Samuel, confectioner, High street
Venables Richard, gentleman, St. Mary’s st
Walmsley and Parson, drapers, High street
Wardle Joseph, Fenshall farm
Welsh Benjamin, omnibus proprietor, Green-end
Whittingham Thos., timber merchant, Green-end street
Whittingham Thos., jun., bend-ware manufacturer and accountant, Green-end street
Williams John, coal agent, Old Wharf
Williams William Chaloner, nurseryman, High street
Wood Mrs., straw-bonnet maker, High street
Wood Thomas, shoemaker, High street
Woodward William, Wirswall Hall farm
Worthington Archibald, Esq., The Mount
Wright George, shopkeeper, Mill street
Wycherley Hannah, beerhouse, Green-end st
Wycherley John, saddler, Bull ring
Youd Thomas, dyer, Bark Hill
Academies.
Marked * are Boarding Schools.
* Cooke Miss, St. Mary’s st
* Dupre Lucy, Dodington
* Grammar School, Bargates street; Rev. James R. Peake, principal
Hewitt Ann, St. John street
* Jackson Miss, Dodington
Keable William Clarke, commercial, Chester street
National, Clay pit street; Ann Miller, teacher
Accountants.
Parker Samuel H., St. Mary’s street
Whittington Thomas, jun., Green end
Architects & Surveyors.
Groom Samuel, Clay pit st
Jenkins George, Green end street
Smith William, Dodington
Attorneys.
Brookes & Lee, Dodington
Clay Charles, New town
Etches James Gouldburne, St. Mary’s street
Harper and Parry Jones, St. Mary’s street
Lakin Benjamin, and clerk to magistrates and county court, St. Mary’s street
Auctioneers & Valuers.
Churton William Parker, High street
Churton John, High street
Churton George, High street
Lakin William, High street
Bakers.
Bright William, High street
Mellor Samuel, High street
Phillips Ann, Bull ring
Poole Mary, Watergate st
Ruscoe Thomas, High street
Venables Samuel, High st
Banks.
The National Provincial Bank of England, High street; George Corser, Esq., manager
Savings Bank, St. Mary’s st; S. H. Parker, secretary and actuary
The Whitchurch and Ellesmere Banking Company, High street, (draw upon the London Union Bank), John Lowe, Esq., manager
Blacksmiths.
Hampson John, Grindley brook
Evans Thomas, Barlow’s yd
Hudson John, Blue gates
Poston John, Watergate st
Savage Joseph, Green end
Booksellers, Printers, Bookbinders, and Stationers.
Jones Robert Barrow, and circulating library, High street
Newling Henry, and print seller, Bull ring
Boot & Shoemakers.
Allinson William, Clay pit st
Carker John, Pepper alley
Cooper Thomas, Venables yd
Dakin Samuel, Green end
Grafton Thos., Venables yd
Green Thomas, High street
Hesketh John, Green end st
Hewlett Richard, High street
Jones William, Yardington
Lewis Edward, High street
Montford Thomas, Pepper st
Newbrook John, Watergate st
Penk Benjamin, Chester st
Penk Thomas, High street
Plant Thomas, Clay pit st
Scott Samuel, Green end
Wood Thomas, High street
Bone & Guano Dealers.
Lowe Thomas, The wharf
Parker Samuel H., The wharf
Roberts John and Son, The wharf
Braziers & Tin Plate Workers.
Gill Robert, Watergate st
Howell Edward, High street
Robinson Jonathan, Bargates street
Brewers.
Brown William, High street
Jones Edward, Alkington rd
Bricklayers.
Edmunds William, Bargates street
Jarvis James, Green end st
Jarvis William, Pepper st
Street Samuel, Green end
William Edward, Castle st
Brick and Tile Merchants.
Brown John, Canal wharf, and agent for Minton, Hollins, and Co., encaustic tyle, of Stoke-upon-Trent, & dealer in slates, bearers, slabs, laths, draining pipes, blue flags, grave stones, &c.
Churton William Phillips, Turnbridge yard
Halsall Thomas and Wm., High street
Tilotson, Smith, and Co., Old wharf
Builders.
Allen Benjamin, Newtown
Jenkins George, Green end st
Oulton Samuel, Bargates st
Butchers.
Those with * affixed are country butchers who stand in the market in High street.
Allen Charles, Watergate st
* Bradbury John, High street
* Cooke Joseph, High street
* Davies Thomas, High street
* Davies William, High st
* Day James, High street
* Dickin William, High st
* Dickin William, jun., High street
* Ebrey John, High street
* Ebrey Robert, High street
* Gostage Thomas, High st
* Hall James, High street
* Hollowood Thomas, High st
* Hudson John, High street
* Jones John, High street
Jones Thomas, High street
* Littler William, High st
Milnes Thomas, Bull ring
* Paling John, High street
* Reeves Jeremiah, High st
* Roberts Edward, High st
* Thomas George, High st
Cabinet Makers and Upholsterers.
Arrowsmith Thomas, Green end street
Boughey William, Newtown
Burrowes Thos., Havannah buildings
Churton Messrs. W. P. & J., High street
Lakin William & Abraham, High street
Chandlers.
Brown William, High street
Lewis William, Watergate st
Cheese Factors.
Burgess Messrs. Thomas & R. W., Newtown
Bromfield William, Green end street
Elliott Thomas, Tarporley rd
Lythgoe Thomas, High gate road
Chemists and Druggists.
Beck Edward, Watergate st
Evanson late Executors of, High street
Coach Maker.
Joinson John, Green end st
Coal Agents.
Roberts John, Victoria wharf
Williams John, New wharf
Lowe Thomas, Whitchurch wharf
Wright George, Mill street
Confectioners.
Bright William, High street, and dealer in British wines
Griffiths Samuel, Newtown
Gorse James, High street
Griffiths Thomas, Green end street
Phillips Ann, Bull ring
Ruscoe Thomas, High street
Venables Samuel, High st
Coopers.
Cooke George and brothers, High street
Dawson Thomas, High street
Wright George, Newtown
Corn Factors.
Burgess Thomas and Son, High street
Chester George, Bark hill
Lythgoe Thomas, High st
Cutlery Dealers, &c.
Bradshaw George, High st
Corser Henry, High street
Hassall John and William, High street
Joyce Thomas & Son, High street
Curriers & Leather Cutters.
Brereton George, Watergate street
Evans William, Green end st
Wycherley John, Bull-ring
Farmers.
Churton William Parker, High street
Edwards John, Brick kiln lane farm
Elliott James, Allport farm
Fenna Thomas, Wickstead farm
France William, Moss farm
Hales Philip, Denston’s farm
Hassall Thos., Hadley farm
Jebb Thomas, Wrexham road
Joinson John, Green end st
Jones Thomas, High street
Joyce Thomas, Hinton hall farm
Lee John, Clap gates farm
Lee Joseph, Redbrook farm
Maddocks Thos., Lodge farm
Nunnerley Thos., Fields farm
Overton Thomas, Mile bank farm
Price John, farmer, Prospect place
Sadler Peter, Mount farm
Wardle Joseph, Fens hall farm
Fire and Life-office Agents.
Agricultural, Wm. Andrew Cartwright, Watergate st
Atlas, Robert Barrow Jones, High street
Birmingham, Thomas Wood Lee, Oak bank
British, Richard Thomas, New street
Farmers, Thos. Whittington, jun., Green end street
Farmers and Graziers, Thos. Whittington, jun., Green end street
Legal & Commercial, Samuel H. Harker, St. Mary’s st
Manchester & Pelican, Rd., Crosse, St. Mary’s street
Norwich Union, Wm. Parker Churton, High street
Phœnix, William Lakin, High street
Provident, Thomas Joyce, High street
Royal Exchange, John and William Hassall, High st
Star, Robt. Smith, Dodington
Sun, Walmsley and Pearson, High street
Fishmongers & Dealers in Game.
Carver William, High street
Farrell Edward, Pepper st
Flour & Bread Dealers.
Bate John, High street
Griffiths Thomas, Green end street
Mellor Thomas, High street
Morgan Mary, Watergate st
Poole Mary, Watergate st
Ruscoe Thomas, High street
Venables Samuel, High st
Wright George, Canal street
Fruiterers.
Farrell Edward, Pepper st
Hogan John, Clay pit street
Glass and China Dealers.
Colclough Sarah, High street
Johnson Robert, High st
Grocers and Tea Dealers.
Brown William, High street
Corser Henry, High street
Gorse James, High street
Harper Robert, Watergate st
Hassall John and William, High street
Overton Thomas Griffith, High street
Price Robert, High street
Venables Samuel, High st
Gun Maker.
Jones John, Watergate st
Hair Dressers.
Bottwood Wm., Watergate st
Foulkes Wm., Watergate st
Kempster Benjamin, Watergate street
Hardware & Toy Dealers.
Green Thomas Fallowes, High street
Harper Robert, Watergate st
Hosiers and Glovers.
Barber William, Watergate st
Harper Robert, Watergate st
Thelwell Thomas, High st
Hotels, Inns, and Taverns.
Anchor, Robt. Barrow Jones, Pepper street
Black Bear, James Large, High street
Black Lion, John Lee, Tarporley road
Bull’s Head, Thomas Harris, Watergate street
Coach and Horses, Francis Bradbury, High street
Eight Bells, Samuel Brown, High street
Fox and Goose, Thomas Dawson, Green end street
George and Commercial Hotel, John Ruscoe, High street
George and Dragon, James Jarvis, Green-end street
Golden Ball, William Jarvis, Pepper street
Greyhound, Robert Henshall, Bargates
High Gate, Richard Bradshaw, High gates
Horse and Jockey, Elizabeth Sandford, Claypit street
Lamb, Thomas Roberts, High street
Lord Hill, and Commercial, Ann Price, Watergate street and Mill street
Red Cow, Martha Kent, Pepper street
Star, John Jones, Watergate street
Swan (commercial and posting), George Bradshaw, Watergate street
Victoria (and commercial), Charles Green, High street
White-Bear, John Lee, High street
White Lion (commercial and posting), Mrs. Honor Jones, Watergate street
Beerhouses.
Boote William, High street
Butler John, Watergate street
Edge William, Newtown
Griffiths Wm., Yardington
Lloyd John, Yardington
Morgan Mary, Watergate st.
Sadler John, Watergate st.
Smith Joseph, Greenend st.
Welsh Benjamin, Greenend street
Wycherley Hannah, Green-end street
Ironmongers.
Brown William, High street
Corser Henry, High street
Hassall John and William, High street
Howell Edward, High street
Overton Charles Griffiths, High street
Iron Merchants.
Hassall John and William, High street
Joiners and Builders.
Allen Benjamin, Newtown
Churton Messrs., Newtown
Foulkes Thomas, Greenend street
Jenkin George, Greenend street
Oulton Samuel, Bargates
Woodhall John, St. John st
Land, Estate, and House Agents.
Parker Samuel H., Back st
Whittingham Thomas, jun., Greenend street
Lime Merchant.
Brown John, Grindley brook
Linen Drapers and Silk Mercers.
Allwood and Andrews, High street
Bass Charles, High street
Done James, High street
Lowe John, High street
Moyle Richard, High street
Shone John, Greenend street
Walmsley and Parson, High street
Licensed to Let Horses and Gigs, &c.
Bradshaw George, Watergate street
Cox John, Mill street
Dawson Thomas, Greenend street
Joinson John, Greenend
Jones Mrs. Honor (and mourning coaches), Watergate street
Welsh Benjamin, Greenend
Maltsters.
Brown William, High street
Burgess and Son, Prospect place
Dawson Thomas, Greenend street
Grindley George, New street
Hassall John and William, Castle hill
Jones Edward, Alkington road
Joyce Thomas, High street
Lea Edward, Greenend street
Merchants.
Burgess and Son (corn), Factory buildings
Garratt Sarah (timber), Havannah
Tilston Smith and Co. (salt, &c.), wharf
Whittingham Thomas (timber and maw skin manufacturer)
Whittingham Thomas (timber and bend ware manufacturer)
Millers.
Jebb Thomas, New mill
Roberts John, Lower wich
Roberts John (steam), Canal side
Milliners and Dressmakers.
Bate Harriet, High street
Baxter Jane, Bark hill
Bolas Susannah, St. Mary’s street
Boughey Elizabeth, Newtown
Chester Hannah, Bark hill
Gorse Alice, High street
Heath Mary, Bargates street
Hinton Jane and Elizabeth, Greenend
Morgan Ann, Bark hill
Oulton Miss Elizabeth, Bargates
Savage & Carter, Pepper st
Nail Makers.
Evanson William, Watergate
Hamer William, Mill street
Hassall John and William, High street
Nursery and Seedsmen.
Bayley William (nurseryman), Ledge ford
Brown William (seedsman), High street
Calcott Thomas (seedsman), High street
Grisdale Richard (nurseryman), High street
Hassalls Messrs. (seeds and hop), High street
Williams William Chaloner, High street
Painters and Gilders.
Crosse Thomas, Bargates st.
Rodgers William, Watergate street
Skidmore James Stephen, High street
Wragg Isaac, Bark hill
Plasterers and Slaters.
Griffith Wm., Yardington
Lee John, Claypit street
Ruscoe John, High street
Ruscoe William, Pepper st.
Plumbers and Glaziers.
Dodd George, High street
Edwards Thomas, High st.
Kent John, Claypit street
Maddocks John, Greenend street
Slayney William, Dodington street
Porter Dealers.
Bradshaw George, Watergate street
Jones Edward, St. Mary’s street vaults
Jones Barrow, Pepper street vaults
Tudman Edward, High street
Provision Dealers.
Baxter William, Greenend street
Bradshaw John, High street
Caldecott Thomas, High st.
Carver William, High street
Cooper Edward, High street
Newbrook John, Watergate street
Rope and Cover Makers.
Batho Richard, attends from Tilstock
Barrass John, Alkington road
Shone Joseph, Greenend street
Saddlers & Harness Makers.
Cotgreave Richard, High st.
Porter George, Greenend st.
Wycherley John, Bull ring, & dealer, Weigh machine
Shopkeepers and Dealers in Sundries.
Ackers Ann, Watergate street
Barber William, Watergate street
Batho George, Bargates street
Baxter William, Greenend street
Bradshaw John, High street
Davies William, Newtown
Griffiths Widow, Greenend street
Donning Robert, Watergate street
Rodgers Ann, Watergate st.
Ruscoe Eliza, Pepper street
Silversmiths and Jewellers.
Bradshaw John, High street
Joyce and Son, High street
Spirit Vaults.
Bradbury Francis, High st.
Jones Barrow, Pepper street
Jones Edward, St. Mary’s st.
Tudman Edward, High street
Straw Bonnet Makers.
Baker Thomas (dealer only), High street
Baxter Jane, Bark hill
Hinton Elizabeth, Greenend street
Howlett Rebecca, Bargate st.
Johnson Elizabeth, St. Mary’s street
More Mary Ann, Dodington street
Phillips Mary, Pepper street
Smith Elizabeth, Sherriman’s hill
Venables Mary, High street
Wood Eliza, High street
Surgeons.
Bromfield John, Dodington street
Brown John, Claypit street
Groome Thomas, St. Mary’s street
Marsh Thomas Palmer, Dodington street
Swinnerton John, Prospect place
Surveyors.
Groome Samuel, Claypit st.
Lee and Son, Red brook
Tailors.
Catherall John, Claypit street
Chester Joseph, Watergate street
Chidlow Richard, Dodington street
Crosse Richard, St. Mary’s street
Crosse Thomas, Claypit street
James George, Greenend st.
Jones John, Mill street
Nokes Thomas, High street
Purcell John, Bargates street
Read Thos., Bargates street
Trantum William, Greenend
Tailors & Woollen Drapers.
Crosse Richard and George, St. Mary’s street
Crosse Thomas, Claypit st.
Nokes Thomas, High street
Tallow Chandlers.
Brown William, High street
Lewis William, Watergate street
Tanners.
Hassall John and William, Castle hill
Turners and Chair Makers.
Edge John, Greenend street
Millwood James, Castle st.
Veterinary Surgeons.
Cartwright William Andrew, Watergate street
Keay Samuel, Greenend st.
Watch and Clock Makers.
Bradshaw George, High st.
Bradshaw Joseph, High st.
Calcott Thomas, High street
Jarvis John, Greenend street
Joyce and Son, (and church turret and spring clock makers and general dealers)
Wharfingers.
Brookes John, Sherriman’s hill
Humstone John. Sherriman’s hill
Roberts John, Victoria wharf
Lowe Thomas, New Canal wharf
Wheelwrights.
Higgins William, Yardington
Joinson John, Greenend st.
Read Thos., Grindley brook
Whitesmiths.
Clutton Thomas, Greenend
Poston John, Watergate st.
Wine and Spirit Merchants.
Jones Barrow, Pepper street
Jones Edward, St. Mary’s st
Carriers by Canal and Railway.
Shropshire Union Railway and Canal Company’s boats from the wharfs to Chester
Liverpool and Ellesmere docks, from which places goods are forwarded to all parts of the kingdom—John Humstone, agent
Omnibuses and Cars, &c.
To Chester, Edwin Arden, from the Victoria Inn, every Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, at 7 a.m., and return at 4 p.m.
To Beeston Railway Station, Benjamin Welsh, Greenend, leaves Whitchurch at 8 o’clock a.m., on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday
To Crewe, daily, John Joinson’s coach leaves Whitchurch 30 min. past 8 a.m.
To Wem, Joseph Owen, on Monday and Friday
Carriers.
To Burslem, James Green, on Friday, returns on Wednesday, to the Victoria Inn
To Crewe, John Welsh, from the Fox and Goose, Whitchurch, on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday
To Wem, Joseph Owen, from the Lord Hill Inn, on Monday and Friday
To Wem, Robert Harris, from the Swan Inn, on Monday and Friday
ALKINGTON,
a small but pleasantly situated village and township, two miles south-west from Whitchurch, contains 1,144a. 1r. 7p. of land, the soil of which is various, and consists of a mixture of peat, sand, and gravel. The principal landowners are the trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater; Samuel Yate Benyon, Esq.; Miss Benyon; William Lee Brookes, Esq.; Rev. George Richard Downward; Mr. John Goodall; Francis James Hughes, Esq.; and Mrs. Wood; besides whom there are several other smaller proprietors. Rateable value of the township, £1,240. 16s. The rectoral tithes have been commuted for £121. 18s. At the census of 1841 there were 23 houses and 135 inhabitants.
Directory.—James Bennion, farmer, Spring hill; Randle Bennion, farmer; Thomas Cooke, farmer; John Griffiths, farmer, Heath lane; George Heath, farmer; John Hinton, farmer; William Hokenhull, farmer; John Holland, farmer; Mrs. Jones, farmer; John Keay, beerhouse keeper; James Lee, farmer, Dernford hall; Stephen Oliver, blacksmith; Mrs. Wilson, farmer; Thomas Wilson, farmer, Alkington hall.
ASH MAGNA
is a township, chapelry, and village, pleasantly situated on an eminence two and a half miles south-east from Whitchurch. The village is straggling, and the farm buildings are mostly of brick, with convenient out-premises, and occupied by respectable agriculturists. Several of the farms are of considerable extent. The township contains 626a. 3r. 14p. of land; and in 1841 there were 39 houses and 204 inhabitants. Rateable value £893. 2s. The tithes have been commuted for £86. 9s. The soil is variable; in some places it is light and sandy, and in other places loam and clay prevail. The scenery is beautifully diversified, and the high grounds command prospects of unbounded extent. The principal landowners are Samuel Yate Benyon, Esq.; John Goodall, Esq.; William Lee Brookes, Esq.; Mrs. Groom; and Mr. James Hughes. There are also several small freeholders.
The Church, dedicated to our Saviour, is a brick structure, simple in its design of architecture, and has a tower at the west end, which contains one bell. It was erected in 1836, at an expense of £1,556. 19s. 10d., including the cost of the parsonage house, and consecrated August 31st, 1837. Of the above sum, £856. 19s. 10d. was raised by voluntary subscriptions; the Rev. C. M. Long and family gave £450, and the Diocesan and Church Building Society granted £250. The internal arrangements are neat and appropriate, and there is a gallery at the west end; the roof is pitched, and supported by groined timber. It contains three hundred and sixty sittings, of which two hundred and fifty are declared free and unappropriated for ever, in consequence of the grant from the Incorporated Society for Building and Enlarging Churches. It contains several neat marble monuments, one of which remembers Samuel Yate Benyon, Esq., and his wives, Elizabeth and Constance, and also of twin sisters, Elizabeth and Mary Benyon, daughters of the said Samuel Benyon, all of whom were interred at the Presbyterian chapel in Whitchurch, but have been exhumed and removed from thence, and are now deposited in a vault in this churchyard. There is also a brass plate in memory of Eliza, the wife of Thomas M. Griffiths, Esq., of Ash grove. There is also a family vault to the Langfords, in which are deposited the remains of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Langford, who bequeathed £500 three per cent. consols, in augmentation of the endowment of the living. The communion plate and clock were the gift of Joseph Booth, Esq.; the stone font was the gift of the Rev. John Brookes; the communion cloth and cushions were given by Mrs. Hughes. In the churchyard are altar tombs of beautiful workmanship to John Gregory, gentleman, of the Ash Acres; and to Joseph Brown, Esq., of Drayton. The living is a perpetual curacy, returned at £100, in the patronage of the Rector of Whitchurch. Incumbent, Rev. William Bryans, who resides at the Parsonage, a pleasantly situated house, a short distance from the church, which commands some fine views of the distant country. The National School, with a residence for the schoolteacher, was erected in 1848. It is a brick structure, and will accommodate 120 scholars; 68 now attend. It is chiefly supported by voluntary subscriptions, but each scholar pays a small sum weekly. The premises are also used for a Sunday school. The turnpike road to Nantwich, Market Drayton, and Whitchurch, intersects the townships.
Directory.—Frederick Bailey, farmer, Ash Hall; Rev. William Bryans, The Parsonage, John Cliffe, blacksmith and beerhouse keeper; William Eardley, farmer, Ash Farm; William Morton, shopkeeper and shoemaker; William Moreton, wheelwright; George Parry, blacksmith and victualler, Lion; John Ravenshaw, farmer, The Grove; Robert Ravenshaw, farmer; Jane Mary Thackaberry, schoolmistress.
ASH PARVA
is a township, with a scattered population, situated three miles S.E. by S. from Whitchurch, which contains 2,377a. 2r. 27p. of land, mostly a fine tract of country, studded with respectable farm-houses, with commodious outbuildings adjoining. The soil is variable; in some places a rich loam is found, in other places a strong soil, which produces good crops of grain, and in other parts it is a mixture of sand and gravel. In 1841 there were 36 houses and 208 inhabitants. Rateable value, £2,079. 12s. The tithes are commuted for the sum of £224. 19s. The principal owners of land in this township are the Devisees of the late Ashton Beckett, Esq., Samuel Yate Benyon, Esq., George Brookes, Esq., Joseph Hares, Esq., Viscount Hill, Wm. Church Norcop, Esq., Mrs. Whitfield, Richard Hughes, Esq., Mrs. Groom, Miss Becks, and Mr. Hewes.
Directory.—Captain Henry Bertles; John Bishop, parish clerk; James Blackshaw, farmer, Ashfield; William Dale, farmer, Twemlows; William Darlington, farmer, Twemlows; Charles Davies, shopkeeper and wheelwright; Mrs. Mary Groom, Ash House; Jas. Hamnett, farmer, Ashwood; Joseph Hares, Esq., Ashacres house; Henry Hewes, farmer, Ashwood; William Hickman, farmer and land-surveyor; John Hough, boot and shoemaker; Rev. William Jones; William Nield, farmer, Ashwood; John Ravenshaw, farmer, Twemlows; Ann Whitfield, farmer, Lee Hall.
BLACK PARK
is a township and small village, in a pleasant situation, two miles and a quarter N.E. from Whitchurch. The township contains 1,334a. 2r. 25p. of land, and in 1831 there were 13 houses and 46 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,379. 16s. The tithes are commuted, and included in the returns given of the town of Whitchurch. There are several good residences here; the farm premises are extensive, and the farms of considerable extent. Large quantities of superior cheese are made in this district, which is quite equal to the best Cheshire cheese. The Trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater are owners of the whole township.
Blackmere, or Bletchmore, one mile and a half N.E. from Whitchurch, is noted as the birth-place of John Talbot, the first Earl of Shrewsbury. He was the second son of Sir Richard Talbot, of Goodrich Castle, in Herefordshire; and on the death of his elder brother, he became heir to that family. John Talbot, who was called to Parliament by Henry IV. by the title of Lord Furnival (having married the eldest daughter of that nobleman), was appointed Lord Chief Justice of Ireland in 1412, and Lord Lieutenant in 1414. In 1420 he accompanied Henry V. to France, where he remained till the death of that monarch. He afterwards served in France under the Regent (the Duke of Bedford), and by his exploits rendered his name more terrible to the foe than that of any other English officer. He was afterwards raised to the rank of general, and commanded the troops which were sent into the province of Maine to the succour of the Earl of Suffolk, and made himself master of Alencon. He joined the Earl of Salisbury at the siege of Orleans, which failed through the intervention of the celebrated Maid of Orleans, under whose guidance the French recovered their lost courage, became assailants in their turn, and defeated the English at Patai, where Talbot was taken prisoner. He obtained his liberty by ransom, and raising fresh troops, recrossed the sea, and defeated the French in several engagements. For these and other services he was raised to the dignity of Marshal of France, and the title of Earl of Shrewsbury was conferred upon him. He was a second time sent to Ireland as lord lieutenant, and the earldom of Wexford and Waterford in that kingdom was added to his honours. In 1541, the English influence in France continuing to decline, Talbot was again sent thither, and constituted Lieutenant General, with extraordinary powers. His presence restored success; he took Bordeaux, and brought back several other places to their allegiance to the English crown. He afterwards marched to the relief of Chastillon, and made an attack on the enemy, when he was shot in the thigh by a cannon ball, and soon after died, at the age of eighty years. In this engagement one of his sons was slain, the English were defeated, and the consequence was their total expulsion from France. The remains of this celebrated general were interred at Whitchurch, where a splendid monument was raised to his memory, which has been previously noticed. Blackmere is a noted and extensive sheet of water in this township, well stocked with fish.
Directory.—George Bradshaw, farmer; Arthur Dickin, farmer, The Yockings; John Edwards, farmer; Thomas Maddocks, farmer, The Lodge; James Price, farmer; William Reddrop, farmer; Joseph Savage, blacksmith.
BROUGHALL.
a township in Whitchurch parish, one mile S.E. from the parish church, contains 818a. 2r. 9p. of land, the soil of which is a mixture of sand and stiff loam. In 1841 here were 44 houses and 203 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,024. 10s. The tithes have been commuted for the sum of £82. 4s. The chief landowners in this township are Mr. John Weaver, Mr. Robert Tudman, Misses Ann and Mary Beckett, Mr. Thomas Overton, Mr. John Brookes, William Lee Brookes, Esq., George Harper, Esq., Mrs. Hopley, the trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater, William Palmer Churton, Esq., Archibald Worthington, Esq., William Worthington, Esq., and Mrs. Jones; there are also several other proprietors. The Methodists have a neat chapel in this township.
The chief residents are the Misses Ann and Mary Beckett; John Brookes, farmer; Peter Caldecott, farmer; Thomas Caldecott, farmer; Rev. Mr. Colley; Arthur Dickin, farmer; William Etchess, farmer, Broughall House; John Fox, boot and shoemaker; Thomas Goodall, farmer; George Hales, farmer, The Fields; Mr. Jones, farmer, Broughall Cottage; William Edward Jones, gentleman; Richard Nickson, farmer; Thomas Palmer, carpenter and joiner; John Pennill, farmer; John Weaver, farmer; William Vicars, wheelwright.
CHINNEL, OR CHIMNEL,
is a small township in the parish of Whitchurch, one and three quarters of a mile N. from the parish church, which contains 240 acres of land, three houses and sixteen inhabitants. Rateable value, £296. 4s. The tithes have been apportioned, and are returned in the amount given with Hollyhurst township. The freeholders are Viscount Combermere, Lord Kenyon, Domville Halstead Cudworth Poole, Esq., Mr. Thomas Overton, and Mr. Sarah Saddler. The residents are Thomas Overton, farmer, Chinnel farm; and Ann Tomlinson, farmer.
DODINGTON
is a township and populous chapelry half a mile S. from Whitchurch, and may be considered a suburb to that town. In 1841 there were 211 houses and 1,010 inhabitants. Rateable value, £3,406. 8s. The township contains 1,626a. 3r. 14p. of fine land, highly productive both the arable and pasture; the soil is a mixture of sand and loam, and there are some good farm houses with commodious out premises, and farms of considerable extent. There are also several respectable family mansions and neat villa residences scattered over the township. The principal landowners are the trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater, William Lee Brookes, Esq., Rev. George Richard Downward, George Harper, Esq., John Lowe, Esq., John Faulkner Wood, Esq., Mr. Thos. Burgess, Mrs. Kirkpatrick, besides whom there are 39 smaller freeholders. The tithes are commuted for £130. 3s., and apportioned to the rector of Whitchurch-cum-Marbury.
The Church of St. Catherine is a commodious structure of brick, with an elegant front of white free stone, exhibiting the Grecian style of architecture, and was erected in the year 1836 by the late Countess of Bridgewater, at a cost of upwards of £8,000. The church has a noble appearance, and is ornamented with some very elaborate workmanship; it is very beautifully fitted up with oak pews, and has a gallery supported by iron pillars; it consists of nave, chancel, and side aisles. The solemnity of the whole is greatly heightened by the chastened light entering from the richly stained glass window in the chancel, which has a most pleasing and magnificent effect. The living is a curacy subordinate to the rectory of Whitchurch, the ministers of which perform divine service here.
The Independent Chapel is a handsome, lofty, and commodious edifice of brick, fronted with free stone, and ornamented with a portico supported with pillars of the doric order; the whole has a chastened and beautiful appearance. It was built in 1846, and cost upwards of £2,000. The interior fittings are neat and appropriate, and there is accommodation for more than 500 hearers. The structure stands partly on the site of a former edifice, which was erected in the year 1796. There is a respectable and increasing congregation, under the pastoral care of the Rev. William Tiler. In connection with the chapel there is a flourishing Sunday school.
The Unitarian Chapel is now being enlarged and remodelled. A previous chapel was built here by the congregation under the pastoral care of the Rev. Phillip Henry, of Broad Oak, father of Matthew Henry, the celebrated commentator. This chapel was the place of sepulchre of many of the descendants and friends of the pious Henry’s—the Benyons, and others. The British School, formerly the Unitarian chapel, is under the management and inspection of the dissenting bodies in this place. It was endowed by Thomas Benyon, in 1707, a particular account of which will be found in general account of charities of this parish, noticed with the town of Whitchurch. The property devised by Mr. Benyon produced £50 per annum when the charity commissioners published their report; out of the income, however, he bequeathed 40s. per annum to the Presbyterian minister. About 140 children attend the school. It is also used as a Sunday school, and numerously attended; Mr. and Mrs. Sandland are the teachers.
The National School is a commodious structure, situate within the bounds of this township, measuring sixty feet by thirty feet, and will accommodate 300 scholars; the average attendance is about 150. It is supported by subscriptions and donations, and a charge of one penny per week from each scholar. The income is about £60 per annum. There are three government pupils placed here as teachers. Charles Frederick Bird is the master. The Girls’ National School, in Clay pit street, has an attendance of 85 scholars. The above are also used as Sunday schools, and numerously attended. There is a Parochial Lending Library in the national school, which contains a considerable number of valuable and instructive publications. It was established for the benefit of the humbler members of society, to whom the books are lent without any payment. Moss Field House is a commodious structure of brick, with projecting gables, and a noble portico of free stone supported by massive pillars. The pleasure grounds and shrubberies are extensive, and laid out with great taste, and the park-like grounds and beautiful scenery add much to the interest of the place. Messrs. Lee and Brookes are stewards of the courts leet and baron, which are held for the manor. A branch of the Ellesmere and Chester canal intersects this township, and terminates near to New-street.
Andrews Thomas, gentleman
Arrowsmith Rev. Aaron
Baxter Jane, milliner, Bark hill
Bayley William, gentleman, The Nursery
Benson Mrs. Mary
Bird Charles Frederick, schoolmaster
Boughey Joseph, farmer, Blackoe
Boughey Mrs. Ellen, High street
Boyes Robert, vict., New Inn, High street
Bradshaw Richard, vict., High gate
Brett Miss, High street
Bromfield John, surgeon
Bromfield The Misses Elizabeth and Mary
Brookes George, Esq., High street
Brookes William Lee, Esq., High street
Burgess Thomas, Esq., The Hall
Burrows John, Bark hill
Burston Mrs., High street
Cartwright Mary, stay maker, Sherriman’s hill
Carver Captain Daniel, High street
Chester George, farmer, Bark hill
Chester Hannah, milliner, Bark hill
Chidlow Richard, tailor, High street
Churton William Phillip, Turnbridge
Clarke Thomas, bricklayer, Alkington road
Cureton John, farmer, Blackoe
Currie Mrs. Mary, High street
Currie William F., Esq., High street
Dupre Mrs. Lucy, Ladies’ seminary
Evanson Joseph, shopkeeper, High street
Foulkes Charles, deputy registrar, Bark hill
Finn Thomas, furniture dealer, Bark hill
France William, farmer
Garratt Mrs. Sarah, High gate
Gould Mr. William
Grindley William Thomas, New street
Griffiths Wm., beerhouse, Sherriman’s hill
Harper George, Esq., Moss field
Hassall Thomas, farmer, Hadley farm
Hinton Thomas, farmer, Fields farm
Humpston John, canal clerk
Jackson Lucy, boarding school
James George, shoemaker, Bark hill
Jarvis John, painter, &c., High street
Jarvis Thomas, grocer, tea dealer, & draper High street
Jebb Thomas, gentleman, Wrexham road
Jones Edward, maltster, Alkington lane
Keay John, vict. and farmer
Kempster Thomas, gentleman, High street
Kirkpatrick Edward Brace, Esq.
Kirkpatrick Miss Lousia, gentlewoman
Lea Edward, maltster, Bark hill
Lee John, Esq., High street
Lee Robert, tailor, High street
Lowe Thomas, wharfinger, New wharf
Lyth Richard, Hadley farm
Lythgoe Thomas, factor, High gate
Maddocks Joseph, beerhouse, Sedge ford
Marsh Thomas Palmer, physician
Morgan Ann, dressmaker, Bark hill
Morgan Charles, cabinet maker, Bark hill
Morrall Rev. John, Bark hill
Morray William, beerhouse, Havannah
Nunnerley Thomas, gentleman, The Farm
Pace John, tailor, High street
Pickering Rev. Edward, High street
Podmore John, gentleman, High gate
Roberts John, Danston’s yard
Roberts John, The Dairy Farm
Roberts Thos., cabinetmaker, Alkington ln
Sadler John, beerhouse, Bark hill
Sadler John, jun., blacksmith, Bark hill
Sandland Stephen, schoolmaster
Sanders Mr. S., High street
Saxton Charles, gentleman
Sharkes Mary, Blackoe farm
Slaney William, plumber, High street
Smith Joseph, beerhouse keeper
Smith Robert, iron founder
Smith William, engineer
Smith William, tailor, New street
Sumner William and Daniel, pump makers
Swinnerton John, surgeon, New street
Tiler Rev. William, Independent minister
Turner The Misses
Watkiss Miss, High street
Wood John Foulkner, Esq., High street
Woollam John, parish clerk
Woolley William, farmer, New street
Wragg Isaac, vict., Bark hill
Wright Elizabeth, vict., Royal Oak, High st
Yond Thomas, dyer, Bark hill
Academies.
Dupre Mrs. Lucy, Ladies’ boarding
National, New street; Charles Frederick Bird, master
British, High street; Mr. & Mrs. Stephen, Sandland
Accountants.
Parker Samuel H., Saving’s bank
Smith William, High street
Architect.
Smith William, High street
Attorneys.
Brookes and Lee Messrs., High street
Harper George, Moss fields
Kirkpatrick Edward Bruce, High street
Auctioneer.
Churton William Parker
Baker & Flour Dealer.
Poole Mary, Watergate street
Blacksmith.
Saddler John, Bark hill
Boot & Shoemaker.
James George, High street
Brewer.
Jones Edward, The brewery
Brick and Tile Merchant.
Roberts John, New wharf
Cabinet Makers.
Burrows Thos., Havannah buildings
Lakin William, New street
Cheese Factors.
Burgess Messrs. Thomas and Ralph; warehouses, The Factory buildings, canal side, and Prospect row, canal head
Lythgoe Thomas, High gate
Civil Engineer.
Smith William, High street
Coal Agents.
Lowe Thomas, New wharf
Roberts John, New wharf
Wright George, New street
Corn Factors.
Burgess Messrs. T. R. W., Prospect row, and Factory buildings
Farmers.
Boughey Joseph, Blackoe
Chester George, Bark hill
Cureton John, Blackoe
France Wm., Dodington lane
Hassall Thos., Hadley farm
Hinton Thomas, Fields farm
Keay John, Dodington
Lyth Richard, Hadley
Nunnerley Thos., The fields
Podmore John, High street
Roberts John, Dairy farm
Sharkes Mary, Blackoe
Woolley William, New street
Fire and Life-office Agents.
The British Empire Fire & Life, Richard Thomas, Prospect place
The Star and General Insurance Company, Robert Smith, Dodington
Grocer and Draper.
Jarvis Thomas, High street
Inns and Taverns.
Boyes Robert, High street
Bradshaw Richard, High gate
Wragg Isaac, Bark hill
Wright Elizabeth, High st
Beerhouses.
Griffiths Wm., Sherriman’s hl
Maddocks Joseph, Sedge ford
Murray William, Havannah
Sader John, Bark hill
Ironfounders.
Smith Wm. & Son, Dodington
Land & Estate Agents.
Brookes and Lee, High street
Lime & Guano Dealers.
Lowe Thomas, New wharf
Roberts John, New wharf
Machine Makers.
Smith Wm. & Son, High st
Maltsters.
Burgess & Son, New street
Jones Edward, Alkington rd
Lea Edward, Bark hill
Millers.
Jebb Thomas, Old mills
Roberts John, Steam mills
Painters.
Jarvis John, High street
Wragg Isaac, High street
Plumber & Glazier.
Slayney William, Dodington
Professor of Music.
Saxton Charles, High street
Surgeons.
Bromfield John, Dodington
Marsh Thos. Palmer, High st
Swinnerton John, New street
Tailors.
Chidlow Richard, High st
Morray William, High street
Smith William, High street
Timber Merchant.
Garratt Mrs. Sarah, High st
Wharfingers.
Brooks John, Sherriman’s hl
Humstone John, Sherriman’s hill
Lowe Thomas, New wharf
Roberts John, New wharf
Wheelwrights.
Davies William Augustus, Dodington
Smith William, Doddington
EDGELEY,
a small township with 416a. 0r. 24p. of land situated 1½ miles S.E. by S. from Whitchurch, in 1841 contained seventeen houses and seventy-three inhabitants, the soil is in general strong, with a portion of sand and gravel. Rateable value £583. 14s. The tithes are commuted for the sum of £37. 10s. The freeholders are William Lee Brookes, Esq., Wm. Worthington, Esq., Samuel Alexander Duff, Esq., John Goodall, Esq., Peter Soole Taylor, Esq., John Lowe, Esq., Archibald Worthington, Esq., and Mr. Richard Weaver. The Baptists have a neat chapel with a residence for the minister and a school attached. It is situated in the lane leading from Edgeley Moss to Ash, near the verge of the township, and was built and endowed by Mr. Brown. The school is open for the instruction of the children residing in the surrounding townships; those that are admitted free must belong to the children who attend the chapel, and prefer the Baptist faith. The master has an income of £30 per annum, which is now paid by Mrs. Brown. The pastor of the congregation also teaches the school. There is a small plot of ground used as a burial place for members of the congregation. Edgeley Moss, usually called Brown Moss, contains 77a. 2r. 7p. and is now chiefly covered with water. Edgeley House, the residence of John Lowe, Esq., is a modern erection of brick, stuccoed. It is delightfully situated, and beautified with shrubberies and park-like grounds.
The principal residents are John Lowe, Esq., Edgeley House; William Poole Churlton, farmer; James Harding, farmer; Rev. William Jones, Baptist minister.
Grindley Brook is a detached hamlet on the high road from Whitchurch to Malpas, a mile and a half north-west from the former place. It lies on the verge of the county, and is separated from Cheshire by the Grindley brook, a small stream which is here crossed by a stone bridge. The Whitchurch, Ellesmere, and Chester Canal takes its course near the village, and near to the wharf are extensive lime works carried on by Mr. John Roberts. The chief freeholders are the trustees of the late Duke of Bridgewater, Mr. James Hancock, Mr. Robert Roe, Mr. Joseph Rycroft, Miss Harper, Mr. Parry Jones, and Mr. George Blanton.
Directory.—Mr. Joseph Beddoe, toll collector at the canal locks and tonnage clerk; Mr. Richard B. Briscoe, Brookhouse; Thomas Cliff, beerhouse and shopkeeper; Philip Hales, farmer, Denston; William Hassall, Esq., land and estate agent, Bubney House farm, Thomas Peake, boat builder; John Roberts, lime merchant; George Seaman, victualler, Canal Inn; James Whittingham, victualler, Horse and Jockey.
HINTON,
a township one and a quarter miles north from Whitchurch, in 1841 had six houses and forty-one inhabitants: the township contains 498a. 0r. 36p. of land the soil of which is a mixture of gravel and loam; the principal land owner is Thomas Boycott, Esq. William H. Poole Esq., and George Harper, Esq. are also proprietors. The district here has a bold undulating surface. The tithes payable to the rector of Whitchurch have been commuted for the sum of £51. 15s.
The residents are Thomas Chester, farmer; Thomas Joyce, farmer, the Hall; W. H. Poole, Terrick Hall; Joseph Vernon, farmer, the Field.
HOLLYHURST,
a small township with a few scattered houses one mile and three quarters north-east from Whitchurch, contains 241 acres of land, and in 1841 had seven houses and thirty-eight souls. The rateable value is included in the return of the township of Chinnel, and the tithes with those of Chinnel have been commuted for £22. 9s. 6d., which is paid to the incumbent of Whitchurch. The land owners are Lord Combermere, John Nickson, Esq., Mrs. Sarah Sadler, and Domville Poole, Esq.
The principal residents are John Sadler, farmer; Sarah Sadler, farmer; and Thomas Venables, farmer.
TILSTOCK
is a chapelry and populous village delightfully situated one and a half miles south from Whitchurch; the township contains 2,549a. 2r. 20p. of land, and at the census of 1841 there were 136 houses and 637 inhabitants; the soil is a mixture of sand and loam, with a portion of gravel, considered good turnip land; the country around is pleasingly diversified with rural scenery, and there are some extensive farms, with good farm houses occupied by intelligent and respectable agriculturalists. The township is intersected by the Ellesmere and Chester Canal, and the Wem and Whitchurch turnpike road. The principal land owners are the trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater, George Corser, Esq., John Goodall Esq., Rev. Geo. Richard Downward, Francis Jas. Hughes, Esq., Daniel Kempster, Esq., Rev. William Renton, Mr. John Whitfield, and Mrs. Wood. There are also several other freeholders.
The Church, dedicated to our Saviour, is a neat erection of brick, with a small square tower ornamented with stone finishings. It was built in 1835, not far from the site of a former edifice which was dedicated to St. Giles; the cost of the structure was about £2,000, which was defrayed by the munificence of the late Countess of Bridgewater. It consists of nave, chancel, and side aisles; the body of the church will accommodate 303 hearers, and there is a gallery which will hold 100 persons; the whole has a neat and tasteful appearance. The living is a perpetual curacy endowed with a grant from Queen Anne’s bounty, and funds given by the Bridgewater family which were laid out in the purchase of land situated in Wales. The value of the living is returned at £120. The rector of Whitchurch is the patron; the Rev. William Renton, M.A. is the incumbent. Tilstock was formed into a district parish for ecclesiastical purposes in 1844. The church, the parsonage, and the national school, have all been erected during the incumbency of the present minister. There is a vestry attached to the church in which are kept two volumes of Jones’s Book of Martyrs. The Parsonage House, a neat and commodious residence near the church yard, was built at a cost of £1,000 given by the munificent family who also built the church. The tithes have been commuted for the sum of £244. 11s. which is paid to the rector of the parish. The Wesleyan Methodists have a neat place of worship, which was built in the year 1837, adjoining which is a small burial ground.
The National School, a modern erection of brick, with a residence for the teacher, stands on the site of the old church, and was built by subscription and a grant of £60 from the National Society. Among the most liberal donors towards its erection were the Countess of Bridgewater, who gave £60, the Rev. Charles M. Long, rector of Whitchurch, £60, and Lord Farnborough £20. About 100 children attend the school, which is chiefly supported by the incumbent of the church and a few benevolent individuals. The minister and his lady assiduously superintend the school.
Samuel Austin bequeathed £10, and directed the interest to be distributed to the poor every St. Thomas’s day. Ten shillings per annum is now paid from a farm in the township of Tilstock, which belongs to G. S. Corser, Esq. The amount is given among the poor by the officiating minister with the sacrament-money at Christmas. The poor also participate in a bread charity, noticed with Whitchurch.
Allen Joseph, inland revenue officer
Allmark Joseph, victualler (Horse Shoe) and wheelwright
Batho Richard, rope maker
Batho Stephen, farmer, rope maker, and shopkeeper
Bayley John, farmer
Bayley Thomas, farmer
Beckett William, maltster, farmer, and beerhouse-keeper
Bennett John, blacksmith
Bennon Randle, farmer
Bolton John, castrator
Broomhall John, maltster, farmer, and victualler, Black Lion
Catterall William, tailor
Cliff Ann, dressmaker
Cliff Joseph, blacksmith, The Heath
Darlington Abraham, shopkeeper and shoemaker
Dudleston Ann, farmer, The Park
Dudleston Richard, farmer, The Park
Dutton Ann, schoolmistress
Eaton Thomas, farmer, Wood-lane Farm
Edwards George, schoolmaster
Edwards John, shoemaker
Fenna William, grocer and ironmonger
Groome Joseph, wheelwright & parish clerk
Hinton James, farmer
Hinton Thomas, butcher and grazier, and victualler, Red Lion
Jones Daniel, shoemaker
Jones Samuel, shopkeeper
Kempster Mr. Daniel, Ivy House
Kempster Miss Mary
Massey Samuel, Tilstock-park Farm
Morris John, tailor
Parbutt John, shopkeeper
Parry John, farmer, The Hollins
Reece John, farmer
Renton Rev. William, M.A., The Parsonage
Roberts John, lime-master, maltster, and farmer, Brick-walls
Watling John, drill-machineman
Wenlock William, farmer
Whitfield John, farmer, Tilstock Park
WOODHOUSES (NEW),
a pleasant but scattered village and township, two miles and a half S.E. from Whitchurch, containing 714a. 3r. 11p. of land, had in 1841, 27 houses and 115 inhabitants. The chief landowners are the Trustees of the late Earl of Bridgewater, Mr. Richard Bellington, Mrs. Gretton, Samuel Yate Benyon, Esq., Mrs. Beckett, Mr. John Cookson, Viscount Combermere, W. L. Brookes, Esq., Mr. John Moore, and Mr. Edward Nickson; besides whom there are several other freeholders. This township has a bold undulating surface, and the soil is strong and clayey.
Directory.—James Goulbourn Etches, Esq., Oak Villa; William Bather, farmer; Martha Beckett, farmer; Prudent Blundell, beerhouse and shopkeeper; Mrs. Mary Boulton; Richard Boulton, farmer; John Leeveley, farmer; John Lewis, farmer; John Moore, farmer; George Robinson, farmer, Old Wood; Thomas Stringer, farmer; Thomas Unett, farmer; Daniel Warrington, farmer, Fir Tree House; James Weston, farmer; Joseph Wright, farmer.
WOODHOUSES (OLD),
a small village and township, three miles N.E. from Whitchurch, contains 391a. 2r. 37p. of land, and at the census of 1841 had 13 houses and a population of 62 souls. The soil in some places is a strong loam, in other places it is sandy. Viscount Combermere is owner of the whole township. There is a fine sheet of water near here, which covers a considerable surface, called Comber-mere.
The principal residents are John Ellis, farmer; William Evans, boot and shoemaker; Richard Hassall, carpenter and joiner; James Reddrop, farmer, The Grove.
WIRSWALL, OR WIRSHALL,
is a township and village in Whitchurch parish, situated in the county of Cheshire, two miles north from Whitchurch. In 1841 there were 17 houses and 91 inhabitants. The principal landowners are John Goodall, Esq., George Harper, Esq., Rev. C. W. Ethelstone, Charles Robert Cotton, Esq., and the Representatives of the late John Parsons, Esq. The tithes are commuted for £70. The Earl of Shrewsbury had land here from the time of Henry VI. to the reign of Philip and Mary; and the manorial rights are divided between this family and Viscount Combermere. Belvidere is a handsome house, the property and residence of John Goodall, Esq. The situation is delightful, and the prospect most extensive and diversified.
Directory.—Joseph Cliffe, blacksmith; Samuel Davies, cattle dealer; James Goodall, farmer, The Grange; John Goodall, Esq., Belvidere; Robert Goodall, farmer, Dairy-house; Mr. William Hale; Mrs. Mary Harrison, Wood Cottage; John Nunnerley, farmer; Miss Reddrop; John Smith, farmer; John Wood, farmer; Wm. Woodward, farmer.