CARSINGTON,
a township, parish, and small village, pleasantly situated on the Wirksworth
and Ashbourn road, 2½ miles W. from the former, and 6½ miles N.E. from the latter,
contains 1,116 acres of strong land, principally occupied in dairy farms, and
in 1851 had 50 houses, and 235 inhabitants, of whom 124 were males, and 111
females; rateable value £1,337 6s. 2d. The village is situate in a valley, one
side of which is sheltered by a bold ridge of limestone rocks, whose grey crags
jut over the tops of the houses. The trustees of the late Philip Gell, Esq.,
and Wm. Pole Thornhill, Esq., M.P., are the principal owners. The Church,
dedicated to St. Margaret, is a small square castellated edifice, with a turret
and one bell, but scarcely distinguishable from the cliffs that overhang it. It
was rebuilt in 1648, and thoroughly repaired in 1855, at a cost of £300, at
which time a new vestry was added, and two windows placed on the north side of
the chancel, and apparatus for warming the church put up; it contains an
ancient font, and in the church yard is a venerable Yew tree. The living is a discharged rectory rated at
£5 1s. 10d., in the parliamentary returns at £120, gross income £176. The
Bishop of Lichfield is patron, and Rev. Henry Barrows Chinn, incumbent, for
whom the Rev. F. H. Brett, officiates. Here
416 WIRKSWORTH
HUNDRED.
are 45A. 1R. 14P. of
glebe, occupied by Mr. John Bowler, farmer, and the tithe was commuted in
1838, for £109. Here is a Free school, for 20 poor children, endowed by
Temperance Gell, in 1772. John Oldfield, an eminent puritan divine, was ejected
from this benetice, in 1662, his son Dr. Joshua Oldfield, a learned
presbyterian divine, was born here in 1656; he published some valuable
treatises on the improvement of human reason and on the Trinity.
CHARITIES.—Mrs. Temperance Gell, in 1772, gave £220 to be
invested in land, and directed her executors to build a school room at
Carsington, for the instruction of 20 of the poorer sort of children at Hopton
and Carsington, and if there should be a failure of a sufficient number of
children in the said towns, the number to be made up out of the town of
Mitldleton by Wirksworth. The legacy given by Mrs. Gell, and a further sum of
£50, which is stated in the Parliamentary Returns of 1786, to have been given
by the will of Samuel Bendall, in 1727, for the support of this school, were laid
out in the purchase of a farm in the parish of Ockbrook, which let for £80 per
annum. No separate account has hitherto been kept of the receipts and
disbursements of the charity. The schoolmistress’s salary and allowance, the
bills for the children’s clothing, and the payments for repairing the
school-house and the building on the farm, constitute the whole of the
expenditure on account of this charity, and they are insufficient to exhaust
its present increased annual income. It is highly proper, therefore, that a
separate account should be kept of the receipts and disbursements; and we
apprehend that the surplus income ought to be applied in extending the benefits
of the charity to a larger number of children.
Two
beast gates were left by an unknown donor for the benefit of the poor. Two poor
widows, usually appointed from time to time, have had the benefit of them.
The
sum of £5 10s., from the bequest of the Rev. Francis Gisborne, is expended in
warm clothing, and given to the poor.—(See Bradley.)
|
Bacon Matthew, parish clerk and miner Dronfieldd Francis, gamekeeper Fearn Wm.,
stonemason Ford Emma, schoolmistress Hardy George, vict., Miner’s Arms |
Oldknow Samuel, vict., Greyhound, Nock- a-Down Stafford Jacob, shopkeeper & miner Steeples Stephen & James, lime burners |
|
Farmers. Beswick William Bowler John Elliott Robt. & Wm., Shiningford |
Greatorex Francis Hardy George Heathcote John, Ken- nel, Meadow Farm Lamb Chas,, (cowkp.) |
Oldfield John, Owslow Slater Francis Steveson Sml., cowk. Wigley John, Breach Wilkinson Robert |
Shoemakers. Banks John Milward Robert Wilkinson Robert |
GRIFFE
GRANGE, otherwise Bret-Griffe, an
extra parochial liberty which adjoins Hopton, 3 miles N.N.W. from Wirksworth, contains
676A. 3R. 13P. of land; rateable value £359, and in 1851 had 5 houses, and 18
inhabitants, of whom 10 were males, and 8 females. Having belonged to the abbot
and convent of Dale, it was granted, in 1546, to Ralph Gell, Esq., ancestor of
the late Philip Gell, Esq., of Hopton, whose representatives are the owners. It
is situated on a lofty mountain, on the western side of which the road from
Wirksworth to Bakewell runs along a delightful romantic vale, designated the
Valley of the Lillies. The eastern side is enclosed by the high lands of Ible.
A small stream overhung with copse and underwood, runs through, forming a most
romantic and sylvan walk. The lead mines here, were during the last century
worked to great advantage, particularly the Golconda
and Chariot mines. The Inn, known as the Lilies of the Valley, in Ible
township, stands at the north end of this dale. Griffe-Grange contains only two farms, which have not been joined
with any poor law union; it is separated from Hopton on the S.E., by an ancient
ditch, called Dooglow Dyke. The
farmers are Aaron Fearn and John Rains. The former gentleman is considered as
having the greatest native talent of any
HARTINGTON PARISH. 417
man in the county,
particularly in the construction of farming implements and machinery of every
description. A natural cave 210 feet in length, was discovered in 1824, by Mr.
Fearn, on the N.W. side of the Grange.
HARTINGTON,
an extensive parish, which comprises the four townships of Town Quarter, Middle
Quarter—with Earl Sterndale chapelry—Nether Quarter, and Upper Quarter. It
extends in length about 16 miles from its south-east extremity to its northwest,
being in some parts 5 miles in
width at its south-east boundary, but on the north-west often not more than 1½
miles. It is bounded on the east by the parish of Bakewell, and at its
north-east extremily by the river Goyt, after which by the river Dove, which
rises from Axe Edge, about 3½ miles S.S.W. from Buxton, and separates it from
Staffordshire. It is returned as containing 24,160 acres of land, but the
rateable acres appear to be 2l,254A. 0R. 10P., and in 1851 had 448 houses and
2,089 inhabitants, of whom 1,079 were males and 1,010 females; rateable value
£11,940 8s. 9d. A large portion being barren heath, having a continuous
mountain range, which, in the Middle and Upper Quarters assumes various
romantic shapes. It contains little timber and no edge-rows, having stone walls
for partitions, which gives it a dreary and sterile appearance. The farms are
widely scattered, and often large—the land principally is grass on limestone,
occupied for the dairy, and by young stock, the few oats that are grown often
remaining abroad till December. By an order of Quarter Sessions of 28th June,
1831, the Middle and Upper Quarters are included in the Bakewell division, and,
by the Reform Bill, in the north division of the county. Even some of the
farmers in the Town and Nether Quarters have their lands so arranged as to have
votes for both north and south divisions. The Cromford and High Peak railway
passes through the whole length of the parish.
HARTINGTON
TOWN QUARTER, a small well built market town, pleasantly situated on the banks
of the Dove, 10 miles N.N.W. from Ashbourn, and 9¼ S.W. from Bakewell, contains
3,515 acres of land, and in 1851 had 103 houses and 453 inhabitants, of whom
219 were males and 234 females; rateable value £2,393 3s. 6d. The Duke of
Devonshire is lord of the manor, and principal owner; but A. B. Hope, Esq.,
John Sleigh, Esq., and Messrs. Joseph and Thos. Fogg are also considerable
owners. The Church, dedicated to St. Giles, is an ancient cruciform structure,
in the early style of architecture, having large transepts, a pinnacled tower,
three bells, and a clock. It is situated on a gentle eminence N.E. of the town.
A new vicarage house is in course of erection, a little N.E. of the Church, at
the estimated cost of £800. The living is
a vicarage, valued in the King’s books at £10, now £149, has been augmented
with £400 parliamentary grant, and is in the peculiar jurisdiction of the Dean
of Hartington, who holds a court for proving wills for the manor and parish of
Hartington. The Duke of Devonshire is patron of the living; the Rev. Augustus
Wirgman, M.A., is incumbent, and surrogate of the Dean’s court. The commons
were enclosed in 1798. The late Earl of Beauchamp, then Wm. Lygon, Esq., had an
allotment of land for the great tithes, being impropriator, which allotment he
afterwards sold to Sir Hugh Bateman, Bart. In right of the rectorial estate,
Sir Hugh’s trustees are patrons of the deanery of Hartington. The Church had
belonged to the Minoresses of London, to which it was probably given by one of
the Earls of Lancaster. The Methodists have a chapel, erected of stone in 1809.
The manor of Hartington belonged to the noble family of Ferrers. On the
attainder of Robert Ferrers, Earl of Derby, it was granted to Edmund, Earl of
Lancaster, who had a capital mansion or castle at Hartington in the reign of
Edward I. The manor continued to be annexed to the Earldom and Duchy of
Lancaster till the year 1603, when it was granted by King James to Sir Geo.
Hume chancellor of the exchequer. Having reverted to the crown, it was granted
by the same monarch, in 1617, to Sir George Villiers. In the year 1663 it was
purchased of the Duke of Buckingham, by William Cavendish, Earl of Devonshire.
The Duke of Devonshire is by far the greatest proprietor in this extensive
parish, and, among other estates, is possessed of Biggin Grange, and Heathcote,
which had been given to the monks of Gerondon by the Ferrers
418 WIRKSWORTH
HUNDRED.
family. Biggin
Grange was for many centuries the residence of the Dakyn or Dakeyne family,
where they were seated almost as early as the time of Richard II. They also possessed
property at Hatton and other places. John Dakin of Biggin married Alicia,
daughter of John de la Pole, Esq., son of Sir John de la Pole. He was the
ancestor of the Dakeynes of Snitterton and Stubbing Edge, also of Linton and
Hackness, in the east riding of Yorkshire, of whom General Dakins of Hackness
represented Scarborough in Parliament in the time of Edward VI. The first of
the family who settled in this county was Humphrey Daking or De Aking, who,
with his brother, Sir Thos. Daking, Knt., of Northwold, in Noffolk, held
considerable possessions in the Peak and other places in this county. The Duke
also owns the manor or grange of Pilsbury and Crookstone Grange, which had been
given by the same family to the abbey of Mervale, in Warwickshire, and had been
granted to George Earl of Shrewsbury; the manor of Foxlow, which had belonged
to the Lovell family; and Cotes Grange which had been granted by Henry VIII. to
George Cotton. When William Earl of Devonshire was created a Duke, he took his
second title of Marquis of Hartington from this place. A market was granted to
William Ferrers, Earl of Derby, about the year 1203, and a fair for three days
at the festival of St. Giles. The market is held on Wednesday, for butter and
eggs. Fairs are held on the 12th of February, 2nd of April, and the Wednesday
before the last Thursday in April for cattle and pedlery. If either of the two
first falls on Sunday, the fair is held on the Monday. Hartington Hall an
ancient edifice on a bold elevation overlooking the town, late the property of
the executers of the late Sir Hugh Bateman, Bart., in whose family it had been
since the early part of the sixteenth century, is now the property of the Duke
of Devonshire, and the residence of Mr. John Redfern. There is a hiring statutes
held the Wednesday before Christmas day. Feast, nearest Sunday to the 12th of
September. At Ludwell, 1¼ miles W.N.W., is a fine spring of water, which soon
falls into the Dove, but which, in summer often yields more water than comes
down the river. The principal farms are Bank Top, ¾ mile N.W. ; Burnt Cliff, 2½
miles N. ; Coltsfield, 3 miles N.N.E. ; Custard Fields, 2½ miles N.E.; Haven
Lodge, 2 miles N.E.; Lean Lowe, 2 miles N.; Pilsbury Grange, 2¼ miles N.W. from
Hartington.
CHARITIES.—Poor’s Land—The rents of 11A. 3R. 8P. of land situated at
Heathcote, in this parish, have for many years been distributed to the poor of
the Town Quarter. It is supposed these lands were formerly left by the Bateman
family, the agent of whom distributes the rents, amounting to £17 7s., annually
at Christmas.
An
annual sum of £2 12s., left by an unknown donor, is distributed in bread every
two or three weeks by the minister. The poor of Hartington are also entitled to
a portion of the gift of the Rev. Francis Gisborne’s charity. £5 10s. is
received by the incumbent of Hartington, and laid out in flannel and coarse
cloth, and given to the poor of the Town Quarter. (See Bradley).
HARTINGTON
MIDDLE QUARTER township contains Earl Sterndale chapelry, with various hamlets
and scattered farms, extending N. and N.W. from Hartington, contains 4,506A.
1R. 13P. of land, and in 1851 had 66 houses and 307 inhabitants, of whom 157
were males and 150 females; rateable value £2,960 10s. 3d. The Duke of
Devonshire is lord of the manor and principal owner. The mountains Croom,
Parker’s Hill, Glutton, and others the most singular of the Peak are in this
township, near to Earl or Church Sterndale, a small village 6½
miles N. by W. from Hartington, and 5 miles S.S.E. from Buxton. The Church was
rebuilt in 1828; it is a neat structure with an embattled tower. The living a perpetual curacy, valued at
£150. The Duke of Devonshire is patron, and the Rev. Thos. Blackburn Kentish,
B.A., incumbent, for whom a new parsonage house will shortly be erected.
Bentley Grange, 3 miles N.E. from Earl Sterndale, and Vincent House, 2 miles
N.N.E., are large farms.
CROWDYCOTE
is a hamlet and small village on the banks of the river Dove, on the Bakewell
and Longnor road, 2 miles S. by E. from Earl Stemndale. Here are two kilns for
burning lime, and a stone bridge of one arch crosses the Dove. Dowall, a large farm at
HARTINGTON PARISH. 419
the foot of a
precipitous mountain, 1 mile N.W. from Earl Sterndale. Glutton, a farm at the foot of Glutton Hill, ½ mile W. from Earl
Sterndale. High Needham, a small
village on an eminence, 1 mile E. from Crowdycote. Hurdlow, a small village 2 miles E. from Earl Sterndale. Here is a
steam engine for drawing carriages up an inclined plane of the Cromford and High
Peak railway, with a wharf and offices at Parsley Hay. Middle Street a scattered district of houses on a road south from
Earl Sterndale. This township is in the north division of the county.
CHARITIES—James
Hill, by will, in 1712, left £2
yearly to the schoolmaster, for teaching four of the poorest children in this
place.
Rowland Heathcote, by
will, dated 1800, left £40 for the benefit of the poor of Earl Sterndale. The
poor also of this Quarter receive bread to the amount of 20s. per annum from
the bequest of Mr. Fletcher.
HARTINGTON
NETHER QUARTER township, surrounds the Town Quarter, except where that adjoins
the river Dove; it is a scattered district of small villages and farms,
principally in the south division of the county, but partly extending into the
north division; and the farmers have their lands so divided as to give many of
them votes for both divisions. It contains 3,732A. 3R. 7P. of land, and in 1851
had 87 houses and 436 inhabitants, of whom 222 were males and 214 females;
rateable value £2,306 l5s. The Duke of Devonshire is lord of the manor and
principal owner. Andrew Brittlebank, Esq., Thos. Bateman, Esq., John Sleigh,
Esq., Thos. Hartshorne, Esq., and Miss M. A. Cantrell are also owners. In 1847
a new Church was built at Biggin, a
pleasant but scattered village, extending from 1¼ to 2 miles S.E. from
Hartington. It is a small stone edifice, with nave, chancel, and handsome
tower with one bell. The cost of erection was about £1,500 raised by
subscriptions, exclusive of the site, given by the patron, H. G. the Duke of
Devonshire. The living is a perpetual
curacy, value £57, in the incumbency of the Rev. Thos. Booth, LL.D., who
resides at the parsonage, a good residence near the Church, erected in 1848, at
the cost of £700. A good school
room was also built at the same time at a cost of £200. Biggin Grange, and The
Hall are now extensive farms. Dale Head, l¾ miles north. Friden, 3¼ miles E.
From Hartington. Here is a wharf and offices on the Cromford and Peak railway.
Heathcote, a pleasant small village on a bold eminence, 1 mile E. from
Hartington. The Primitive Methodists have a stone chapel here, built in 1835.
Newhaven, a small village 2½ miles E. from Hartington, on the old Manchester
and London road. Several other roads unite here, and it is noted for its Inn,
the Devonshire Arms, and posting house, 7 miles S.W. from Bakewell, 11 miles
S.E. by S. from Buxton, 5 miles N.N.E. from Dovedale. Very great fairs are
held here on the second Tuesday in September, and on the 30th of October, attended
by very distant dealers in sheep, &c. Ivy House, formerly the Bull’s Head
Inn, half a mile S. from Newhaven, is now a handsome private residence, Pike
Hall, 3¼ miles E.S.E from Hartington, has four farms in this township, situated
on the Winster and Newhaven road. Pilsbury Grange, 2 miles N. from Hartington,
near the Dove, has a large farm in this township, and one in the Town Quarter.
CHARITIES.—Matthew
Bennett, by will dated 1758, left £20 in trust, the interest
thereof to be given to the poor of Lower Quarter.
Margaret Sleigh gave
to the poor of the Lower Quarter 10s. yearly, for ever; and Robert Bateman gave 20s. yearly, to be
distributed on St. Thomas’s day. These two annuities are charged on a piece of
land called the Furlongs, near Leek.
Elizabeth Cottrill, in
1814, left £20 in trust, the interest thereof to be annually given to all the
poor widows of this Quarter.
HARTINGTON
UPPER QUARTER township forms the north-west extremity of the parish and of the
Wirksworth Hundred. It is a wild romantic district, and contains 9,550 acres of
hand, 192 houses, and 893 inhabitants, of whom 481 were males, and 412 females;
rateable value, £4280. Of this township, 4,147A. are common and heath, of which
the
420 WIRKSWORTH
HUNDRED.
heath is mostly on peat
and gritstone. The enclosed is mostly on limestone of excellent quality, of
which much is burned near the Ladmans low wharf, on the Cromford and High Peak
railway, near Grin hill, in Burbage. The Duke of Devonshire is lord of the
manor, owns the whole, except 1,215A., which belong to several freeholders. Axe Edge, at the north-east extremity,
forms the highest of the High Peak mountain range, being 1,750 feet above the
level of the sea, and nearly three miles S.W. from Buxton. The river Dove has
its source from the south side; the river Goyt from the north side; and the
river Dane from the south-west point, about 3½ miles S.W. from Buxton, on the
Leek road. Goyt’s Bridge forms the
extreme N.E. point. Near this point, 4½ miles N.W. from Buxton, the counties of
Derby, Cheshire, and Stafford, all meet.
BRAND,
a small hamlet, containing several scattered houses, lies at the foot of Axe
Edge. In 1776, a school was erected here. In 1831, it was converted into a dwelling-house
for the master, and a new school erected.—(See Charities). The Church clergy
and Methodist ministers occasionally perform divine service in this schoolroom.
BURBAGE,
a scattered hamlet at the north-east extremity, nearly adjoining Buxton, where,
at half mile south from Buxton, is Poole’s
Hole, a noted cavern, supposed to derive its name from an outlaw called
Poole, who secreted himself in its gloomy Caverns. Others suppose it was a
hermit, who chose this dismal cell for his place of abode. This cavern, at the
foot of Grin-low hill, has the honour of being classed amongst the wonders of
Derbyshire. The entrance is so low and narrow that the visitor is obliged to
proceed in a stooping posture for nearly 80 feet, when it widens considerably,
and he presently enters a very large opening with something like a covered
roof, which, with the floor and sides, abound with stalactical formations, so
thrown together as to bear a remote resemblance to various objects. In one
place the visitor is shewn a petrified turtle, a flitch of bacon, and old Poole’s
saddle; further in the cavern, a woolpack, a chair, a font, a lady’s toilet, a
lion, and the pillar of Mary, Queen of Scots, so named from a tradition of that
Queen having visited the cavern and advanced to this point, which is as far as
any one would wish to go, the remaining portion being contracted into a very
narrow chasm. From the entrance to the farthest extremity is said to be 2,007
feet. Near the entrance are a few cottages, and guides always in attendance to
shew the cavern. Grin Low is covered
with Limekilns. The hill is composed of a bluish limestone, which is
considered to make lime of the very best quality, which is transported to great
distances. In several of the old kilns, houses have been formed by the
peasantry, who by this means obtain a cheap and tolerable dwelling. The hill
had a strange and uncouth appearance, but it has been planted which now hides
its deformity. Harley is a large
farm, half a mile N.W. from Earl Sterndahe. Hedge
Moor, 1½ miles W. from
Buxton, is a pleasant cottage residence, the property of the Duke of
Devonshire, and in the occupancy of the family of the Bishop of Madras, now
officiating at Calcutta. There are a great number of others noticed in the
Directory. About 2 miles S. from Buxton, the Cromford and High Peak railway
passes through a tunnel 600 yards in length, near which is a colliery leased by
John Boothman, Esq., under the Duke of Devonshire; he also is lessee of the
limeworks, near Ladmanslow wharf, 1½
west from Buxton.
CHARITIES.—About
the year 1776, a school was built by Thomas Taylor, and 13A. of land were
appropriated, by the late Duke of Devonshire, to the use of the master of this
school, but it does not appear that any instrument was executed for the purpose
of annexing it permanently to the school, in respect to which the master
instructs 12 poor boys and girls.
Abraham Nadin, by
will, in 1807, left £60, the interest thereof to be paid to the schoolmaster
for teaching six poor children.
HARTINGTON PARISH. 421
HARTINGTON TOWN QUARTER TOWNSHIP.
Post Office, at Joseph Wardles; letters arrive by mail gig
from Ashbourn at 10.0 a.m. and are despatched at 4.0 p.m.
|
Alsop Mrs. Elizabeth Banks Mr. George Banks John, corn miller Belfield Mr. Isaac Harrison Henrietta,
schoolmistress Hope Wm., cheese factor,
& tailor & draper Hopkins Robert, cooper Lomas James, vet.
surgeon Milward
Mr. Thomas Redfern Miss Ann |
Sleigh Thos, and Henry, butter dealers Stone Wm., saddler and
harness maker Sutton Wm., parish clerk Wirgman Rev. Augustus, M,A.,
vicar Inns and Taverns. Devonshire Arms, Jno.
Lomas, & cheese fctr Red Lion, Edw. Broomhead Sleighs Arms, Mary Clark |
|
Blacksmiths. Love George Wayne John Butchers. Fogg John Prime Daniel, (and cattle dealer) Farmers. Abbot Thomas, Colt’s field Allen My., Moat House Boam James, Parsley hay Briggs Geo., Ludwell Broadhurst Ralph Broomhead Samuel Chritchlow Eliz. |
Chritchlow Henry, (& bone merchant) Chritchlow Ralph Dain Ralph, Lean low Fogg Thos. & Joseph Fogg Thos., sen. Gibbs John, Whim Gillman Mary Grindey John, Burn- clfffe Gould Jph., (& cheese factor) Gould Richard, Bank Top Housley Geo., Custard Fields Kirkham John, Pool Hall Mason Wm., Wolves- cote Grange Nadin John |
Oliver Robt., Nettle Tor Percival Isaac & John Redfern John, Har- tington hall Roose G., Churchsteps Shirley Benj., Dig st Swarfield Benj., Pils- bury Grange Wakefield Samuel Wilton Joseph, Haven Lodge Wooddisse Martha Wooddisse John Grocers. Mked * are Drapers. Broomhead Joseph * Hope James Sutton George * Wardle Joseph |
Shoemakers. Clulow Joseph Moorwood Wm. Presbury Wm. Sutton Wm. Wheelwrights & Joiners. * are
Joiners only. * Lomas Edward * Moore John Sleigh John Sleigh Samuel Woodisse John Carrier. To Leek, Geo. Sutton, Mon., Wed., & Sat. |
HARTINGTON MIDDLE QUARTER TOWNSHIP.
Those
marked 1 reside at
Crowdycote, 2 Earl Sterndale, 3 High Needham, 4 Hurdlowe.
|
Gilman Thomas,
blacksmith Gould Wm., engineer Hallows Samuel, wharfinger & coal dealer Johnson Thos., corn miller, Glutton
mill Kentish Rev. Thos.
Blackburn, B.A., incum- bent, Parsonage 2 Twigg Jph., shopkeeper and blacksmith |
Weston Chas., shoemaker Inns. 1 Pack Horse, Geo.
Bagshaw 2 Quiet Woman, Joseph
Heathcote, jun. Royal Oak, Thos.
Horobin, (and asst. over- seer,) Sparklow |
|
Farmers. Bagshaw Joseph 3 Bagshaw Ralph Bagshaw William Bainbridge William, Benty Grange Beardmore G., Cronk- stone Grange Bentley Thos., Glutton Bown Fras., High st 3 Brassington Thomas |
Broomhead Rbt., Vin- cent House Carr Hugh CritchlowJohn, Benty Grange CritchlowR., Stanary 2 Finney George 1 Gould William Gregory John Harrison William 2 Heathcote Jph., sen 2 Holland Sampson |
1 Horobin Thomas, sen., (and miller) Johnson Matthew, Wheldon Trees 4
Johnson Wm. Marsden Thos., Dowell Plant James Rodgers Thos., Under- hill Tunnicliff Mary,
(and tanner and currier) |
Wain Richd., High- edge Wilton Joseph 4
Wood William Shopkeepers. 2 Kidd Joseph 1 Mellor Joseph Wheelwrights. 1 Gregory Samuel Hall William |
422 WIRKSWORTH
HUNDRED.
HARTINGTON NETHER QUARTER TOWNSHIP.
Marked 1 reside at
Biggin, 2 Heathcote, 3 Newhaven, 4
Pike Hall, & 5
Pilsbury Grange.
|
1 Ault Isaac, sawyer 1 Austin Simeon, tailor 1 Bealby Richard, gent. Bland John, plasterer Booth Rev. Thomas,
L.L.D., incumbent, Parsonage Bowler John, clerk, Friden Wharf yard 2 Featherstone Michael,
shoemaker Heathcote
Joseph, wheelwright Naylor John, blacksmith |
Percival Mr. Joseph, Well closes Richardson John, gamekeeper 1 Shaw Miss Ann Inns and Taverns. Batemans Arms, Ralph Dain 3 Devonshire Arms, Wm.
Dain, Newhaven house Jug and Glass, Francis Featherstone, jun. Waterloo, James Shaw |