William Grimbaldson, M.D., left £300 in 1725, the interest to be used for binding out poor apprentices in Treales, whose parents received no parish relief. Boulton’s and Porter’s charities are rentals amounting to about £12 a-year, to be given to poor persons of the township. Bridgett’s charity is the interest of £15 for the poor of Wharles.
POPULATION OF TREALES, ROSEACRE, AND WHARLES.
| 1801. | 1811. | 1821. | 1831. | 1841. | 1851. | 1861. | 1871. |
| 675 | 671 | 760 | 756 | 709 | 696 | 632 | 625 |
The township has an area of 4,015 statute acres.
Newton-with-Scales. Newton appears in the Domesday Book as containing two carucates. In 1324 William de Clifton had 60 acres in Scales; and in 1354 Adam de Bradkirk held land in Newton. John Hornby, of Newton-with-Scales, left in 1707, the residue of his estate, after certain bequests, to six trustees to found and endow the present Blue Coat School; and in 1809 the funds of the institution were increased by a legacy of £800, under the will of James Boys, of London, an old pupil. The principal soil owners are the Rev. R. Moore, and the Westby, Swainson, Bryning, Hornby, and Loxham families.
POPULATION OF NEWTON-WITH-SCALES.
| 1801. | 1811. | 1821. | 1831. | 1841. | 1851. | 1861. | 1871. |
| 269 | 336 | 380 | 381 | 324 | 299 | 286 | 292 |
The area of the township is 1,525 statute acres.
Hambleton. Hambleton was held during the reign of King John by Geoffrey, the Crossbowman, or de Hackensall, from whom it descended to his son-in-law Richard de Sherburne, and afterwards to Robert de Sherburne, the son of the latter. The manor was held successively by different members of the Sherburne family until 1363, when it passed to Richard de Bailey, who had married the daughter and heiress of the last male Sherburne, and adopted the maiden surname of his wife. Hence the title of the manorial lords remained unchanged up to 1717, when the property became the possession of the Duchess of Ormond, the sole child of Sir Nicholas Sherburne, who died at that date. After the decease of the Duchess of Ormond, without issue, Hambleton passed to Edward, the son of William Weld, of Lulworth Castle, by his marriage with the sister of Sir Nicholas Sherburne. The descendants of Edward Weld still retain some portion of the soil, but a considerable proportion has been sold in recent years.