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Kelly's Directory of Gloucestershire - 1897

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Published by Colin Savage, 2018-08-08 19:11:31

GLOUCESTERSHIRE - 1897

Kelly's Directory of Gloucestershire - 1897

92 CHELTENHAM. GLOUCESTERSHIRE.

Hooper Elizh. (Mrs.), dairy, Wentv:ille, Shurdington I'd Jacobs, Smith & Co. dyers, Montpellier arcade

Hooper Frederick, Globe inn, North street Jake-way John, beer retailer, 23 Townsend street

Hooper George, coal dealer, Mar1e Hill parade Jame9 Ethel, Evelyn & Beatrice (Misses), ladies' Ichool,

Hooper Hannah (Mrs.), registry office for servants, 64 Suffolk hall, Suffolk lawn

High street James Charles, Lansdown inn P.R. Gloucester road

Hooper Jesse, wardrobe dealer, 259 High street James Charles, music seller, 7 Well walk, Clarence street

Hopkins & Co. grocers, 58 Winchcomb street ' James Eliza. (Mrs.), dairy, 182 High street

Hopkins Wm. apartments, 10 Spa buildings, MontpeJier James Elizabeth (Mrs.), apartments, 32 Montpellier vils

Hopson Edwin, painter, 7 Granville street . , James Elizabeth (Miss), apartments, 6 Royal Well terrace,

Hopton Ann (Mrs.), shopkpr. Cardiffstorel, Bath road St. George's road

Hopwood & Son, nurserymen, 58 High street James George, shopkeeper, 93 Tewkesbury road

Rorlick John, baker &i flour dealer, 247 High sfreet James Henry, baker, Swindon road

Horsfall John Thos. prof. 'Of music, Selby viI. College rd James Hy. hairdresser &; tobcenst. 5 Waterloo ter.Bath rd

Horsley Wm.Hy.auctioneer & accountant,8 &l ~ Promenade J am.eR J ane (Mrs.), shopkeeper, I Angle vils. Gratton rd

Hoskins Henry, Tivoli inn P.H. 6 Tivoli place James John, furniture dealer, 15 Sherborne street

Hoskins Sidney, l()cal inspector for the National Society J ames J oseph, cycle manufacturer, College road
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, 3 Hawal'den James Joseph, homooopathic chemist, S Promenade
James Leigh, butcher. Clare terrace, Bath road
parade, St. Paul's road
Boughton Geo. carpenter &; beer retlr.I7 Lypiatt st.Tivoli James Lucy (Miss), upholstress, 10 St. George's parade
James Owen, fancy draper, 130 High street
Houghton James William, plumber, Suff-olk road
H-oughton Sarah Kezia (Mrs.), registry office. Suffolk rd James Stephen, beer retailer. Gloucester road
"ames Thomas, butcher &i farmer. families sup-
Houghton William, fly proprietor. St. Paul's road
plied with the best english meat on reasonable terms &
Houlton Sidney, grocer, 323 High Slreet
delivered free to any pan of town or country; breeder
Hounslow John, beer retailer, Sherborne street of shire horses, short horn cattle & Oxford down sheep,
House Robert, apartments, 21 Imperial square
I Great Norwood street; farms, Vineyard farm. Char!-
Rowell George, CNlwn &; Cushion P.H. Bath road ton Kings & Bengrove farm, Teddington. Tel. N(). 84
Howell William, dairyman, Andover road
J ames Thomas, dairyman, 4 Portland pI. Portland st
Rowell Wm. greengrocer, 13 Hamilton pt St. Paul's rd James Waiter, coffee tavern, 281 High street

Howlett John, watch &; clock maker, 9 Clarence parade James William. brass worker, Little Bayshill terrace
Huband Thomas Arthur F.R.a.V.S. veterinary surgeon, James William, meat salesman, 8~ High street
James William, wheelwright, Hanover street, St. Paul's
&; shoeing forge, Albion street &; Regent street
Jamieson Saml. draper &; tailor,Somerset ho.St.James' sq
Huber Joseph, jeweller, 87 Winchcomb street Jardine William, .tailor, draper & general outfitter, Esk-

Hudson Albt. Edwd. inspector of nuisances,Municipal offs dale house, 5 St. George's place
Jeffery Frederick, art needlework designer & stationer,
Hudson Richard, tobacoonist, 84 High street
Hughes Arthur, cycle maker, 21 Pitvil1E~ fltreet 20a, Promenade villas

Hughes James, coal merchant & haulier, 13 Sherborne st Jeffrey Russell & Son, chemists, Post office, Leamington
place, Pittville
Hughes J oseph Fras. builder & undei'taker, 8 Suffolk I'd
Jeffs Harriet (Mrs.), china rivetter. 17 Henrietta street
Hulbert Arthur William Hyde, organist of Holy Trinity
church & teacher of music, 14 Pittville parade J elfs Chas. Fredk. cabinet ma. St. J ames' pI. Painswick rd
Jenkins David, tailor, Regent terrace. St. George's street
Humfrey Raphael ehas. chemist, 10 Sussex pl.Hewlett st
Humphreys Henry, horse & carria~ repository, 70 Jenkins Frank Ernest, confectioner. 4238, High street
& 8a, Colonnade
Winchcomb street

lIumphreys William, provision dlr. 47 Townsend street
Humphries Edward T. cycle manufacturers, Spa road
Humphries Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress, 2 Brighton cots. Jenkins Saml. jobbing gardnr. I Lyne vils.Shurdington rd
Jennings Elizabeth Annie (Mrs.), confectioner &1 refresh-
Naunton crescent
Humphris Alfred Hy. Nelson inn P.H. 221 High street ment rooms, 120 High street
Jennings Robert, builder, 3 Suffolk street
Humphris Edmund, apartments, 7 Bath parade
Hunt W. T. "" R. A. builders, contractors, decorators &; Jessop W. & O. H. solicitors, I Church street
Jessop Charles Hale (firm, W. & C. H. Jessop), solicitor
sanitary plumbers &c. Carlton street
&i commissioner for oaths, :I Church street
Huphnill Charles, Railway hotel, Ambrose ~treet
Jessop Bylton, solicitor, I Church street
Hureombe Thomas, boot maker, Warwick place

Hutchenie Alice (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 43 St. James' street Jewell Caroline S. (Mrs.), apartments, ~7 Lansdown cres

Hutchinson M. A. &; S. (Misses), ladies' & juvenile out- Johns Benjamin, apartments, 5 Queen's parade

fitters, children's costume & mantle makers, trousseaux, Johns John Franeis M.D., D.P.R. physician & surgeon, &;

layettes & colonial outfits, 13 Colonnade public vaccinator for Cheltenham district,3 Lansdown pI

Hutchinson Louisa (Mrs.), ladies' college boarding house, Johnson Bessie (Mrs.), apartments, 5 Hawarden parade,

S Bayshill lawn, Parabola road ' . St. Paul's road

Hyatt Albert Thomas, apartments, 21 Promenade Johnson Elizh. (Mrs.),private sehl. The Croft, Regent pi

Hyatt Arthur James, house decorator, 2 Portland terrace Johnson Emily (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Moorend street

Hyde Alfred, fish dealer, Roman road, St. Mark's Johnson George Henry, grocer, 216a, High street

Hyett William, picture framer, Suffolk road. J ohnson J ames, engineer, 23 Henrietta street

Iles Charles Robert, lithographer, 3 North street JohnS<ln William,shopkeeper, 6 Adelaide buildings,Bath rd

nott William, coal & wood dealer, Prestbury road Johnston Edward Cocks M.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon,I Clover"

Imperial Temperance Hotel (John Playle, proprietor) dale lawn, Painswick road

(Cheltenham Coffee Tavern Co. Lim.), 388 High street Jones- Albert, greengrocer, 64a, High street

Ingles Jane (Miss), dress maker, 26 Montpellier terrace Jones Ameli8l (Miss), apartments, 36 Montpellier terrace

Inglis Alex.Monro M.D.physician,Montpellier lawn,Bath I'd Jones Ann (Mrs.), sh()pkeeper, 9 Brecon ter. Rosehill st

Inland Revenne Office(Thos.Mitchell,supervisor),I Bath st Jones Annie (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 54 Tivoli street

International Tea Co. Stores Lim. tea dealers, 340 High st Jones Charles Allen, fancy draper, see Bailey &i Jones

Ireland A. E. & M. J. (Misses), girls' school, 3 Bath par Janes CharlGtte (Miss), lodging house, superior furnished

Ireland John Thomas, masseur, Rodney ho. Rodney I'd apartments, 2 Crescent terrace

Ireland Lizzie (Mrs.), dress maker, 25 Great Norwood st Jones David, tailor, 4 Hatherley villas, Tivoli plaoo

In-ing Robert, school attendance officer, Municipal offices Jones Edwal'd, paperhanger, 2 Otago ter. St. Luke's rd

laher Henry, baker, 6 Adelaide buildings, Bath road Jones Edward, wheelwright, Worcester street

Ives Fredk. shopkpr. 18 Queen's retreat, St. George's rd .Tones Eliza (Mrs.), apartments, 39 Lansdown crescent

Jack Arthur &; Co. jewellers, 15 Promenade villas Jones Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer, 21 Portland street

J ackson Blanche· & Gertrude (Misses), collegiate school, :Jones Fredk. fly proprietor, P()rtland mews, Portland st

St. .Tohn's lodge, Hewlett road Jones George, boot maker, 8 Northwick ter. Suffolk road

.Tackson Alfred, coffee house, 196 High street Jones Geo. William, gardener, St. James' pI. Painswick rd

J'l1ckson Charles, boot maker, 232 High street Jones Josiah, cab proprietor, North place

Jackson George, butter merchant, JI9S, High street "ones M. A. (MlsB), oorset warehouse; an assortment

Jackson George Mark, joiner, 46 Keynsham street of french & other ready-made stays; agent for

Jackson Henry John, wheelwright, Folly lane PuUars' dye works, Perth, 25 Winchcomb street

Jackson James, market gardener, Swindon road .Tones Mary (Mrs.), apartments, 3 Rodney place

Juckson John, fruiterer & poultry dIr. 91 Winchcomb st J ones Rees, draper, 344 High street

Jackson John, grocer & provision dealer, 170 & 243 High .Tones Richard, firewood dealer, 29 Towns-end street

street & 22 Winchcomb street Jones Ros-e Elizabeth (Miss), tobacconist, 2 Suffolk plU'

.Tackson Richard William, greengrocer, 2 C'1arence street J ones "Villiam, librarian of public library. Clarence st
Jordan Renry & Co. coal merchants; office, 12 Promen-
Jackson Thomas, carpenter, Moorend street
.Tat:kson William, apartments, 10 Grosvenor pI. Albion st ade; depots, Great Western station; &; at Charlton

Kings & Leckhampwn G. W. railway stations

DffiECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CHELTENHAM. 93

Jordan Charles, haulier, 30 St. Philip's Sltreet Laurence Ernest Alired L.D.S.lreI. dentist, 3 Spa place.

Jordan Edwin, market. gardener, Swindon road Montpelliel'

Joyner Edwin &; Son, brush makers, 31 Suffolk paTade Law Mary Ann (Miss), apartments, 27 Promenade

Joyner Caroline. (MillS), dressma. 7 Oriel pI. Bath rd Lawrence E. &; Co. coal merchants. &; brickmakers.

Joyner Edwin, llpartment8, 13 M-ontpeUier villas- Montpelliet walk &; Leckhampt-on

Joyner Ellen (Miss), aparts. 1 Brandon tel'. Gratton I'd Lawrence Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress, 31 Naunton crea

Joyner Herbert, jobbing gardener, Priory pI. High s~ Lawrence George, tea dealer, 325 High street

Joyner 'John, photogrnpher, 408 High street Lawrence James, boot maker, ro6 Naunton crescent

Joyne8 Mercy Cook (Mrs.), confectioner, Suffolk road Lawrence Wm. coal &; wood dlr. '8 Upper Norwood 8t

Judd Matthew, boot &i shoe maker, Moorend street Leacey Frederick WilliaD'l, confectioner, 85 High @trreel

KMrsey Fredk. nurseryman, Niagara, Great Western I'd Leacey Geo. mineral water manufactwrer. York pa.ssage

Keen Charles Lewis, sign writer, 5, &; 6 Marle Hill par Leacey J ames Richard, watchmaker, 4 Hewlett place

Keen George, sh-opkeeper, 5 Exmouth street Leacey Mary Jane Haydon (Mrs.), beer ret. 4 Hewletb pI

Kelly James, picture framer, 4 Chester walk Leacy Agneg (Mrs.), apartments, 3 Clarence parade

Kendall Wm. Benj. brush maker, 14 Clarence street Leadiootte James Harold, accountant, Bransford villa,

Kendall Wm. Wheeler, umbrella maker, 386c, High si Hewlett road

Kensington Edward, apartments, Bellevue lawn, High st LeaI' Alfred George, f.ruiterer, see Stokes &; Lear

Kent John &; Co. pawnbrokers, 207, 208 &; 209 High st LeaI' Alfred Geo. market gardener, II3 Tewkesbury rd

Kent Annie (:Mrs.), dres91 m3ker, 8 St. George's parade Leatham Richard A. apartments, 2 Queen's parade

Kent MaJI"k, greengrocer &; p1a<Sterer, Dunalley par. nrth Leatham Richard Atkinson, fancy drape!" &; milliner.

Ker Claudius Buchanan M.D. physician, Hadley house, 3233, High street

BayS'hill road LeaveI' Francis Frederick, manager of Lloyd's Bank Lim.

Kesterton John, old metal dealer, Devonshire street 2 Colonn3de apartments, t4 Imperial square
Kettle F. L. (Mrs.), costumier, 2 Torquay vils.Selkirk s~ Le Olu~e Madame,

Kilbey Charlotte (Mrs.), window blind maker, 42 Legge Esther (Mrs.), bootmaker, Bath Toad

Winchcomb etreet Legge Henry, boot-maker, Swindon road

Kilbey F.rederick, watchmaker, 20 Winchcomb street Lengden Alfred, dispenser at Branch Dispensary, :I

Kilbey Henry, french polisher, town crier &; bailiff of the Raymond terrace, London road

manor borough &; hundred of Cheltenham, Swindon rd Lenrthall Joseph Samuel, outfitter, 156 High street

Kilg<>ur M. H. boro' electrical engineer,15St.George's par Leonard Built, printer, 6 &; 7 Bath street
Leonard Edward, letterpress printer, Wellington passage.
Kilminster Charles, baker, 7 Courtenay street
Kilminster In. jobbing grdnr. :2 Denmark vils.Hewlett I'd High street
Kilminster William, beer retailer &; brewer, Victoria Leonards Limited, boot &; shoe wa'rehouse, 379 High st
Leopard Edwd. jobbing grdnr. 2 Elmfielm cots. Pittville
street, Fairview
Kilminster Wm. Hy. brewers' traveller, 10 Priory ter LeSJterleigh Frank William, teacher of music, I Otag()
terreoe, St. Luke's road
Kimber William Edward, outfitter, 84 High street
Letheren William &; Sons,Vulcan iron wrks.Gloucester rd
King CharleS', furniture broker, Sherborne place
King Frederiek, boot maker, 4 St. 1>1ark's emporium, Letheren John, a.uctioneer &; valuer, 13 Great Norwood si
Lewis Christopher &; Co. butchers, 95 Winchcomb s1;
Gloucester road
Lewis .Albert Sturt, medical electriCIan, Priory build-
KiQg Frederick J. sign writer, .Albert street
King Harry, Burton Brewery inn' &; a.gent for Godsell et ings, High street
Lewis John, tailor, 8 St. Philip's street
S<JDS~ brewers, 21 St. James' square
King Saphire (Miss), wardrobe dealer, 222 High street Lewis Thos. jobbing grdnr. 2 Orrisdale ter. St. Luke's
Ley Wood &; Bickerby, solicitors, 2 Ormond place.
King Sophia (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 6 Hewlett place
Telephone No. 3
King William, apartments', 33 Montpellier telTllce
King William Oscar, engineer &; agricultural machinist, Liddington Lake &; Plea,sure Grounds (Mrs. Elizabetb
Newby, proprietress), Leckhampton road
Hope villa, Gloucester road
King-Turner Robe'l't, school attendance officer, South- :t..ines Annie (Mirs.), fruiterer, la, Promenade terrace
Lines Charles, bootmaker. 2 Tivoli street
end house, Prestbury road
King-Turner Sarah (Mrs.), boys' preparatory school, Lint-er Elizabeth Ann (Mrs.), teacher of singing, Cots-
more lodge, Bath 'food
Southend house, Prestbury Toad
Kirkham Letitia Miriam (Mrs.), beer retailer, Leck- Lipton Thos. Johnstone, provision mer. 386a, High st
Little Catherine (Mrs.), grocer, I Norwood parade,
hampton road
Kirkland Robert M.B., C.M. physician, 5 Crescent tel Shurdington road
Kirkman John, grocer &; provision dealer, 198 High at Little George, jun. hay &; straw dealers, Swindon road
Little Girls' Home (Miss Sawyer, treasurer & lady prin-
Kitcl>ing James, Exmouth .AJrms P.H. Bath road
KnilZ'ht &; Cbatters, architects &; surveyors, IIO High sl cipal), 2 Alevandra villas, Hewlett road
Knight .Alice Rose (Miss), tchr. of music, 43 Leighton rd Little Henry, greengrocer, 3 Adelaide buildings, Ilath rd
Little Thomas Kirby, market gardener, I Melrose cot-
Knight Edmund John, builder, Q Suffolk parade tages, Naunton orescent
Knight Edwio, greengrocer, 27 Manchester street
.Knight Thomas William B.A. tutor, I Painswick lawn Lloyd &; Williams (Mis~s)t ladies' school, Eton house,

Knott Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, 6 Chester walk Wellington street .

Xromora Martha (Mrs.), d'ressmaker, Chapel house, St. Lloyd Edward, pork butcher, 225 High street
Lloyd John James, shopkeeper, 13 Franci9 street
James' square
Kunz Gamaliel, pastryoook &; confectioner, luncheon & Lloyd John Owen, coal merchant & factor, Montpellier
refreshment rooms, ball & party contract<lr, Au ChAlet arcade. Telephone No. 154
Lloyd Thomas, relieving officer No. 2 district, Merlin
Suisse, I I Promenade villas
villa, Naunton Park terrace
Lacey Henry, plasterer, 26 Dunalley parade north
Lloyds Bank Limited (County of G:oucester Bank branch)
Lacey Joseph, h~irdll"esser, 4 Grosvenor street
Lacey William Henry, wood & coal dlr. I Naunton ter (J. Wilson, manager; J. F. Emerton, sub-manager),
105 High street; draw on London office, 72 Lombard
Lake John, tailor, N-orth street
street, London E C
Lamb Arthur, solicitor, 5 Regent street
Lamb Family & 0:lmmercial Hotel (George Bland, Lloyds Bank Lim. (branch), Colonnade &; agency at
• Montpellier walk (F. F. Leaver, manager); draw on
proprietor), II6 High street
Lambourne Chas. beer Il'etailer, 7 Northwood ter.Bath rd head office, 72 Lombard street, London E C

Lance ",ohn "" Co. Limited, wholesale &; retail linen Lock Oharles, fish dealer, Waterloo street

drapers &; silk mercers & h{)use furnishers &; under. Lock JGmeS', Sherborne Arms P.H. Sherborne street

takers, 125, 126, 127 &; 128 High street Locke Henry &; SOIlS, confectioners, 17 Clarence street

Lane & BUl"I'<lughs, engineers, millwrights &; agricultural &; 8 &; 9 Montpellier avenue
Lockstone N. A. &; Son, mineral water mnfrs. Swindon rd
implement agents, Victoria street, Fairview
Lane John &; Son, furniture dealerS! &c. 6 &; 7 Mont- Lockstone Sarah Ann (Mrs.), provision dlr. 29 Henrietta st
London &; North Western iRailway goods office (John
pellier -street •
Stevens, agent), .Ambrose street
Lane George, builder, 10 St. Philip's terrace
Lane George, butcher, 267 High street London Rubber Co. india-rubber goods warehouse (Edward

Lane Relen (Miss), S'hopkeeper, 16 Henrietta street Luscombe, manager), 12 Colonnade

Lane Josiah John, saw mills, Swindon road London Supply Co. (J. How, mgr.), grocers, 400 High st

Lane Waiter George, bootmaker, II St. Jamesl street London & West of England Yeast Co. 205 High street

Langdon Mail'Y Jane (Miss), apartments, 10 Imperial sq Lord Henry &; Jane (Miss), drapers, Leicester ho. Ilath I'd
Loud John George, farmer, Sandford mill, Old Ilath road
Langdon Thomas, tailor, 21 Great Western terrace
Loveday Arthur, fish & poultry dealer, 142 High street
Lanwarn George, builder, 27 Tivoli street
Lart~r Edward, engineer, see Such &; L3rter Loveday George, builder, Somerford house, Gloucest&r rd

Laund-er Elizabeth (MiSiol), draper &; post office,Tivoli pI Lovell Alexander & Co. coal merchants, II Promenade

94 ,()HELTENHAM. . GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Loveridge Peter, collector' of rates, Municipal offices Maule Henry, saddler, 314, 315 &; 316 High street

Lovewe11 Ann (Mrs.), apartments, 2 Rodney place. May Norman &; Co: Lim. photographers, 23 Promenade viIs

Lovewell Egbert Hood, law stationer, 2 Rodney place' May Charles, boot tnaker, St.. J ames' place, Painswick rd

Low Peter. apartments, 10 Oambray '. May James Edward, plumber, 10 Victoria street, Fairview

Lowe Jane (Miss), apartments, 32 Impenal square May Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Union street

• Lowndes Robt, Baxter, solicitor &; commissioner for oaths, Maybrey John, jun. teacher of music, 10 Greville terrace,
2 Church street
Gratton road .
Lueas John, tailor, Hewlett road
Mayo George, jobbing gardener, Naunton Park road
Luekett John, apartments, 19 Imperial square
Mead George, tailor, 2 Moorend street
Lunn William Renry, .commission agent, 10 Rotunda ter Meats &; Co. engirteers &; tnerchants, '24 Lansdown Crescent
, Lusty Thomas & Son, grocers & hardware merchants, Medens Eliz8 (Miss). apartments, ColvilIe house, High It
. 165, 233 &; 234 High street . Meek Charles, fine art dealer. 6 Suffolk parade

Lyne George &; Co. dyers &; cleaners, 117 Hi~h st!eet Meek John, assistant clerk &; collector to the guardians ot
Mabbatt Catberine (Mrs,), dress maker, 7 Vlcton3 place,. the poor, Essex place
Fairview .. .

Melbourne Charles, tobacconist, 255 High street
Mabson Geo. Alfred, beer retailer, 125 Tewkesbury road ,Mellersh William Henry, solicitor, see Brydges. Mellersh
Macey Joseph Osborne, beer retailer, 53 Russell street
&; Brydges
MeFee John, draper, II St. George's square• .Am.bz:ose st Merchant Fanny (Miss), dress maker, 25 Grosvenor street
McIlquham Gilbert, solicitor &; deputy supt. regIstrar, Merrett John ·Joseph, shopkeeper, 26 Bath street
Essex place. . Merrett Willie John, Life, Fire, Accident, Live Stock, &;

Mack &; Co. tea merchants, 333 High street Plate Glass Insurance agent, Charlcut, Kings road

Mackay Charles, fly proprietor, 34 Wit;lchcomb street Merrick Jane (Miss), apartments, 2 Spa. bldgs. M?ntpellier

McLoughlin &; Son, gun makers, 89 HI~h s:treet Merl'itt JoAeph, jobbing gardener,Rosevllle,Shurdmgton rd

McRae Donald, supt. of county police, 4 Crescent place Marry &; Co. upholsterers & cabinet makers, 6 Clarence st

MacVitie Fanny ,&; Gertrude (Misses), dress makers, 2- Merryman John, dairyman, 21 Swindon street
Portland streeh
Messenger Oharles, boot maker, 2 Manchester square
MacVitie Charles WaIter, plumber, Ambrose -street
Me,;senger Elizabeth (Miss). apartments, I Hatherley
MacVitie Mary (Miss), milliner, 9 Pittville street
place, St. Stephen's road
MacVitie William, plumber &; decorator, 2 Portland street Metral Franl(ois, medical electrician, 4 St. Georgoe's par
Maddock Jane (Mrs.), beer retailer, 200 High street
Midelemiss Jane (Mrs.). market gardener, Hopeville,
Maisey Charles Henry, builder, Suffolk .street
Maisey Edward, paperhanger, 15 An Samts' road Swindon road Moor's gardens.
Maisey Edward James, decorator &; paperhanger, 56 St. Middlemiss Joseph, ma.rket gardener.

George's place Tewkesbury Toad

Maisey Thomas, shopkeeper, 2 Union st. Gt. No~oo~ st Middleton .A1ice (Miss), shopkeeper, 266 High street
Major Herbert Richard, apartments, 11. Montpellier .villas
Mallory H. &; Sons. ironmongers, 395 HIgh st. &; AlblO~ st Middleton Protherl) & Phillott, architects, 13 Promenade
Mal~ory Daniel, solicitor &; commissioner for affidaVIts, Midland Railway Company; parcel office (Charles Ricketts,

Essex place agent), la, Regent street; goods station (Benjamin
Broadhurst, manager), Tewkesbury road; goods re-
. ceivinl}; office, Plough Hotel yard
Malvern Oharhs &; Sons, builders &; decorators, 36 Winch.. Miles Alfred, coach builder, Winchcomb street &; Albion at
comb street
Miles Edwin, carver &; gilder, II Bath street
Malvern Arthur Henry, seedsman, 19 Portland street
Miles Stephen, beer retailer, 63 TOWIlsend street
Mann Alfred, coal merchant, 51 Tivoli street Millard Alfred, ca.binet maker, 3 Portland parade
Millard Alfred Harry, grocer, 4 Bon Marche place, Great
Manor Office (William Fowles, resident clerk), Portland st
NOl'wood street
ManseU Emma (Mrs.), Old Swan hotel, 60 High street
Millard Alfred Summers, beer retailer, Union street, Great
Mansell James, plumber, 3 St. George'll place Norwood .street

Mansell William, dining rooms, 98 Alibion street . Millard Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 4 Hamilton place, St.
Paul's road
Marchant Henry, shopkeeper, Hales road·
MilIard Herbert Emmanuel, builder, 6 Ota~o terrace
Marden Ann (Mrs.), apartments, Lucknow vils. St. Mark's Millard James Doddrell, tailor, 4 Bath road
MillaTd John, g-entleman's nurse, 5 St. Paul's stl'eet north
Margrett &; Son, bakers, 61 High street
Miller Edgar Geor'l'e, working jeweller, 43 Winchcomb st
Margrett Henry George, loan office, Cambray Miller Frederick, Great Western P.H. Clarence street
Miller George, beer retailer, Tewkesbu~ road
Marment James, fruiterer, Bennington st. &; 263 High st Miilel' John, refreshment rooms, 3 HermItaQ"e ter. Bath rd

Marment Margaret Julia (Mrs.), British Crown P.H. Million (The) Social Cycle Club (hon. sec. W. Kin!?, Hew-
lett place); head quarters, Crown &; CtMhion, Bath rd
Dunalley street • .
Mills Bc Son, coach &1 carriage builders, 38 Winchcomb
Marmon William, beer retailer &; brick maker, Princes st street; show room, adjoining Humphreys' repository

MarshaU Richard Eede &; Chas. ironmongers,s Clarence at Mills Bc Co. wholesale &; family wine &; spirit merchants,

Marshall Daws Rowe. dentist, 5 Oriel terrace beer bottlers, &; mineral water manufacturers; offices &;
duty-paid cellars, 100 High st.; vaults, liverpool pI
Marshall Samuel, sho.pkeeper, Lower Alstone
Mills .Ahce (Miss), ,shopkeeper, Swindon road
Martin &; Co. jewellers, Promenade Mills Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 10 Princes street

Martin Charles William, temperance hotel &; ca.b pro- Mills Mar} (Miss), apartments, 34 Montpellier terraqe
Mills Richard (Mrs.), apartments, 10 St. George's street
prietor, Qu~en's road
Mills Richard, boot" maker, Wellington passage, High at
Martin Edwiri George, plumber, 26 Great Norwo,od street
Mills Thomas Edward, shopkeeper, 2 Royal Well place
Martin Ernest Albert, watch maker. 21 Marle DiU parade
Minett Elizabeth (Mrs.), apa.rtments, IS Rotunda terrace
Martin Frank. confectioner, :;! High st:eet
Minett John, beer retailer. Gloucester road
Martin James, beer retailer, Oommermal street
Minett Richard F.S.A.A. borough accountant, Municipal
Martin Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, Wellington pas. offices, High street

sage, High street Mitchell &; Co. (Mrs. Carolina Curtis. manageress),Water-

Martyn H. H. &; Co. monumental sculptors, Sunningend,

High street

Martyn Gool'ge Henry, photographer, Oriel road

Maslin Frederick John, painter, 7 Sherborne terra~e
Maslin Joseph A,le:xander, waste paper dealer, 287 ~Igh st

Mason Annie Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, Gothic cot.

tage, Portland street
Mason Fl'aneis John Gorringe M.R.C..s.~ng. surgeon &
medical officer No. 5 district, &; public vaccinator, Char!- loo P .H. 309a, High street .

ton King's district, Livorno lodge, St. Margaret's :road Mitchell Fredk. Wm. gen. &; fancy draper, 15S BIgli st
Masonio Hall (Michael CarroU, hall-keeper), Portland st Mitchell In. travelling drapr. 2 North par. Winchcomb st
Mathews Henry B.Sc.Lond. teacher of natural science, Mitchell Jsph. Harvey, -antique dk. Ashton 10. North pI
Mitcbell Thomas. supervisor of inland revenue, I Bath st
4 Cambray . Mogridge Helen (Mrs.). second hand clothier, 13 Nor-

Ma.tthews Alfred, builder, New street .
Matthews Aliee- (Mrs.). dress maker. 3 Blenbeim terrace, wood terrace, Bath road
Monk Richard C. accountant,Duffryn cot.Shurdington rd
Portland street
Matthews Henry, gas exam~er, Essex lodge, 4 Cambray Montpellier Bath, &; Spa Co. Limited (G. H. Williams,
Matthews John Alexander, prores~or of music & conductor sec.), Bath road
of the Cheltenham Festival Society, 9 North place &; 9 MOIltpellier Baths (Mrs. E.Craddock,manageress),Bath ,rd
:Montpellier Billiard Rooms (Frederick Wright, proprIe-
Portland street
Matthews Mary .Ann (Mrs.), dairy, Pa.ragon ho.•Bath l'd. tor), Montpellier Rotunda •

MMithews William Charles, upholsterer, 8 Bennmgton at Montpellier Gardens (property of the CorporatIon; Jsph.
Hall, manager) ..,
Matthews William Henry, fishmonger, 264 HiR"h street
Maule Albert Henry, district 'Surveyo~, 3 Oxford villas, Montpellier Rotunda (Peter Jones, lessee &; musical direc.
tor), Montpellier
High street

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CHELTENHAM. -95

Moody William Henry, butcher, 9 Winchcomb place Niblett &; Co. mineral water manufacturers, Sherborne pI

Moon Elizh. (Miss), apartments, Ecclesburn, Moorend rd Nicholas &; 00. oil &; color mers. 5, 6 &; 7 Clarence st

Moon Jsph. Thos. chimney sweepr. 6 Hathsrley st.Ti~li Nicholls Henry, shoe maker, 9 Manchester street

Moore J ames k Son, builders, Bath parade, Bath road Nicholls John, carpenter, Leckhampton road

Moore William W. house agent, &; certified bailiff under Nicholls William, watch maker, 42s1 High street
the Law of Distress Amendment Act, 2 Rodney terrace Nixon Samuel Henry, china, glass, earthenware et lamp

Moore Willoughby James, tobacconist, Oriel ho. Bath rd warehouse, 10 Promenade villas

Moorman Henry, nurseryman, Tivoli road Norman &; Sawyer, printers &i publishers of the II Chel-

Moorman Wm. photographer, Mosquito Ghur, Bath rd tenham. Examiner" &; the "Cheltenham Free Press,"

Moorman William, surveyor, Rose cottage, Croft street 9 aarenee street. See advertisement

Moran Samuel, carpenter &; upholsterer, 9 Bayshill par Norman, Sawyer &; 00. printers &; stationers, St. George's

Morgan O. &; 00. grocers &; wine &; spirit merchants, 2 hall, High street

Queen's circus Norman Frederick, stationv, 3 Bedford buildings, Clar-

Morgan Annie (Mrs.), dress maker, 4 Sherborne terrace encs street &; confectioner, 3 Clarence street
Morgan Charles Frank, ladder maker, 29 Burton street Norman Hy. Geo. printer &; lithogrphr. 10 Bennington It

Morgan Clara (Miss), dress maker, 3 All Saints' road Norman William, fine art dealer, 2 Bedford buildings

Morgan Harriet (Mrs.), beer retailer, Swindon road Norrls David James, ironmonger, 183 High street

Morgan Henry, fly proprietor, Princes street Norris Sidney John, news agent, Ambrose street

Morgan John Henry, paperhanger, I Brunswick place, Norris Thomas William, dairyman, 12 Suffolk parade

St. Paul's road Norton Henry George &; 00. ironmongers, 416 High st.

Morison Margaret (Miss), ladies' college boarding house, &; cycle agents, 2 to 5 Bath road

Cambray house, Cambray Norton Jane &; Bessie (Misses), dress makers, 13 Great

Morris Henry, furniture dealer, 428 High street Western. road

Mnrris John, coffee house, 20 Sherborne street Norton Alfred, tailor &; hatter, 406 High street

Morris Lucy Ann (Mrs.), fishmonger, 56 Winchcomb st Norton Bernard, bookseller, 393 High street

Morris Sarah (Miss), fruiterer &c. 4 Montpellier avenue Norton Wm. new'&; secondhand booksllr. 16 Clarence st

Morris Thomas, fish, fruit & potato mer. 2'86 High st Nott Alfred Henry, coal merchant, 95 High street &; Tew-

Mouat-Biggs Charles Edward Forbes L.R.C.P.Lond. Bur- kesbury Road bridge

geon, 2 Fauconberg villas, Bayshill road Noverraz Emily (Mrs.), milliner, 41 Tivoli street

Moulder John, eating house, Clare terrace, Bath road O'Brien Michael, optician, II Winchcomb street

Moulder Mary (Mrs.), apartments, 27 Bennington street Oddfellows Hall (William Newman, sec.), York rooms,

Mousell Brothers (branch from Gloucester), furniture Grosvenor terrace south

removers, 27 Pittville street Ody Mary (Mrs.), dress maker, 14 Princes road, Tivoli

Mowatt In. Rodman, pharmaceutical chemist,109 High st Ody Tom, grocer, 9 &; 10 Townsend pI. Tewkesbury road

Mnlhearn John Thomas, smith, 33 Victoria st. Fairview Ogden &; Scotford, fishing tackle manufacturers, 7 Port-

Muller Charles Martin, architect &; surveyor, I Ormond ter land terrace, Pittville

Mullinar Charlotte (Mrs.). boarding ho. 21 Lansdown pI Ogden James, fishing' tackle maker, 28 Winehcomb street

Mnlliss Sarah (Mrs.), fruiterer, 61 Winchcomb street Okey Jsph. grocer, Post office,St.George's rd.Glo'ster rd

Mumford W. Prince, surgeon chiropodist, all Old .Tohn Arthur, Clarence hotel, Clarence street

diseases of the feet scientifically & pain- Olive &; Olive, fishmongers, C<Jlonnade

lessly treated; author of "Painless Treatment of Oliver George, boot maker, IIg &; 345 High street

the Diseases of the Feet." &; late pupil of the eminent Oliver James, shopkeeper, 13 Beaufort bldgs. Portland sq

Dr. Zacharie, London, 5 Ormond terrace, Regent st Oliver WaIter James, linen draper, 83 High street

Musk George, waiter, I Oriel road Oliver William, shopkeeper, IO Henrietta street

Musk Matilda (Mrs.). dress maker, I Oriel road Organ Elizabeth (Mrs.), confectioner, 10 Mount Pleasant

Mustoe Charles, haulier, Sherborne street Organ Robert, ironmonger, 92 Winchcomb street

Mustoe Elizabeth (Miss), dairy, 39 Winchcomb street Orgee Elizabeth (Mrs.), apartments, I Lansdowne cres

Musty William, fruiterer, 6 Northwick tel'. Suffolk road Orphan Boys' Asylum (Rev. O. E. Gibson M.A. &; Rev.

Nadin J. N. &; Co. coal merchants, 147 High street &; M. A. Smelt M.A. hone secs.; Miss Gardner, matron),
St. Marg-aret's road
Tewkesbury Road bridge

Narramore EmiIy &; Rose (Misses), apartments, II Royal Otter Winifred, dress maker, 3 Bat'h street

.'parade, Bayshill road .. Overthrow William, marine store dealer, Swindon road

Nash Arthur, watch &; clock maker, 269 High street Overton Catherine (Mrs.), apartments, 12 Brandon ter-

Nash Charles WaIter, dining rooms, 7 Portland street race, Gratton road

Nash Frank Walter, King's Head P.H. 295 High street Packer Harry, furniture remover, contractor, haulier

National Provincial Bank of England Limited (branch) &; wheelwrigh.t, 23 Townsend place, Tewkesbury road;

(John Pearson, manager), 398 &; 399 High street; draw telegraphic address, "Packer, Haulier, Cheltenham";
telephone number II6
on head office, London E 0
National (The) Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Packer Thirza (Mrs.), Regent inn, Regent street

Children (Sidney Hoskins, inspector), 3 Hawarden par. Packer Tom Herbert, Conservative registration agent.

St. Paul's road CIarence parade
Page H. &; Son, cabinet makers, upholsterers et beddinlZ'
National Telephone Co. Limited, 19 Regent street
Naunton Bible Class Club (Miss Foaker, hone sec.), 5 manufacturers, furniture removers, new et Becondhand
furniture, luggage &c. st()red in dry rooms, 88 HilZ'h
Clare street, Bath road
street; stores at 26 Grosvenor street
Nazareth House (home for aged poor), Bath road
Neale Hy. &; Sons, china &; glass wareho.25 Promenade vils Page J. &; J. &; 00. butchers, 348 High street &; 3 Mont-
Neale Algernon Wm. Prince of Wales hotl.P.H.6Portlnd.st pellier avenue
Page Andrew, ladder maker &; shopkeeper, Swindon road
Neale Ambrose, artist, Blenheim place, Bath parade
Page Benjamin, carver &; gilder, 59 St. George's place
Neale Robert Samuel, decorator, St. Luke's road
Page George; market gardener, Hatberley road
Nealson Edward, ladder maker, Swindon road
Negus Ralph, draper &; fancy goods dealer, Suffolk road Page John, fruit dealer, Waterloo street.
Neininger Mary (Miss), dress ma.see Bevan &; Neininger Page John Robert, wood dealer, Swindon road
Pa.ge Robert, art-needlework designer, 4 Bath para.de
Nelson's Limited, butchers, 415 High street
Page Robert, coal &; wood dealer, 220a, High street
Nelson Mary Ann (Miss), d'lliry, 23 Clarence street
NelthOTpe Augustine. watch maker, 6 Grosvenor street Page Thomas, Cross Keys P.R. Tewkesbury road

New Club (Oapt. J. K. Fraser, sec.), Promenade PogeWilliam, carpenter, Fairford cottage, Gloucester rd

New George Henry, tea & coffee mer. IOI &; ;[02 High st; Page William, painter &; decorator, Albion street .
Paget Augustus, jeweller, 18 Pittville street
New James, bookseller, Caxton house, North street
:New Margaret (Mrs.), ladies' school, 4 Trinity terrace, Painter Henry, wood carver, 62 High street

Portland street . Palmer Emily (Mrs.), Duke of Brunswick r.B. St.Paul's rd

Newbery Fredk. slater &; plasterer, 17 Grosvenor pl.south Palmer Frank, furniture broker, 9 Chal'1ton pI. London rd

Newbold &i Newton, stationers &; post office, 73 nigh st Palmer Frank Thomas, pharmaceutical chemist, see

Newdick John Moysius, catholic repository,Manchester st Fleteher &i Palmer

Newman Elisha, boot ma. 1. Edward pI. Shurdington road Palmer John, beer retailer, 99 Tewkesbury road

Newman Fanpy (Mrs.), dress maker, 10 Mitre st.St.Luke's Palmer Richard Amold, grocer. Silverton buildings,

Newman Joseph, market gardener, 24 Duke street . Great Norwood street

Newman Sarah (Mrs.). dress maker, Nailsworth cottage, Papworth Wm. Holder, cabinet ma. 23 Great Norwood sf;

Swindon road Paradise John W. Fleece family &; commercial htI. High st

Newman William, secretary to the Imperial lodge of Odd- Pardington Emma (Miss), dress mo. 2 St. Paul's st. north
Pardington John, tailor, Portland street
fellows, 27 Albert place, Pittville

Newman Wm. Hey, Bell Hotel tap P.R, Winchcomb st Pardington Mary (Miss), dress maker, 22 North place

Newton Alfred Wm. professor 'Of music, 73 High stree~ Parker &; Co. d,·ers, 7 North street

96 CHELTENHAM. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Parker Daniel William, beer retailer, Gloncester road PhilIips George, florist &; fruiterer, 422 High street

Parker Edward, carver, gilder &; artists' repository, PhiIlips James, waiter, 439 High street

MontpeGer avenue PhilIips W'ilIiam, MaItster's Arms P.H. St. James' street

Parker Frank, builder, see Price &; Parker Phillott George Henry M.A., M.S.A.Lond. architect, see

Parker George, photographer, 4 Portland parade Middleton, Prothero &; Phillott

Parker George Henry, builder, North villa, North place Philps E;izabeth (Miss), apartments, 12 Rodney terrace

Parker John. cabinet maker, Sandford street Phipps Archibald Henry, tailol" &; outfitter, 413 High sI>

Parker John Henry, grocer, 228 High street Phipps Charles, pork butcher, 7 Upper Bath road

Parr William, apartments, 3 York terrace. St. George's rd Phipps Elizabeth (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, 273 High st

Parry Francis Philip, timber merchant, Croome rilla, Phipps Samuel Henry, hosier &; hatter, Bath road

Great Norwo<Kl street Piff Charles, Nag's Head P.H. 236a, High street

Parslow John, plumber &; glazier, Victoria pI. Fah-view Piff Edwin, haulier, Crab Tree piece, Swindon road

Parsons Francis, reporter, 7 !North place Pigott Alfred Raymond, deputy clerk to the commis.

Parsons Henry Edward, tailor, 4 Exmouth pt Hewlett st sioners of taxes, 2 Crescent place

Parsons Philip Lant, photographer, The Woodlands, Pigott Grenvil!e Edgar, furniture broker, II Regent

Rodney terrace place, Swindon road

Pars.ons Wm. Bowd, cabinet maker, 8 Montpellier villas Pilgrim James, nurseryman, 46 Windsor street

Partridge George, apartments, 7 Lansdown place Pilley Jemima (Mrs.), apartments, Wellington passage,

Partridge Richard, umbrella maker, 7! Winchcomb litreet High street

Pates &; Sharpe, nurserymen &; florists &; floral contrac- PilIey J oseph, house decorator, North street

tors, Imperial nursery, St. George's road (Tel. No. 181) Pinder Robert, mantle warehouseman, II7a &; IIB High sl

&; Kingston gardens, Prestbury road Pink John William, new &; second-hand bookseller, 20

Pates &; Co. coal merchants, College coal exchange, St. Pittville street

George's road Piper Thomas, Sydney Arms hotel; every accommoda_

Pates' Almshouses, Albiolll street tion for commercial gentlemen, 19 Pittville street

Pates William Thomas, plumber &; painter, Hewlett road Pitcher James &; Son, boot &; shoe makers, 85 Winch-

Patrick Samuel, Worcester Arms P.H. 92 Tewkesbury rd comb street & 154 High street

Pattison Thomas, chemist &; druggist, see Butcher &; Pitcher William Michael, boot maker, 214 High street

Pattison Pittaway WilIiam, baker, 227 High street

Payne George, sexton of Christ Church, 5 Christ Church Pittville Spa (property of the Corporation) (Joseph Hall,

terrace, Malvern road. manager)

Payne Joseph Ernest, grocer, 22 Bath street Plant T. &; Co. Limited, hatters, 18 Colonnade

Peachey Mary Ann (Mrs.), apartments, 27 Grosvenor st Pleydell Edith Emily (Miss), butcher, 236 High street

Peacock Lucy Catherine (Miss), milliner, see Wright Pleydell Ellen Eliza (Mrs.), butcher, 288 High street

&; Peacock Plough Hotel (Plough Hotel Co. Limited) (Miss Camp-

Peake G. Arthur L.R.C.P.Lond. surgeon dentist, .Alma bell, manageress); old established, first-class family

house, Rodney place hotel; central position; unrivalled livery accommoda-

Pearce B. W. Br. Sons. wholesale &; retail timber tion; carriages of every description, High street

(english &; foreign), slate, cement, plaster, brick, pipe Pockett Mary Ann (Mrs.), market gardener, Chester

&; tile merchants, lath renders, dealers &; factors in cottage, Hatherley road

lead, glass, colors, oils, varnishes &; builders' iron- PoOlice Office (CoOunty) (Admiral Henry Christian, chief

mongery, St. George's timber yards; steam sawing constable; Young Sainsbury, chief clerk; Donald

&; turning mil!s &; general building material dep6t, McRae, superintendent), Crescent place

Regent place; brickfields, The Marsh, Folly lane &; Pollock Andrew Gibson R.A.M. professor of music, 1

cement stores. at Docks, GI<lUcester. Tel. No. 8. Cloverdale villas, Painswick. road

See advertisement Pond George Charles, dyer, 86 Albion street

Poorce Annie (Mrs.), laundress, I Moorend villas, Shurd- Ponting James Ellis, apartments, 33 Imperial square

ington road Pool Jane (Miss), apartments, II &; 12 Bayshill terrace,

Pearce EIlen (Miss), dress maker, 15 Winchcomb place St. George's road

Pearce Emily (Miss), apartments, 5 Jersey pL Hewlett rd Poole Charles, coffee tavern, 6 Rutland street

Pearce Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 9 Commereial street Poole Elizabeth (Miss), beer retailer, 63 Burton street

Pearce Frederick, baker & grocer, Shurdington road Poole George Frederick, printer & publisher, 15 Ben·

Pearee George, York hotel, York passage nington street

Pearce Harriet (Mrs.), ladies' hair dresser, Regent chmbrs Porter Harry Couche, New inn, Hewlett road

Pearce John, ooal dealer, Hermitage street Potter C. M. (Mrs.), Royal hotel, family &; commercial;

Pearce Thomas, cabinet maker, 3 Victoria terrace telephone No. 74, High street

Pearce WilIiam, master of workhouse, Swindon rO$d Potter John, earthenware dealer, Suffolk road

Pearce William, shopkeeper, 31 Burton street Pottinger Frances Ann (Mrs.), scholastic agency, Rodney

Pearman WaIter, assistant overseer, Eldoncot, Leek- lodge, Rodney terrace .
. hampton road
Pottinger Frederick, certified bailiff under the Law of

Pearman Walter J. boot ma. Charlton lane. Leckhampton Distress Amendment Act, 2 Rodney terrace

J>earson & Smith, milliners &C. 4J7 High street Poulston .Albert, hair dreilser, 68 Regent street

Pearson .Albert E. architect, 13 Promenade Poulston Thomas Geo. hair dresser, 69 St. George's place

Pearson John, manager of National Provincial Bank of Poulton Frederick, blacksmith, 18 NOl"Wood ter. Bath rd

England Limited, 398 &; 399 High street; Powell CIara. (Miss), n~ws agent & post office, 24 Winch·

Peart Alice (Miss), apartments, 2 Royal Well terrace, comb street

St. George's road Powell Isabella (Mrs.), apartments, 2 Poplar place,

Peart Thomas, beer retailer, II Hewlett street Shurdington road

Pemberton William, market gardener, 4 Cyprus cottages, PoweIl James, shoe maker, 22 Francis street

Lower .Alstone Powell John, builder, 4 Albion parade, Market street

Peninsular &; Oriental Steam Navigation Co. (Sidney PoweIl John, fancy repository, 3 St. Luke's road

Morris Cornelius. agent), 26a, Promenade rillas Powell John, shopkeeper, I Keighley ter. Brunswick st

Pennel! Alfred, toy dealer, 8I High street Powell Samuel James, watch maker, 6 Winchcomb street

Penny Ernest, cabinet maker, Vernon place, Bath road Powell William, baker, 36 Victoria street

Perratt William, beer retailer, 21 St. James' street Powell William, fly proprietor, Lansdown Hotel stables..

Perrin John J. stationer &; newsagent, 2 Bon Marche See advertisement

place, Great Norwood street PoweR William, surgeon, I Segrave place, Pittville

Perrin Josiah, stationer &; tobacconist, II Winchcomb pI Practising School (In.McFee RA.head mstr.),St.Paul's rd

Perry Kate (Miss), fancy goods dealer, 338 High street Prance Geoffrey Hammett M.D., C.M. surgeon, Alderley

Peters Percy, boot maker, 38a, Winchcomb street villa, Queen's road

Pewtress Ellen (Mrs.), apartments, I Oriel villas, Oriel rd Prater Ellen (Mrs.), aparts. x Priory bldgs. High street

Phelps Wm. chimney sweeper, 2 College place, Bayshill Pratley Charles Wm. dairyman, Priors farm, Cemetery rd

Phillipps Minnie. (Mrs.), servants' rQgistry office, 14 Pratley George Chas. supt. of cemetery, <A!metery rd

Regent street Pratley George Harry, grocer &c. 12 North place

PhilIips Catherine (Mrs.), temperance hotel, Manchester st Predith Lama (Mrs.), boot maker, 69 Winchcomb street

Phillips Charles, coach builder &; wheelwright, Suffolk st Preece Jane (Mrs.), aparts. 2 S()uthampton pI. High st

PhiIlips Edward, livery stable proprietor, Suffolk mews, Preparatory & Boarding School for Boys &; Girls (Mis8 M.

Suffolk road M. Kimbe;r, principal), Malvern view, Churchdown;

Phillips Eliza (Miss), apartments, 5 OxfQrd parade, High st references permitted
Phiilips George C., M.D.Cantab. house surgeon, Chel- Presley John Thomas, librarian, Cheltenham library, 5

ienham General Hospital -Victoria terrace

••

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CHELTENHAM.

Press Elizabeth Jane (Mrs.), dairy, 317 High street Ricketts Ellen (~Irs.), apartments, 29 Imperial square

Preston Charlotte (Miss), dress maker, 66 St. George·s pI Ricketts Martin Benjamin, assistant overseer &i collector

Preston William Hy. sign writer &; painter, 4 Warwick pI of poor's rates, 8 Cambray

Prew Fanny (~Irs.), -shopkeeper, 18 Marle Hill road' Ride William &; Co. corn dealers &; millers (steam), 31

Prew William, carpenter, Ambrose street Winchcomb street &; Upper .A1stone

Price & Parker, builders, 4 Pittville street &; Keynsham st. Hidler Elizabeth (Miss), apartments, 30 Imperial square

l'rice Algina Jas. organ builder &; tuner, 23 Grosvenor st Ritchings Mary (J\Jrs.), laundress, 2 Moorend villas,

Price Annie (Miss), fancy work repository, 8 Pittville st Shurdington road

Price Fanny Ellen (Mrs.), apartments, 102 High street Roberts Oharles, shopkeeper, 7 Charlton pI. London road

llrice J<Jhn, pork butcher, 5 Mount Pleasant Roberts John, private tutor, Boldre villa, Selkirk street

'Price Miriam (Mrs.), confectioner, 26 Clarence street & Roberts Louisa (Mrs.), registry <Jffice for servants, 2

apartments, I York terrace, St. George's road Fern villa, Queen'll road

!Price Thomas, beer retailer, Union st. Great Norwood st Roberts Mary (Miss), berlin wool repos. 3 Pittville street

Price William, dairyman, 24 Bath street Robertson & Hands. surgeon: dentists, 13 Royal crescent

Price William, travelling draper, St. George's place Robertson \Valter J. & Co. tobacconists, 8 Colonnade

Priest Joseph Henry, watch maker, 67 Winchcomb street Robinson Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, 7 Pittville street

Pritehard Mark Thomas, boot maker. 3 Winchcomb place Robinson Henry, farmer, Alma farm, Hatherley road

Private Hospital &; Home for Trained Nurses (Miss Lane, Robinson Joshua, leather seller, 191 High street

lady supt.), 5 Royal parade, Bayshill r<lad Robinson Louisa (Mrs.), dress maker, 31 All Saints' road

'Prockter & Forth, pharmaceutical chemists, 397 High at Robinson Waiter, upholsterer, 41 Winchcomb street

Promenade Tea Rooms (!loIrs.Elizabeth Smith, mangns.), Roche James, builder & decorator, Hewlett road; res. 4-

5 Promenade Priory terrace

Prothero Henry Allen M.A., F.R.I.B.A. architect, see Rock Mary (Miss), news agent, 193 High street

Middleton, Prothero &; Phillott Rodgerson Emily (Mrs.), lodging house, 7 Spa. buildings,

Prude George, market gardener, Six Chimneys farm, M<mtpellier

Lower Alstone Rodway Charles, upholsterer, 5 Keynsham street

Pruen Septimus Tristram M.D. physician &; surgeon &; Rodway Frederic, shopkeeper, 1 Mitre street, St. Luke's

medical officer to Cheltenham Union workhouse, Sher- Rodway William, house carpenter &; undertaker & picture

borne lodge, Promenade frame maker, Portland street

Puddicombe Annie &; Caroline (Misses), 1 &; 2 Winch- Roe Caroline (Miss), dress maker, 12 Promenade

comb place RDebuck Frank, shopkeeper, 282 High street

Pugh Charles Fredk. accountant &; certified bailiff under Rogers &, Fernald, surgeon dentists, Alma ho. Rodney pI

the Law of Distress Amendment Act, 2 Regent street Rogers Albert, stone mason, 17 Albion parade, Market st

Pugh Edward, greengrocer, 276 High street Rogers Broome, ironmonger, 3 Bon Marche place, Great

Pugh William, butcher, 341 High street Norwood street

Purnell H. A. (Mrs.), chemist &1 druggist, 337 High st Rogers Henry, professor of music,I4 Royal par.Bayshill rd

Parnell Robert John, estate agent (firm, Engall, Cox, Ross !Eliza (Miss), furrier, 3 Beaufort bldgs. Portland sq

Gregory & Purnell) Round Joseph Alfred, registrar <Jf births & deaths for sub-

Queen'. Hotel (Queen's Hotel Co. Limited) (Miss J. district of Cheltenham, 5 Qarence parade

Hill, manageress), Promenade. Telephone No. 13 Rouse Frederick William, teacher of music, 12 Christ

Queen's Hotel Co. Limited, livery stables (H. Siros, man- Church terrace, Malvern road

ager), Promenade Rowland Ann (Mrs.), tripe dresser, Bath road

Radburn Frank Howard, grocer & post office, St. Paul's rd Rowland Mary Ann (Mrs.), hair dresser, 97 Albion street

Radway Mary (Mrs.), aparts. 7 York ter. St. George's rd Rowland Robert, hair dresser, 254 High street

Raikes William Genrge, beer retailer, Swindon road Rowlands Francis, hair dresser, 92 Albion street

Rainey John &; Co. antique furniture dealers, Old Post I Royal Society for the Prevention of u-uelty to Animals
i (Cheltenham &; East Gloucestershire branch) (William
office, Clarence street

Itainger Oharles H. builder, Ba.h place, Bath road Heath, solicitor; Capt. Arthur RyTes, sec.; Edwin Tom

Ramsey Jane (~liss), ladies' home, 36 Montpellier villas Channing, inspector), lISt. George's place

Ratcliff Amy (Mrs.), aparts. 2 Warwick vils.Portland st Royal Family A Commercial Hotel (Mrs. C. M.

Ratcliff Benjamin, Collett's Brewery P.R. St. Paul's Potter, proprietress), High street. Telephone Ko. 74-

Rattey Henry, shopkeeper, Croft street Roylance James, draper, &; post office, 248 High street &;

B.awlings Harry, bookseller, 3 Bath road 3 Fairview road, Mount Pleasant

Rawlings Jamas, tailor, Ambrose street Ruck Frank, medical galvanist & turkish baths, Cambray

Rea Francis Holland, wine & spirit mer. &c. Rodney tar spa, Rodney road

Reason Charles Henry, greengrocer, Inkerman cottage, Rudge George Hall, commrcl. trav. 10 Montpellier villas

Lansdown road Rudge James Henry, assistant district supt. Prudential

lteay Matthew Henry, grainer &; h<l. decorat{)r,14 Bath par Assurance Co. 36 All Saints' road

Reeve Joseph, florist, King's road Rudman Joseph A. goods manager, Great Western Rail-

Religious Tract Society's Depot (A.E. Dangerfield, agent), way goods station

4 Olarence street Rusbton Josiah, artist, Montpellier street

Rendol Edward, apartmel'lts, 16 Montpellier terrace RusseU J(}hn, tailor, 40 Swindon street

Rendol Thomas Charles, apartments, 3 Montpellier ter Russell William Herbert, solicitor &; commissioner for

Renton Rohert M.B., C.M. physician, 3 Montague lawn, oaths, 6 Regent street

London road Ryan James, tailor, 3 Chester walk

Rex Florence (Miss), dress maker, 95a, High street Ryan McMahon Edmond John, physician & surgeon L.K.

Rix Jessie (Miss), apartments, 19 Lansdown crescent &I Q.C.P.I. & L.R.C.S.I. &; medical officer of health to

.Rhodes Louisa (Miss)" apartments, 2 Knowsley parade, Northleach rural sanitary authority & medical officer

St. Paul's road No. 4 district, Northleach union, Elkstone ho. Bath rd

Rice Alieia Fras. (Miss) & Watts Florence (Miss), apart- Ryde Charlotte (Mrs.), apartments, 17 Imperial square

ments, 6 Royal parade, Bayshill road Ryder George, tailor, 9 St. George's parade

Richards John & Son, tile layers &; mers. Swindon street Ryder James, grocer, 52 Queen street

~ichards' Charles, fried fish shop, 194 High street Ryland Alfred, brewer &; hoor retailer, Swindon road

~ichardsl Ellen (Miss), dress ma. 12 Hatherley st. Tivoli Ryland Ge<lrge Thomas, Bayshillllln P.H. St.George's pI
Richards Jane (Miss), dr~ss maker, 31 Selkirk street
Ryland James, jeweller, 371 High street

Richards Joseph Pearce, provision dealer, 289 High street Ryland Sydney Procter (firm, Griffiths, Ryland, Wag-

Richards Louisa (Mrs.), apartments, 20 Cambray horne &; Griffiths), solicitnr &; clerk to the commis-

Richards T<lm Harry, jeweller, 6 Montpellier walk sioners of taxes &; deputy coroner for the Upper dis-

Richardson Arthur, artist, Cleveland, Tivoli road trict, ~ Crescent place

Richards<ln Elizabeth (Mrs.), preparatory school for boys, Ryland Thomas, Berkeley Arms P.R. Albion street

Beech villa, Gloucester road Rymell Edwin, butcher, 3 London road

Richings George, market gardener, 8<luthville cottage, Sabin Edwin, waiter, 24 .suffolk parade

LeckhamptoR road Sadler & Son, furniture dealerll, 313 High street

Richings Thomas, beer retailer, Grove street Sadler Geo. Wm. F.S.I. architect & surveyor,467 High st

lticbmond James, beer retailer, II Gloucester place Sadler John, grocer & beer retailer, 7 London road

Richmond James, smith &, cycle dealer, Albion 'Street Sadler Joseph Farman, grocer &; wine & spirit merchant,

'Rickerby Thomas Ellerson, &olicitor, see Ley Wood & 1 &; 2 Tivoli buildings, Tivoli place..

Uickerby Sadler Julia. (Miss), dress maker, 13 St. George's paradB

~icketts Alfred,fancy draper, Sandringham ho.Promenade St. Gregory's Convent (Rev. Mother Casimir, mothel"

Ric1retts Cha:rles, apartments, 57 Regent litreet superior), St. Paul's street north

GLOU. 7

98 CHELTE:NHAM. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Sadler Laura (Miss), toy dealer, 7 Pitt..ille street Siddall William Charles, fruiterer &c. 16 Montpellier walk

St. Gregory's High School (Sister Vincent, principal), Sidney Herbert Stafford, horse trainer, Priory ct.High 8~

St. James' square Sier John, parish clerk of St. Mary, I St. James' parade-

St. Hilds's College, incorporated with Cheltenham Col- Silk &, Son, grocers, 146 &; 430 & 431 High street

lege (Miss A. Lumby, principal; J. F. Tarrant, sec.), Sim Roderick M.R.O.S., L.R.C.P. junior house surgeon

Western road Cheltenham General Hospital

St. Mary's Cemetery, High street Simmons John, goldsmith, jeweller, silversmith, diamQad

St. Mary's Parish Room (Mrs. iEliza West, caretaker), merchant &; watch manufacturer, 384 High street

Bt. James' square Simmons William, pork butcher, 2ti Great Norwood st

Salisbury Henry, tailor, 2 Birdlip place, Bath road Sims &, Turner, stock &, share brokers, 10 Regent streeh

Salisbury Joseph, tailor, 55 St. George's place Sims Benjamin, confectioner, Northwick pI. I Suffolk rd

Salmon & Gluckstein Lim. tobacconists, 369a, \High st Sims Chas. Henry, coffee tavern, 6 Upper :Bath road

Salmon E. (Miss), mantle warehouse, Kensington house, Sims Geo. Fountain Inn P.H. Northwiek place, Bath rd

Promenade Sims Henry, tailor, 5 Upper Bath road

Salt &; Co. Unicorn P.H. Wellingt<ln passage, High st Sims John, baker & corn dealer, 16 & I] Suffolk paradlt

Salter Edward, Wheatsheaf inn, Leckhampton Sims John, beer retailer, Bath road

Sanders Alex. Gilbert, electrical engineer, Clarence par Sims Thomas, baker &; confectioner, 148 High street &.

Sanderson Misses, preparatory school for boys, Glyn- 2 Imperial buildings, St. George's road

garth, Douro road . Sindr~J .Arthur George, market gardener, Tewkesburyrd

Saunder George, tobacconist, 5 Bath road Sindrey Frederick William, market gardener, The Tree-

Saundera Edward, builder &; contractor, house de- lands, Rowanfield road, St. Mark's

corator & sanit.ary engineer kc. 2 Southend villas, Sindrey George, market gardener, Sydney house, Rowan-

Painswick road field road, St. Mark's

Saunders Elizabeth (Miss), private school, I O>ttage Singer Manufacturing Co. (branch), 382 High street

place, Monson avenue, St. Margaret's road Singleton Benjamin, clothier, 95 Albion street &; Water...

Savage John, apartmentll, 5 Royal Well ter.St. George's rd loo terrace, Bath road

Savage John, picture frame maker, I College pI. Bayshill Skeml' Rt. Rowland, builder, Gratton ho. Gt. Norwood st

Sawyer Ftederick William, hair dresser &; perfumer, 4 Skey William, stonemason, St. Edward's villas, King's rd

Queen's circus & 370 High street Skidmore Frederick, apartments, I Gloucester place

Sawyer Wm. commsn. agt. 2 Hillsboro' villas, King's rd Skingle Jabez, photographer, 4 'Bath road

Sayer Elizabeth &; Annie (Misses). teachers of dancing, Skinner Albert, Russell Arms P.H. Hales road

Pierreville, Bayshill Skinner Benjamin, fishmonger, 17 Albion street

Schneider Gustav, professor of languages, 5 Hatherley Skinner Oharles, grocer, 238 High street

place, St. Stephen'il road Skinaer Frederick William, boot warehouse & teacher of

School of Art (Charles Wilson esq. president; Edward music, 8 Upper Bath road

J. Wilson M.B. hon. sec.; C. Stuart Millard R.A.C. Skinner Henry, baker & grocer, 20 Sherborne street

head master), Clarence street Skinner Hy. Adolphus, hair dresser, 12 St. George's at

School of Cookery (Miss Gertrude Roberts, sec.),North st Skinner William, jobbing gardener, 32 Windsor street

School of Science (B. S. Gott M.A., F.C.S. head master; Slade Sophia (Mrs.) &; Florence (Miss), dress makers,

Major A. K. Abbott, hon. sec.), Clarence street ID Warwick place

Schwamenkruge William, boot maker, 33 -Suffolk parade Slade Richard Horne, designer, 10 Warwick place

Scotford Lambert W.illiam, ~shing tackle manufacturer, Slade 1Vm. David, boot & shoe ma. 12 Promenade villas

see Ogden & Scotford Slader &; .son, cabinet makers &; furniture dealers, 76

Scott Louisa (Miss), apartments, 8 Promenade terrace High stree.t; 13 -Bath street & 6, 7 & 8 Bath road

Screen .Annie (Mrs.), dress maker, '39 .All Saints' road Slader .Alice (Mrs.), news agent, St. James' terrace,

Scriven Wm. fly proprietor, Berkeley lawn, Berkeley st Suffolk parade

Seaford Annie (Mrs.), draper, 310 High street Shder Caleb Henry, ironmonger, :Bath house, Bath road

Seager & Co. mineral water manufrs. St. George's st Slader Wm. }<'rdk. cabinet ma. St. James' ter.Suffolk par

§econd 'Cheltenham "Richmond" 'Building Society (E. Blatter & Co. bookbinders, 4 Bennington street

A. Evans, sec.), 147 High street Slatter Emily (Mrs.), apartments, 21 Montpellier terrace

Seeney James, dining roems, 347 High street Slattar James, plumber, 20 St. Philip's street

Selley Charles, greengrocer,'Il Great Norwood street Slatter William, market gardener, Arlebrook cottage,

Selley Henry, shopkeeper, I Sherborne street Tewkesbury road

Sessions Emily (Miss), aparts. 12 Spa bldgs. Montpellier Smart Robert, bQot maker, la, Carlton place, Hewlett st

Seward George, plumber, I ~t. Paul's street north Smith Brothers, builders, Albion street '

SeymourSamuel, builder, 4 Brandon ter. Grafton road Smith Charles & Sons, accountants, commission & insur-

Sharpe William & Sons, boot makers &;, leather mer- ance agents & rent & debt collectors, 53 RegeRt street

chants, Colonnade house & 2 Promenade buildings Smith Clara &; Annie (Misses), apartments, 4 Queen's par

Sharpe Stephen, nurseryman &c. see Pates &; Sharpe Smith &; Cotton, grocers, Weybridge house, Bath road
Sharples Elizabeth (Miss), apartments, a Queen's parade Smith Edward & Son, nurserymen, St. George's road

Shaw John Henry, beer retailer, 10 Grosvenor street Smith Edwin &; Sons, stone masons, Libertus cottage,

Shenton Emma ~ Rachael (Misses), milliners, 58, Pro- Roman road & Queen's buildings, Queen's road

menade villas Smith James & Son, builders, Exmouth house,Hewlett st

Shenton Elizabeth Jane (Mrs.), printer & stationer, 90 Smith Nathaniel & Co. pharmaceutical chemists, 373

Winchcomb street . High street & 2 Montpellier exchange

Shenton Shakespeare, advertising contractor, 23 Gros- Smith Albert, cab proprietor, Swindon street

venor place south Smith Albert Charles, plumber, 16 Gratton street, Grea~

Shepard & Co. restamant, 3 Colonnade & 3 Clarence st Norwood stree~

Shephard Edwd. Hy. insurance agent, 16 Regent street Smith Alexander Wllllam, mantle, costume, under-

Shepherd Emily Mam (Miss), preparatory school for clothing &; millinery warehouse, sole agent for Liberty

boys, Montague h9use, Cambray . &; Co.'s art fabrics &; specialities, Brunswick house,

'Sheppard H. & Son, builders, 23 Montpellier terrace Promenade

Sheppard Arthur Wm. watch ma. Springwell ho. Bath rd Smith Alfred, pork butcher, ~o High street

Sheppard William, confectioner, St. Luke's 'road Smith Arthur, market gsrdener, Tewkesbury road
• Shill John, cider merchant, Moorend villa, Moorend road Smith Arth. H. solicitor, I Bedford bldgs. Clarence st

Shinner Arthur J. managing direclor to the Cheltenham Smith Arthur Wellington, greengrocer, 307 High .stree~

Original .Bre'Wery Co. Limited, 160 High street Smith :Bertlaa (Mrs,), wardrobe dealer, Albion street

Shipcott Elizh. (Mrs.), apartments, 32 Montpellier ter Smiili Cecil (Mrs.), ladies' college boarding house, Glen-

Shipway Wm. Henry, tobacconist, 17 Mount Pleasant lee, B8y!hill

Shlrer '" Haddon, silk mercers, lacemen, drapers, Smith Charles, markeil gardener, Lower .Alstone

hosiers, upholsterers, carpet & furnishing warehousemen Smith Charles Henry, journalist, 35 Leighton road

& undertakers, ;t, 2, 3, 6,_ 7, 8 &; 9 Imperial .circus; Smith Edwsrd, horsE\' dealer, 6 Raymond ter. London rd

17 Colonnade &; ,20 Clarence street, &; furniture re- Smith Eliza (Miss), laundress,Hill View ho. Naunton cres

pository, 178 & 179 High street Smith Francil'!, 'Waiter, 15 Keynsham street ,

Showells Brewery Company Limited, brewers (John Smith Frederick (Mrs.)~ ladies' cellege boarding honse;

Henry Webbe, llgent), II Regent street 1 Fauconberg terrace, Baysbill road

Shrives George, draper, 299 High street Smith George, apartments, 49 Gr-osvenor street.
~hrivetl James, watch maker, 9 Winchcomb street
Smith George, furniture dealer, 167' High street

Shurmer Fanny (Mrs.), dress maker, I Winchcomb place Smith Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Clare tar. Bath road
Smith ·Hy. Wm. markt. ~ardnr. Rowanfieldrd., St.Mj1'k'lI'
Siddall Alberl Giles, saddler, .suffolk road

SiddoDlil John Thomas, inspector of postmen. Exeter Smith James, baker k grocer, 4 Moorend road

villa, Grosvenor street ';:;mith James, boot maker, 17 North place

JDIRECTORY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CHELTENHAM. 99

Smith .lames Arthur, riding master & livery stables; Steventon Robert Henry, apartments, 23 Regent street

under the patronage of H.R.H. the Duke of Cambridge Stibbs & Co. brewers, Cheltenham brewery, Albion st;

& Princess Mary Adelaide, Duchess of Teck; the oldest Cleveland inn, Tewkesbnry road; Mitre inn, Sand-

establishment in the West of England, Regent street ford street; Portland inn, Sherborne st. & Suffolk par

Smith John, 'beer retailer, 48 Montpellier terrace Stibbs George, toba~conist & haird!I'esser, 3 Norl;h street

Smith John Morley, decorator, Hewlett road • Stockwell Alfred Grimes, coal merchant, Bat·h road

Smith Joseph, fly proprietor, 235 High street Stokes & Lear, fruiterers, II Montpellier walk

Smith Josiah, sewing machine agent, IQ St. George'~ pI Stokes George William, whitesmith &c. 2 Gloucester pi

Smith Richard, market gardener, Lower Alstone Stone John &;, Co. fruiterers, 410 & 322 High street

Smith Robert, dairyman, 24 Rosehill street Stone Alfred, decoratoc, 20 Regent street

Smith Robt. Thos.(Mrs.), farmer, Benhall farm,St.Mark's Stone William Henry, grocer, 9 Albion street

Smith Savena (Mrs.), market gardener, The Moors, Stoneham Julia (:Mrs.), brush maker, 26 Manchester st

Tewkesbury road Storr & Co. butchers,S Po-rtland terrace

Smith Selim, mourning warehouse, 67 High street Strang Robert, ironmonger, 17 Montpellier walk

Smith Thomas, market gardener, Leckhampton road Strange Ellen (Miss-), milliner & dressma. 32 Suffollr par

Smith Thos. markt. gardener, Plough gdns. St. Paul's rd Strang~ Saml. Wm.com.agent, 4 Tavistock pI.Rodney rd

Smith Thomas, wood dealer, I Naunton parade, Bath rd Stranger R. E. linen draper, 138 High skeet

Smith Thomas Giles, grocer & wine & spirit merchant, Stratford Henry, dairyman & fruiterer, 3 Rotunda tar

Upper Bath road & St. Mark's emporium, Glo'ster rd Street Edwardine (Miss),teacher of harp,2IGros'Venor st

Smith William, apartments, 8 Orrisdale ter. St. Luke's Strettons Limited, the "Million" Cycle Factory,

Smith William, fly proprietor, undertaker &c. 122 Nor- manufacturers of the "Million" cycles. Best value

wood terrace, Bath road & St. Philip's mews,Grafton I'd obtainable; lists sent free on application; speeial terms

Smith William, horse dealer, I Sussex viIs. Clarence I'd to agents. Best class of cycles for hire; repairs to

Smith William, sign writer, Moorend street any make of machine

Smith William Thom.as, fly proprietor,Montpellier mews Stretton He-tbert Arth. cycle agent, ~ee Rand & Stretton

SneIl Annie (Mrs.), apartments, 4 Belle Vue pt High st Stroud Herbt. solicitr. 2 Clarence chmbrs. Clarence par:'

Sneil Louisa (Miss), dressmaker, 4 Selkirk viIs.Selkirk st Stroulger & Co. pork butchers, 93 High street

Snowsell Elijah, miller- (water) & baker, 197 High st Studman George, beer retailer, Chapel street

Sollis Mary (Miss), apartments, IS PittvilIe parade Such & Lart~r, engineers, King street

SollOll"s Frederick, hardware dealer, 7 Henrietta street Such S. John, superintendent of fire brigade, Caledonian""

Soul Edmund, apartments, Belle Vue lodge, High st house, Swindon road

South Ann (Miss), apartments, 6 St, George's terr~e Sully Edwin, apaTtments, 18 Lansdowne place

South Wm. Watson, beer retailer, 7 St. Paul's s1. north Sultan (The) Engineering Company, cycle·.

Spackman Charles William, builder, Windsor street & makers & agents, 30a, Winchcomb street

I4 Albel1t place, Pittville Summers Amelia. (Miss), dressmaker, 2 Bath parade

Sparrow Brothers, working cutlers, 16 Mount Pleasant Summers 1Villiam Lloyd M.A. tutor, Gordon villa~.

Spanow .A.lired Henry, boot maker, St. Luke'S! place Leckhampton road

Sparrow William, insurance supt. 3 Warwick place Sumner Francis, shoeing smith, Painswick road

Sparrow William Henry, shopkeeper, 12 Beaufort build- Sumner Herbert ArthUJr, fly proprietor & livery stable,

ings, Porrtland square keeper, victorias, broughams, l.andaus, dog-carts &C.

Spencer Ellen (Miss), apartments, II Princes street Lansdown Crescent m,ews

Spencer George, carpenter & window blind maker, 20 Surman Harry Oharles, beer retailer, Swindon ll'oad

Henrietta street Surman Thomas, baker, 29 York street

Spencer William, poultry dealer, 8 Bayshill parade Surveyor of Taxes' Office (George Lethem Williams,

Spender Henry, assistant superintendent Prudential surveyor), I Bath street

Assnranee 00. Lim. 67 Brighton road 1 Suter ·Wm. Jas. photogr. Royal house, Montpellier s~

Sperry John, ticket writer, 14 Benningt·on street I Sutherland David, commetcial traveller, 10 Victoria tel'"
Spier Edward Pearce, chemist, 26Ia, High street
i Sutton & CD. carriE'I"S (Joseph Ge<Jrge Freeman, 3gentj•..

iSpill JO'hn, apartments" I Warwick villas, Portland street 50 S1. George's place
Spra.gg George, refreshment rooms, 96 .Albion street Swanborough Wm. Chas. Turk's Head P.R. Mt.Pleasant .

Spreadbury Arth. fly propr. Bath Villa mews, Bath rd Sweet Edith (Miss) • .apartments, 45 Montpellier terrace

Sp-readbury William, boot maker, I Sandford street Sweetman Eliza (Miss), baby linen dlr. 12 Pittville ~t

Spreag James Hy. Paul, boot maker, 13 St. James' st Sydney Arms Hotel (Thomas Piper, proprietor),

Skidden Elizh. H. (Mrs.), shopkpr. 30 Upper Park street I every accommodation for commercial gentlemen, 19

Staite Alfred, upholsterer &c. Oxford passage & 17 Pittville st,reet

Dunalley parftde Sykes & Son, grocers, 5 Thirlestaine place, Ilath road
Staite Elizh. (Mrs.), furniture dealer, 12 Townsend Tallboy Mary (Mrs.), rope & twine maker, 324 High .st -

place, Tewkesbury road Tanner Ohades', shoe maker, 9 Burton street

Staite Richard, fly p['oprietor, Berkeley House stables, Tanner George, brewer & beer retailer, 87 Tewkesbury rd

PittvilIe drive Tapp William, confectioner, 312 High street
Stallard Harriet (Mrs.), window blind ma. Portland at Tarling Alfred, builder, 39 All Saints' terrac~
Stal1ard Thomas GallTold, solicitor & commi~ioner for Tarling Eleanor (Mrs.), aparts. Haddonhurst,Grosvenor st..

oaths, Regent chambers, Regent street Tarling Thomas, shopkeeper, 4 Winchcomb place

Stallard William (Mrs.), apartments, 25 Gloucester place Tarr George Squires, pa.rk butcher, 151 High strE'er---

Stamp Office (Powell Chandler, distributor), Genenl Tate Thomas, apartments, I, 2, 3, & 4 Promenade ter'

Post office, Promenade Taylor & Webb, linen drapers, 368 High street

Stark!! Tom, boot maker, Queen's bldgs. Queen's road Taylor Alfred, chimney sweeper, Portland street

Stead & Simpson Lim. boot makers (R. Buxton, mngr.), Tavlor Alfred Henry, currier &; leather & hide & skin

123, 124 & 139 High street merchant, 34 Gloucester place

Steel Thomas & Son, college, court, military & hunting Taylor Ernest BaJrtlett,Boar's Head in» P.H.Henrietta st

c.o. Iboot makers, 3 Queen's circus & 79 High street Taylor Francis James, sign· writer, 24a, Gt. Norwood st

Steel & sewing machine agents, 19 Winchcomb st Taylor Frank, assistant inspector County Weighb &,

Steel Lanriston Thoma~ solicitor, I Regent sb-eet Measures office, I Manch<ester street

Steel Robert, fruiterer '&c. Bath I"oad, 4 Montpellier st. Tarlor F'rederick, plumber, 8 Leamington pI. PittvilIe

& 4IIa, High street Taylor Frederick William M.R.C.V.S. veterinary sur-

Steel Robert Edward, solicitor & commiilsioner for oaths, geon, 74 Winchcomb street

I Regent sln-eet Taylor Henry, boot maker, 13 King street .

Steel Sydney Thoma!', jeweller &c. 18 Promenade villas Taylor Jemima (Miss), apartm-ents, 9 Bayshill teT'J'aoe

Steel Wm. Columbns, boot ma. I Hermitage ter.Bath rd Taylor John Philip, picture frame maker, pictures

Stembridge Marie (Mdme.), milliner, 5 Queen's ci!rcus framed in any style, cheapest shop in the town, 3

Stephenl! F. A.. &; Son, 17 Great Norwood street WestaIl buildings, Bath road

Stephens & Finch, hot water engineers, Sherborne place Taylor Matthew Nicholls, decorator, 7 St. George's pair

Stephens Caroline (Mrll.), dairy, 12 Grosvenor s-treet Taylor Robt. stationer & post office, Montpellier avenue

Stliphens In. Fdk. fishmonger, 2 Hermitage ter.Bath Il'd Taylor Thomas,. fly proprietor, Collf'ge mews, Suffolk rd

Stephens Thomas William, picture frame m2ker, 84 TayIor WilIiam, beer retailer, 217 High street

Winchcomb street Taylor Wm. groeer, I Beaufort bldgs. Portland £quare

Stevens Eliza (Mrs.), apartments, 6 Bayshill terrace Teague Charles James Alfred, teacher of music, VioIl,

Stavens Henry~ hairdressQr, 14 Albion street I Great Norwood sbreet.
Stevens Hobert, saddler, 82 Winchcomb street Teague John Edwd. prof. of music, Lismore ho.Rath I'd

i1Jeventon Marie (Mrs.), newsagt. 20 Mount Pleasant ,GLOU. ~*

100 CHELTENHAM. GLO UCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Teague John ~Iill, profeSsor of music, 22 Park place Turner David, builder, I4 Norwood terrace, Bath road

Teakle Annie (Miss), dressma. 6 Andover ter.Ashford rd Turner Edward, hatter, 169 High street

Teakle Charles Perkins, grocer, Naunton crescent Turner George, confectioner, 14I High street

Temple William James, beer retailer, Bath street Turner George, tobacconist & hairdresser, 2 Northwick

TelTett Edward, hairdresser, Swindon rOad place, Bath road

Terretb Edward, practical tailor &; woollen draper, Turner Maria (Mrs.), beer retailer, 41 Brunswick street

breeches maker &C. 16 Pittville SJl;reet Turner Mury Ann (Mrs.), beer retailer, 258 High street

Third Cheltenham ,. Richmond " lluilding Society (C. Turner Miss, ladies' college boarding house, 2 Fauconberg

Askew, sec.), Grove villa, Albany srbreet terrace, Bayshill road

Thomas Brothers. dispensing &; family chemists & Turner Ralph, shoe maker, 4 Gordon ter. Sherborne place

photographic materials dealers, photographic appalratus Turtle EdwardJ Richard, dairyman, 3 St. J ames' terrace,

&; full stock of all chemicals &; materials used in photo- Suffolk parade

graphy, at wholesale prices, The College pharmacy, Tuson Arthur "Vm. pawnbroker, Norfolk ho. Chester walk

Bath road &; the Spa pharmacy, Montpellier Tymms Edward, watch maker, la, Regent street

Thomas Alfred, grOC€r, 7 Westbourne ter. St. Paul's rd Tyrer Richard RA. The Modern School, Prestbury road

Thomas David, station master, Great Western railway Underhill Eliza (Miss), ladies' schl. Lyncourt, The Park

~tion, St. J ames' squuTe; residence, Ashburn house, Union Club (George Morman, hon. sec. & trea,surer;

St. J ames' square Thomas Sparrow, steward), Cambray

Thomas Dinah (Mrs.), Barley Mow P.H. Tewkesbury Td Ursell Ann (Miss), dress maker, 2 Napier cottages,

Thomas Edward, British Union inn. Painswick Toad Ormond place

Thomas Emily (Miss), prof. of mus. Stonham ho. Bath rd Ursell Edward, carpenter, ArIe end, Arle

Thomas J. Philip, chemist, &; hon. sec. to the Cheltenham Ursen Francis Augustus, hairdresser &; perfumer, Paris

Amateur Photographic Society, see Thomas Bros house, Promenade

Thomas J oseph Arden, chemist &c. see Thomas Bros Ursell Francis William, pianoforte &; music dealer, 9

Thomas Robert, CDal merchant, 3 St. George's street Colonnade, & 3 Imperial buildings

Thomas Wm. Hy. boot maker, 2 Regent pI. Swindon rd Vacara AntoniD, shell fish dealer, 322 High street

ThompsDn Daniel, tailor, Horton house, Gloucester road Vale Thomas, teacher of music, 2 Qarence parade

Thomson Harriet (Miss), dress maker, Bilbrook house, Vanner John James, inland revenue officer, I Bath street

Winchcomb street Varder Samuel Browne. estate & house agent,

Thorndoll David, haulier, Andover road auctioneer & surveyor, Albion chambers. Clarence par

Thornton & Co. waterproofers, 380 High street Vaughan John, hardware dealer, 9 Upper Bath road

Thornton Frank, brass finisher, Oxford passage, & Verrinder Thomas, butcher, 3 Hewlett road

plumber, 2 Westall buildings, Bath road Veterinary Infirmary (Thomas A. Huband F.R.C.V.S.),

Tibbles Sidney, Coopers' Arms P.H. 65 High street Albion street

Tibbles Sidney, hairdresser, I69a, High street Vick Benjamin, hairdresser, 21 M{)uot Pleasant

Tibbles William George, carriage painter, Royal Hotel Victoria Home for District Nurses (Miss Eladen, supt.;

yard, Albion street Miss l?enn, hon. sec.). St. James' square

Ticehurst & Sons, solicitors, Essex place Viles Rosa Louisa. (Mrs.), refreshment rooms, 3 Benning.

Ticehurst Frederic (firm, Ticehurst &; Sons), solicitor, ton street

commissioner for oaths & deputy clerk to the guardians, Villar James. architect, surveyor &; estate agent & sur-

Essex place veyor to the urban district council o()f Charlton Kings,

Ticehufst Rowland (firm, Ticehurst &; Sons), solicitor, la, Cambray ; &; at Charlton Kings

commissioner for oaths, clerk to the guardians, rural ViUar John Gaspard, auctioneer, Clarence street

district council, school attendance &; assessment com- Vimpany Henry John, grocer, 5 Sussex pI. Hewlett st

mittees, &; superintendent registrar, Essex place Vincent Elizabeth (Mrjl.), apartments, 25 Imperial square

Tilley Henry James, market gardener, Hales road Viner Emily (Miss), dress maker, 2 Painswick parade.

Tilley John, fly proprietor, Wellington -street Painswick road

Tillott George, general dealer, 46 Tewkesbury road Viner James, boot maker, 2 Painswick par. Painswick 'I'd

Timbrell Edward, chimney sweeper, 41 Burton street Vines Harry Theodore, stati{)ner, 4 Portland terrace

Tinker William, sexton of St. Stephen's, 4 HatherIey st Viret Caroline (Mrs.), apartments, 23 Suffolk parade

TinkleI' Joseph, brush maker & cooper, 168 High street Vitrographic Co. (The), gold leaf importers &; beaters,

Titcomb Albert, assistant insurance superintendent, 10 16 Regent street

Denmark villas, Hewlett road Vizard George, market garden~r, Swindon road

Todd Charles, hairdresser, 2 St. James' ter. Suffolk par Vizard Lewis, accountant, 10 Clarence street

'Todd Henry Ilansall, surgeon &; medical officer to Charlton Voile Thomas &; Co. coal merchants, II CDlonnade &

Kings urban council, Keynsham lodge, London road Tewkesbury Road bridge

-Tombs .John & Son (late Hiam), carriage builders, Von HoIst Adolphus, professor of mus. 45 Lansdown crell

all kinds of repairs executed on the premises, Sher- Voyle Decimus William, cycle agent, I B<ln Marche build-

borne terrace, Mount Pleasant, & Bath road ings, Great Norwood street &; Suffolk road

'Toms Edward, wheel chair propr. 2 St. George's parade Wade Thomas, tax collector for Charlton Kings, St. Paul's

Tovey GeOTge, surveyor & inspector of nuisances to rural Waghorne Brothers, butchers, 346 High street

district council, South lawn, Church road, St. Mark's Waghorne Alfred, accountant. 17 Regent street

Tovey James, chimney sweeper, 39 Sherborne street Waghorne Edwin Hoad, C<ltswold hotel &; wine & spirit

Tovey Mal'Y Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 5 St. Mark's merchant, 9 Portland street

emporium, Gloucester road Waghorne Frank, butcher, 242 High street & 4 Tivoli

Tovey William Henry, Red Lion P.H. 3II High street buildingS', &; 2 St. Mark's emporium, Gloucester road

Tow Charles, hairdresser, 9 Sherborne street Waghorne John, solicitor & clerk t{) justices &; county

T-ownsend Georg-e, baker, Pilley, Leckhampton coroner for Upper district, see Griffiths, Ryland, Wag-

Townsend James, coal mer. Hereford ho. Suffolk street horne & Griffiths

Townsend William Henry, grocer, I Croft street Waine William, milk dealer, Sandfield road

Townshend Emily (Mrs.), ladies' schl.Glengyle,London I'd Waite, Kite & Codling, chemists, I Ormond vils.Montpellr

Townshend William Henry, oil & colorman. 167 High Wajte &; Pettitt, photographers, Montpellier, Spa road

street &; 19 Henrietta street Waite & Son, watch makers, 349 High street

. Training College for Schoolmasters (Rev. Henry Alfred Waite Edward Willoughby, professor of music, 6 St.

Bren M.A. principal; Rev. Isaac A. Smith M.A. vice- Paul's terrace, St. Paul's road

'principal; Chas. Hotland King M.A. master of method Waite Frederick James, photographer, 104 High street

.& music; Thos. Lyon, lecturer; C. E. Browne RSc. Wai~e J ane (Miss), apartments, 5 Sherborne terrace

-scienc-e master), Swindon road Waite John, marin~ store dealer, 2II High street

'"Training College for S~hoolmistresses (Miss Bird, supt.), Waite Laura (Miss), stati<lner, 13 Qarence street

St. M31l"s hall, St. George's place Wakefield Albert, furniture dealer, 65 Winchcomb street

T-reasure Mary Ann (Mrs.). boot maker, 350 High street Wakefield Henry Matthew, cabinet maker, I&;2 Bath

Trigg Mary (Mrs.), laundreils, Southfield, Naunton cres place, Bath road '

Trinder Charles, fly proprietor, 3 Upper Park st.Hales I'd Walcroft John, apartments, 25 Promenade

'Trinder Elizabeth (Mrs.), cab proprietor, North place Waldron Alice (Miss), apartments, St. James' villa, St.

Trotter Eliza (Mrs.), aparts. Camden lawn, Portland st J ames' square

''Turk Ellen (Miss), apartments,3 Warwick vils.Portland st Waldron Cath. (Mrs.). aparts. 12 York ter.St.George's rd

''Turk George, saddler, 89 Winchcomb street Walker Robert George, shopkeeper, 17 Townsend place,

""Turk Henry, shopkeeper, 43 Tewkesbury rood Tewkesbury road

"I'urner & Co. butehers, 424 High street Walkley James Thomas, grocer & branch post office,

'Turner Charles, chimney sweeper, 45 Rutland street Moorend, Bath road

"Turner Charles, coal dealer, Swindon road Wall James, buildel' &c. 7 St. Luke's place &; Darwen

Turner Chal'le!l Fredk. stock broker, see Sims &; Turner house, Bath road

DIRECrORY.] GLO U C E S T E R S H I R E . CHELTE~HAM. 101

Wall Mfd. Bernard, sculptor, Oak bank,Pittville Circus rd Wheeler In. Hy. bricklayer,s Bayshill par. St.George's rd

Waller Edward John, heraldic painter, 66 St. George's pI Wheeler Mary J ane (Mrs.), Greyhound inn, Hewlett road

Walter EUis James, aparts. Southampton hOe High st Wheeler Thomas, beer retailer, Gloucester road

Walter Joseph J. Noah's Ark P.H. St. George's street Wheeler WilIiam, beer retailer, King street

Walton Louisa (Mrs.), apartments, 9 Royal crescent Wheeler William Thomas, beer retailer, 275 High street

Walton William Henry, cab propr. St. George's plac& Wheway J oseph &; Co. cycle makers, I Promenade place

Walwyn Oara (Mrs.), apartments, 12 Imperial square Whiffin Edward, apartments, 9 &; 10 Rodney terrace

Ward Ann ~Mrs.), dress maker, 19 Victoria st. Fairviilw Whislay Horace, watch maker, 73 Winchcomb street

Ward Thomas, scripture reader for Holy Trinity, 26 Whislay Maria (Mrs.), servants' registry offices, 73

WindS<lr street Winchcomb street

Ward-Humphreys George Herbert L.R.C.P.Lond. phy- Whitaker Thomas E. grocer & wine &i spirit merchant,

sician &i surgeon, Oriel lodge, Oriel road 328 High street

Warder Joseph, carpenter &i sext()n of St. John's, 2 Keyn- Whitbread &; Son, drapers, 5 &; 6 Leamington pl.Pittville

sham street &i Old Bath road Whitbread George, draper & hosier, 2l High street

Warner Harry, Norwood Arms P.H. Leckhampton road Whiteombe Arthur, carver &I gilder, looking glass &; pic-

Warner James, confectioner, 336 High street ture frame maker, dealer in fine arts & printseller &;

Warner Thomas, butcher, Norwood parade,Shurdington rd restorer of paintings &; engravings, I I &i 12 Clarence st

Warren Brothers, timber &; 'firewood dlrs. Market street White Clara &; Rhoda (Misses), ladies' school, Ellen-

Warren Charlotte (Mrs.), beer retailer, 291 High street borough house, Oriel terrace

Washing Machine Co. (The) Edward Gastrell, manager), White Thos. &i Son, naturalists, 10 Norwood ter. Bath rd
White Anne (Mrs.), beer retailer, ~loorend, Bath road
423 High street

Wasley Silas In. market gardnr. Benhall gdns.Glo'ster rd White Anthony Thomas, market gardener, Midland cot-

Watkins Elijah, Bath hotel, Albion street tage, St. Mark's

Watkins Joseph, beer retailer, I06 Albion street White Ernest E. photographer, Dighton's art studios,

Watkins William Henry, hair dresser, 45 Tewkesbury rd West on villa, High street

Watson Henry W. photographer, la, Bays-hill villa, St. White George, carpenter, Tullock's cottage, Swindon rd

George's road White John, beer retailer, 9 Croft street

Watts Annie (Miss), apartments, 14 MontpeIlier V;illas White Phcebe (Mrs.), ladies' school, Tewkesbury road

Watts George Herbert, coach builder; all kinds of White Reuben, coal dealer, Roman road, St. Mark's

carriages, dog carts, business &; other traps made to White William, beer retailer, 250 High street

order on the most improved principles, Grafton car- White William, market gardener, Long-ett's cot.St.Mark's

riage works, Grafton rd.; res. Brooklyn,Leckhamptn rd White William John, coffee room, 8 Grosvenor street

Watts Isabella (Mrs.), beer retailer, Tivoli place Whitecross "\Villiam, travelling draper, 58 St.Goorge's pI

Watts Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 32 Tivoli street Wllitford Edwd. &; Co. saddlers & harness mas.263 High st

Watts Thomas, family butcher, 317 High street Whiting Robert, hair dresser, I Bath road

Watts William, hair dresser, 7 MontpeUier walk Whiting Thomas, provision dealer, II3 Tewkesbury road

Weaver Benjamin, insurance agent, 2 Victoria terrace Whitmore Charles, accountant, Gresford lodge, Hales rd

Weaver Emily (Mrs.), laundress, Hopewell, Swinton road Whittaker Amos, scriptural reader, 4 Hawarden parade,

Weaver John, income tax collector & school attendance St. Paul's road

officer, I Fairfield villas, Leckhampton road Whittard Jane, Caroline &; Louisa (Misses), ladies' school,

Webb Brothers, coal merchants &; brick manufacturers, The Hall, Montpellier parade
10 Colonnade; truck loads to any station in England at Whittle John, apartments, 6 Lansdown place

trade prices; T N I Whittle Joseph, dairyman, Sandfield, Leckhampton

Webb Alfred Christopher &i Son, plumbers, 21 Lypiatt Wickham Geo. commsn. agt. Southampton vil. High st

street, Tivoli Widdows Geo. confectioner, 4 Hermitage ter. Bath rd

Webb Charles, fly proprietor, IS Jersey pI. Hewlett road Wiggall Jeremiah, paperhanger, 2 Brunswick street
Wiggall J'Oseph, saddler, Brecon house, Gloucester place
Webb Charles, greengrocer, 4 Hewlett road
Wig-gall William. Alfred, decorator, 4 Courtenay villas,
Webb Frederick, tailor, 13 North place
Webb Hannah (Mrs.), aparts. 19 Royal par. Bayshill :rd Courtenay street
Wig-gett William, apartments, 13 Regent street
Webb Henry, fruiterer, Bath road

Webb James, bookseller, 7 Winchcomb street 'Wilbraham & Roddis, mineral water manufacturers,

Webb Reuben, grocer, Post office, Hewlett road Grosvenor place south

Webb William, linen draper, see Taylor &; Webb Wilcox Joseph, butcher, 44 Tewkesbury road

Webbe John Henry, agent for Showell's Brewery 00. Lim. Wilc'ox Leonard, broker, 4 Mount Pleasant
Wilcox Samuel Elliott, joiner, 9 St. Paul's street north
brewers (Birmingham), 11 Regent street

Webber Allan, -apartments, 10 Lansdown place Wilde Frederick George Stanley L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S.Edin.

Webber John, confilctioner, 290 High street surgeon, Ingleside, St. George's road

Webley Henry Wm. dairyman, 10 St. Paul's st. north Wilderspin ~nnie E. (Miss), ladies' college boarding ho.

Wedberg &; Edney, tailors,S & 6 Montpellier avenue 24 &; 25 Lansdown place

Wedgewood Sarah (Mrs.), beer retailer, Townsend place, Wilding Henry Ambler, shopkeeper, Northwick pI.Bath rd

Tewkesbury road Wilkins Waiter & Son, stock &; share brokrs.6 Promenade

Weeks Thomas, tool grinder, 4 Gloucester road ,Yilkins Edward Weedon, stock broker, see Walter Wil-

Weighing Machine (Corporation) (Jesse Sollors, weigher), kins &; Son
Wilkins Fredk. Jas. confectioner, 63 & 64 Winchcomb st
Tewkesbury road
Welch William &; Frederick, saddle &i harness makers, Wilkins Frederick William,' ironmonger, IIO High street
Wilkins Matilda (Mrs.), apartments,s Brandon terrace,
15 Clarence street
Grafton road
Welch Emily (Miss), milliner, IS Pittville street
Welch Frederick William, boot maker, 284 High street Wilkins Thomas, grocer, &; agent for W. &; A. Gilbey
Lim. wine &; spirit merchants, 10 &; II MontpeIlier av
Welch Robert, boot maker, Westall house, Bath road
Welch Robert, jun. boot ma. I WestaIl bldgs. Bath road Wilks Ann (Mrs.), apartments, 4 Andover ter.Ashford rd
Wilks Eliza Burdock (Miss), apartments, 8 Royal parade,
Welsh Alfred, furniture broker, 230 High street
Went Samuel Ashley, apartments, 8 Royal Well terrace, Bayshill road
Wilks Sarah Ann (Mrs.), fishmonger, 372 High street
St. George's road
Wesleyan &; General Assurance Society (Arthur Brunt, Wilcox Harry, professor of music, 5 St. James' parade
Willcox J ames, carpenter, 47 Tewkesbury road
district superintendent), Manchester street
West Augusta (Mrs.), apartments, 12 Royal par.:Bayshill rd Willett Ellen Mary (Mrs.) &; Frederick, stone merchants,
West Frederick, beer retailer, Upper Park st. Hales road Knapp house, New street
We,st Frederick Edward, watch maker, 274 High street Willett &; Co. confectioners &; bakers, 8 Sussex place,

West Walter, private tutor, 12 Royal par. Bayshill road lIevvlett street

Westbrook Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, I Crescent par Williams &; Payne, accountants, 3~ Essex place

Westcott William, market gardener, The Bays, Rowan- Wllliarns ,John Br. Co. coal merchants, 383 High street

field road, St. Mark's &i depots at Gloucester, Moreton-in-Marsh, Beckford,

Westley Charles, bookseller &; stationer, 13 Promenade vils Cleeve &; Dowdeswell

Weston &i Son, carriage builders, 91 Albion street Williams &; Co. cutlers, II3R, High street

WettDn &; 00. patentees &; sole manufacturers of the Williams Charles Field, carver &; gilder, Sherborne place

" Magneticon" curative appliances; medical &i manu- Williams Daniel, butcher, Bath road

facturin~ electricians &i galvanists, II Promenade Williams David, builder, 34 Duke street

Whatley Edward Bord, ironmonger, 96 High street Williams Dinah (Mrs.), apartments, I Camden terl"aclt,

Whatmore Edwin, baker, I Leckhampton place Portland street

Whatton Julia (Miss), apartments, 7 Queen's parade Williams George lIeather, accountant, 3 Ormonq -cham....

Wheatley Wm. Robinson,music seller &; teachr.J03High st bers; T N 191
Wheeler George, beer retailer &; brewer, 27 Fairview 8t Williams Geo.Hy.tailor,3 Fairlight ter.Princes r~ 1'ivoli

]02 CHELTENHAM. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Williams GeOr!!6 Lethem, surveyor of taxes fur the dis- Wonson James, china dealer, & sexton of Holy Trinity, 6

tricts of Cheltenham & Tewkesbury, I Bath street Winchcomb place

Williams Henry, corn & hay dealer, 239 & 240 High st 'YooL! Benj. (Mrs.), farmer, Whaddon farm, Cemetery rd

Williams Henry, greengrocer, 186 High street Wood Edward, pawnbroker, 199 High street

Williams James, confectioner, 212 High street '''ood Elizabeth (Miss), apartments, 4 Bayshill terrace

William$ James Henry, undertaker, .3 Thirlestaine place, Wood Elizabeth (Miss), apartments, Trevor house, Leck..

Bath road hampton road

Williams John, beer retailer, Swindon road Wood James, farmer & dairyman, Arle Farm dairy, Aria

Williams Mary Maria (Miss), apartments, 7 Royal Well Wood John, shopkeeper, 19 Hamilton place, St. Paul's rd

terrace, St. George's road 'Wood Philip, surgical e:astic stocking maker, 17 Hamilton

Williams Olive Jahn LL.B. district registrar of the High place, St. Paul's road

Court of Justice & registrar & high bailiff of the county Wood Robert Ley (firm, Ley Wood & Rickerby), soli·

court, County court. Regent street citor, commissioner for oaths & perpetual commiss:oner,

William8 Richd. plumber, Brandon cot. Shurdington rd 2 Ormond p:ace

Wil1iams Sidney, profoosor of the violin, 12 Lansdown par Wood Thomas, landscape gardener, I Lansdown cottages.

Williams Thomas, provision dealer, Swindon road St. Mark's

Williams William, beer retailer, Kew street Woodard Thomas Burt, fishmonger, I &i 2 Montpellier ave

Williams Wm. cab proprtr. &; livery stables, Hewlett st Woodman Richard Philip, china &i glass warehouse, 9

Williams William, tailor, 12 Warwick place Promenade villas

Willington John, apartments, 8 Suffo:k square Woodward &; Co. piano & music wareho. 14 Promenade vis

Willis Charles, butcher, 308 High street Woodward .A.lbert Ernest, professor of music, 53 St.

Willis Charles John, chemist, 18 Clarence street; 2 High George's place
Woodward Edith (Miss), teacher of dancing, ~ Ormond
street & I & 2 Queen's buildings, Queen's road

Willis George, cattle dealer, Regent house, Swindon road terrace, Regent street

Willis John, butcher, 12 Winchcomb street Woodward Edwin Geo. professor of music, 12 Olarence sq

Willis William, slater &, shopkeeper, 55 Sherborne street Woodward Frank, pianoforte dealer, .I Adelaide buildings,

Willmore Jane (Mrs.), coal dealer, 62 Waterloo road Bath road .

Wills Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress, 5 Townsend place, Woodward George, photographer, 27 Winchcomb street

Tewkesbury road Woodw:,rd Morfee, teacher of the violin, 13 O:arence sq

Willson William, station master Mid~and Railway station, Woof William .Alfred, sports depot, Northwick terrace; 4

High street Suffolk road & II7a, High street

WlIson Alien, contractor, builder &; sanitarian,surveyor, l-Voolnough Howard James, confectioner, 261 High street

member of the Sanitary Institute, London; offices & l-Voore John, fishmonger, 25 Montpellier walk

show rooms, 14 Promenade villas; yard &; works, Working Men's College (Miss Roberts, hon. sec.), North st

Royal crescent & St. George's place. Tel. No. 200 Workman Henry & Co. coal merchants, 16 Colonnade;

Wilson Amos, builder, Swindon road depots, New street & Andoversford 1

Wilson Edward Thomas RA., M.B. physician, Westal, Workman Henry, livery stables, Imperial mews

Montpellier parade World Wil:iam, shopkeeper, Brunswick street

Wilson Ernest, painter kc. 3 Moorend street Worman &; Amos, florists, Tivoli road

Wilson John, manager Co. of Gloucester Branch of Lloyds Worthing William John, joiner, Ampiney cottage, Shur.

Bank Lim. treasurer to the guardians, rural district dington road

Icouncil; & Leckhampton &; Char:ton Kings parish Wrathall William James, relieving officer, No. I district,
councils, I05 High street Arle cottage, Tewkesbury road
Wilson John M.D., a.M. physician &; surgeon, medical Wright & Peacock, milliners, 376 High street

officer, No. 4 district & public vaccinator, Prestbury Wright Eliza (Miss), confectioner, 17 Winchcomb street

district, 16 Cambray Wright Francis Joseph, ironmonger &; post office, 163 High

1Vilson Louisa (Mrs.), apartments, 17 Rodney terrace street & 51 St. George's place

Wilson St. Andrew Roland, manager of the Wilts & Dorset Wright Frederick, tobacco & cigar merchant, direct im..

Bank Limited, 132 High street I porter of tJigars &; cigarette manufacturer, II2 &; 327

Wilts & Dorset Banking 00. Limited (branch) (St..A.. High street & MontpeI:.ier rotunda; &; at The Cross,

R. Wilson, mana~er), 132 High street; draw on London G~oucester k 17 Northgate street, Bath. Tel. Nos.-

&; Westminster Bank Limited, London Cheltenham 107, G:oucester 82
Windridge &; Sons, printers, We:lington pass~e, .Albion st . Wright Thomas .Lawrence, stock & share broker, ~ Spa

Winfield Alfred, Sudeley Arms P.H. Winchcomb place place, Montpellier

Wingate Sidney Ryder, teacher of music, 5 St. Philip's Wyatt AIgernon Hugh, solicitor & notary pub:ic, Essex pI

terrace, Gratton road Wyatt Sarah (Mrs.), grocer, 262 High street

Winstone Martha & Sarah (Misses), aprtmts. 18 Cambray Wycherley Mary (Mrs.), private school, ~ Blenheim parade

1Vinstone Charles, builder kc. Sherborne terrace WyJlie J oseph (Mrs.), draper & tailor, 22 Grosvenor street

Winstone Thomas, carrier, I4 .Albion parade, Market st Wynn Edward, brass finisher, 51 St. Geor~e's place
Winter Garden &; Skatin~ Rink (Joseph Hall, manager; Wynn George Henry, brass finisher, St. James' squal"e

property of the corporation), Imperial square Yarnclld Henry Thomas, pork butcher & cycle maker, 295

Winter Albert, monumental sculptor, 2 G-reville terrace &; 297 High street
Ya~es George &; William, seed growers & merchants, 432
'Winter Aiice (Mrs.), apartments, 28 Imperial square

Winter Charles, apartments, 15 Cambray Rig-h street; & at High street, Evesham .

Winter Walter Percy B.Sc. tutor, .~ St. Luke's terrace, Yeandle William & Son, tailors & woollen drapers &c. 14.

St. Luke's road Suffolk parade

Winterbotham &; Cardew, surgeons, Arundel house, Bays- Yorston Char:es Henry, german art publisher, 56 Winch..

hill road comb street

Winterbothams &; Gurney, solicitors, Essex place Young & (Ulllng, auctioneers, valuers, estate &; honsB

Winterbotham James Batten (firm, Winterbothams &; agents, Promenade & Promenade house

Gurney), solicitor, perpetual eommiss:oner, commis- Young Charles, beer retailer, 7 Clare terrace, .Bath road

sioner for affidavits & commissioner for oaths in the Young Elizabeth (Miss), apartments, II Imperial square

Supreme Court of the Colony of Victoria &; in Canada, Young Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer, 34 Burton street
Young Henry Thomas, gardener &; florist, Naunton hons~
Essex place

Winterbotham. Lauriston, surgeon, Arundel ho. Bayshill rd Leckhampton road

Wintle Mary (Miss), dress maker, 9 Beaufort buildings, Young Men's Christian Association (John Reade, Sile.),..
Port~and square
. 7 Cambray .

WintIe William, a.partments, 23 Promenade ' Young R. W. street inspector, Municipaloffic.es
Witchell Annie (Mrs.), apartments, 19 Montpellier villas Young Hobert, market inspector, 16 Gloucester cresce~1"

\Vitherington Thomas, wine & spirit merchant, see Cook Gloucester road

&; Witherington Young Susannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, New street

Witts George Backhouse A.M.I.C.E. civil engineer, 12 Young William, Royal Standard P.H. Swindon road

Promenade YOUI!g 'Vomen's Christian Association Boarding :E{ons~

Women's Work Association & Cheltenham School of Art. . (Mrs. Charlotte Crisp, superintendent), !Z St. Margaret'"s

Needlework (Miss 13raybrooke, manageress), 3 Pro. terrace, St. Margaret's road r
Young Women's Christian Association & Home (Miss 11.
menade

Wonson Robt. mr~t. gardener, Se:kirk grdns. Prestbury I'd Eyton, hon. sec.), 18 Royal crescent

CHERINGTON is a parish and village, I mile east' tion on the Strond and Gloucester section of the Greab
from the road from Tetbury to Minchinhampton, 2 north Western railway, 4 north-west from Nailsworlh terminal
from Oulkerton station, 4 north-east from Tetbury ter- 'Station of a branch of the Midland raIlway, 7 south-eut
minal station, both on the branch of the Great Western from Stroud and 8 south-west-by-south from. Cirencestel',

railway from Kemble junction, 3i from Brinscombe sta- . in the Eastern division of the county, Longtree hundred,

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CHIPPING CAMPDEN 103

Tetbury union and petty sessional division, Stroud county George, who are ladies of the manor and the principal
-court district, rural deanery of Stonehouse, and arch- landowners. The soil is light loamy, but varies consider-
deaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. ably; subsoil, oolite. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
1fteholas is an ancient building of stone in the Early oats and roots. The area is 2,120 acres; rateable value,
English and later styles, consisting of chancel, nave uf £1,379; the population in 1891 was 199.

two bays, south transept, north porch, and a low em- Parish Clerk, Jesse Howard.
battled western tower containing 4 bells: the church was
restored in 1881-2, at a cost of £500, and affords 130 Letters from Stroud arrive at 9 a.m. Minchinhampton
eittings. The register dates from the year 1560. The is the nearest telegraph office &; Avening money order
living is a. rectory, net yearly value £roo, arising from office. Wall Letter Box cleared all 4'45 p.m. week days
&; sundays
280 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Misses
George, and held since 1896 by the Rev. Oharles Marriott National School (mixed), built, with mistress's house, in
RA. of Queen's o>Uege, Oxford. There is a charity of 1850, for 50 children; average attendance, 34; &I en-
[,10 10S. yearly, £2 10S. of which is applied to educa- dowed by the late Mrs. George, of Cherington Park;
tional purposes. Cherington Park is the seat of the Misses :Miss Frances Edwards, mistress

George The Misses, Oherington park Fowloo Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Roberts In. Wait. carpntr. &; wheelwrt

Marriott Rev. Charles B.A. Rectory Hall Jesse, beer retailer, baker, far- White Thomas, farmer

COMMERCIAL. mer &; assistant overseer' White Thomas, Trouble House P.H.

Champion William, farmer, Grove Kilmister Sidney, farm bailiff to W. (postal address, Tetbury)

farm (postal address, Tetbury) R. Hedges esq. Trull (postal ad-

Fowler Edward, farmer, Westrip dress, Tetbury)

CRILDS WICKHAM is • village and parish, in the gift of and held since 1891 by the Rev. llewellyn

bounded on the north, south and west by Worcestershire, Lloyd. In the centre of the village is an ancient stone

... miles east from Hinton station on the Evesham and Market cross. The charities, derived from rent of land

Ashchuroh branch. of the Midland railway, and 5 south- left in 1600 by Samuel Wharton, amount to £3 105.

east from Evesham, in the Northern division of the yearly, which sum is applied to church purposes and

.county, lower division of the hundred of Kiftsgate, union distributed among the poor. Gardner S. BazIey esq. of
:and county court district of Eve sham, petty sessional Hatherop Oastle, Fairford, is lord of the manor, principal
division of Winchcomb, rural deanery of Campden, arch- l~downer and lay impropriator. The soil is clay. The
deaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The chIef crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area of
church of St. Mary is a building of stone, consisting of the parish, including the hamlet of Murcott, is 1,822

chancel, nave, north transept, south porch and an em- acres; rateable value, £2,13°; the population in 1891
battled western tower with pinnacles and spire, contain- was 400.
ing 6 bells: there was formerly a south transept, but Sexton, Thomas Turner.

it has long since gone to decay: the nave and transepts MURCOTT. 11 miles north-west.
are ,supposed to have been built in the 12th
.century, the tower and spire of the 14th century: Post Office. John Newbury, sub-postmaster. Letters

the church was restored in 1870 at a cost of £1,100, un- through Broadway (Worcs.), which is the nearest
der the direction of Mr. Hunt, architect, of Evesham, money order &; telegraph office, arrive at 8 a.m. & 4

and a new chancel was built by the late W. Atkinson p.m.; dispatched at 9.30 a.m. &; 5.30 p.m. Postal
esq. in 1874, at a. cost of £600, under the direction of orders are issued here, but not paid
the same architect: there are 150 sittings. In the church- National School (mixed), erected, with teacher's house,

yard is a gravestone, on which is recorded the death of in 1863, for IIO children; average attendance, 69; in
:a woman at the age of 133 years. Tne register dates 1875 a. class room was added ~ John Edward Gray,
from the year 1560. The living is a vicarage, net yearly master; Mrs. Louisa Gray, mistress

value £180, including 70 acres of glebe, with residence, Carrier to Evesham. Samuel Newbury, mon

Hignell Mrs Crump Martin, farmer Newb1;1ry In. prov. dealr. Post office
Newbury Samuel, carrier
Lloyd Rev. Llewellyn (vicar),Vicarage Crump Wilson, ilhopkeeper
Print David, market gardener
COMMERCIAL. Davis A}bert, market gardener Smith Edward, farmer
Smith Frands John, farmer
Agg James, market gardener Gilder William, market gardener
Smith William, farmer & miller
Ilaker Wm. farmer, Mount Pleasant Ran'is Philip, market gardener
(water), ~lurc-ott
. Ilarnett Joseph, market gardener Jacques Joseph, news agent Stephens James, blacksmith
Towers James, farmer, Whitechapel
Ileloher Zephaniah, market gardener Jones Ann (Mrs.), market gardener

Brown Geol"ge Henry, Bridge inn Mansell Stephen, farmer, Murcott

Carter Alfred, market gardener Morris Crescens, miller (water)

tOHIPPING CAMPDEN (for postal "nd railway chants and burgesses of Campden; all the brasses have

-services, called" Campden") is a small market town and been removed into the chancel: in the Noel chantry is a.

parish, head of a petty sessional division, with a station marble monument, with recumbent effigies, to Sir Bap-

<In the Oxford and Worcester section of the Great Western tist Hicks bart. first Viscount Campden, _ob. Oct. 18.
railway, 29 miles north-east from Gloucester. 9 south- 1628, and Elizabeth (May) his wife, under a canopy, snp.
-east from Evesham, 7 west from Shipton-on-Stour and ported on twelve marble columns: there are in$criptions
91 from London, in t·he Eastern division of the county, on the north and south sides: here aho is another monu-
hundred of Kiftsgate, union and county court district of ment t-o Penelope, daughter of Edward Noel, Viscount

Shipston-on-Stour, rural deanery of Campden, arch- Campden, and Juliana. (Hicks) lUs wife, and wife of John.
~eaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The second Viscount Chaworth, ob. 1633; and a fiat stone
town mainly consists of one long street, ~md is lighted inscribed to Henry Hicks M.A. 50 years vicar, 1708, and
"With gas by a. company formed in 1869 with a capital of Maria. (Bartholomew) his wife, 17°1: the exterior of the

£3,000; the works are near the railway station, about a fabric was thoroughly restored in 1875-6 at a. cost of

mile from the town: the town was incorporated by James over £4,000, when the nave and aisles were new roofed,

I. and governed by a. steward, two bailiffs, twelve capital the windows renovated and reglazed.. the galleries re-

burgesses, and twelve inferior burgesses, appointed an- moved, and the organ rebuilt and enlarged: the interior
'Dually, but the corporation has been abolished under the was restored in 1884 at a cost of over £1,000, under the
llrovlsions of the" Municipal Corporations Act," 46 and diTection· of Messrs. Waller and Wood, architects, of

47 Vic. cap. I8. The church of St. James is a. large and Gloucester; the flooring being renewed, open benche!
handsome building of stone, in the Late Decorated or substituted for pews, and carved oak stalls placed in tha

"Early Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave chancel; a new chancel screen was also erected and a.

o()f f'Our bays, aisles with chapels, south porch and an new r{JOf placed over the s(}uth porch: there are sittingS

-embattled western tower, with rioh pinnacles, containing for 600 persons. The register dates trom the year 1616.

a clock 1md 8 bells, and a. set of chimes which play every The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £360, including
three hours; the chimes were thoroughly restored in 265 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of trustees

![!90 by the family of the late Rev. Canon Kennaway, appointed by the Earl of Gainsborough, and held since

-as a memorial to his widow, their mother: there is a 1896 by the Rev. Thomas Carrington Th.Assoc. of King's

very large canopied brass in the chancel, with. effigies, College, London. The church of St. Michael and All

merchants' marks and marginal inscription, t~ the memory Angels, at Broad Campden, a chapel of ease to the parish
of William Grevel, "the flower of the wool merchants of church, wa-a erected in I868 to the memory of Charles
all England," ob. 1401, and Marian (Thornborough) bis Noel, first Earl of Gainsborough, who died June 10, 1866:

wife, ob. 1386; other brasses oommemorate William Wel- it is a building of stone, and has 120 sittings. The

181, merchant, ob. 1450, and Mice his wife;· Jobn Bar- Catholic church of St. Catherille is a handsome building

ker, ob. 148o, and William Gibbys, ob. 1484, with his of" Campden ashlar" stone in the Gothic style of the

three wives and thirteen children, all of whom were mer- 14th century, erected at a. cost of £2.500, from design•



104 CHIPPING CAMPDEY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELl.Y'S

by :Mr. William Lunn, architect. of Malvern, and con· and of which the gateway and other portions are still
standing; it was erected at the beginning of the 17th
sists of chancel, nave, aisles, transept, two sacristies, a. century by Sir Baptist Hicks bart. afterwards created

~ide chapel dedicated to St. Bernard, and a Lady chapel, May 5, 1628, Viscount Campden, a dignity whicli, at his
erected by public subscription to the memory of I.ady
death, Oct. 18, 1628, descended by remainder to his
Constance Bellingham. The roof of the chancel is en- son-in-law Baron "Noel, of ~idlingtoD, Rulland; this
tirely of oak, richly moulded: the window tracery pre- princely seat was destroyed by fire during the Civil WaI'
s~nts twenty different designs. The site and stone were by command of Baptist, 2nd Baron Noel and 3rd Viscount
given by the present Earl of Gainsborough. There is Campden, in order that it might not be seized and gar-
risoned by the Parliamentary forces. Coombe Manor.
also a Catholic chapel at Coombe Manor, dedicated to
about a mile and a half west, the residence of T.he Earl 0:
the Annunciation, and a Catholic school chapel, built in
1869, and seating ISO persons. The Wesleyan chapel, Gainsborough D.L., J.P. is an elegant mansion of stone,

built in 1841, has 200 sittings. The Baptist chapel, erec- of mixed styles, with irregular gables, turrets and tran-

ted in 1872, at a cost of upwards of £1,300, will seat about somed windows, facing a wood-clad slope similar to that
300, and has a school, minister's residence, and burying on which it stands, and approached from the town by a
ground at the back; it was entirely renovated and a heat- pleasant drive through Campden Wood; although on an
elevated site, it is well sheltered on every side; the iD.-
ing apparatus put in in 1893. The Town Hall is a small terior contains family portraits from the time of J ame..
and plain building of modern date, but the court and I. and a. beautiful portrait in enamel of Augusta of Saxe
Gotha, Princess of Wales, who died Feb. 8, 1772: the
market houses are ancient structures, the latter supposed present mansion took the place of an "lncient house called
to be of the 15th century, and the former about a century " Old Combe," which formed part of the hamlet of West-
ington. The Earl of @.ainsborongh. who is lord of th&
later: the insignia of the defunct corporation included manor, and Lady Northwick are the principal landowners:
two maces, which are still preserved; these are of silver, The soil is clay, loam and sandy; subsoil, clay and sand.
The chief crops are pasture, Wheat, -oats, barley, beanS',
parcel gilt, with handsome diapered shafts, 13 inches peas and roots. The area is 4,455 acres; rateable value,
£9,390; the population in 1891 was 1.736.
and Ili inches in length respectively, and one bears the
BERRINGTON adjoins Chipping Campden on the east
date 1603. A police court and station were erected in side of the town. Broad Campden lies 1 mile south-east..
Westington is about a mile south.
1873 at a cost of £2,500. The market is held on Wed-
Parish Clerk, Joseph Plested.
nesday, and a cattle sale is held on the last Wednesday
in every month. The K Co. 2nd Volunteer Battalion of
the Gloucester Regiment is quartered here. There are

12 almehouses for 6 females and 6 aged males, founded

by Sir Baptist Hicks bart. with an endowment of £140,
derived from a rent-charge on the Campden estate; the

inmates have 3s. 4d. weekly, with two tons of coal and a
new suit of clothes annnally. Here are the ruins of a

once magnificent mansion, covering a space of 8 acres,

OFFICIAL ESTABLISHMENTS, LOOAL INSTITUTIONS &c.

Post, M. O. & T. 0., S. B. &; Annuity & Insurance Office The property of the Corporation is now vested in the Town
(Sub-Office. Letters should have S.O. GIQucester-
Trust.

shire added). Julius R. Neve, postmaster Trustees.
Delivered from London &; SDuth, 7.25 a.m.; North, Mid-
Earl of Gainsborough Rev. Phillip Lewis
lands &; West, 8 a.m.; all parts, 2 p.m.; sundays. Robert Coldicott
from all parts, 8 a.m. Dispatch.-Outward Mails, Lon- George Ebbol'n John Samuel Morris
don &; all parts, u.45 a.m.; London & South, 5.45 Robert Henry HaydoIl'
p.m.; all parts. 7.20 p.m.; sundays, Lond-on &; all parts, Rev. Canon G. D. Bourne

4.35 p.m Rev. B. LNl.o•yIzdod

William

Telegraph open 8 a.m. to 8 p.m Secretary to the Trustees, Robert H. Haydon

Postal Orders &; Parcel Post, 7 a.m. to 8 p.m DISTRICT HIGHWAY BOARD.

Savings Bank &; Money Orders, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m
Broad Campden Wall Letter Box, cleared at 9.20 a.m. &; Meets at the Town hall on the last wednesday in eacb

4 p. m. on week days only month at 11.30 a.m.

rhe following villages are delivered from Campden :.- C:erk, John Eden Hiron
Mickleton, Ebrington, Aston Subedge, Great &; Little Treasurer, G. H. Hogarth, Capital & Counties Bank~
Hidcote &; Paxford
Evesham

Sl1rveyor, Josiah Bayliss

CO"C~TY MAGISTRATES FOR CAMPDEN PETTY PUBLIC ESTABLISHMEKTS.

SESSIONAL DIVlSION. Fire Engine Station, Town hall
Inland Revenue Office, Francis Henry Macklin, officer
Bourne Rev. Canon George Drinkwater l\I.A., F.S.A. Police Station, Edward 'Cooke, supt. I sergeant & 2'
Rectory. Weston Subedge, Broadway, chairman
constJa.bles
Gainsborongh Earl of, Coombe Manor, Campden Town Hall, Thomas Smith, caretaker
Ashwin James esq. Bretforton manor, Dear Evesham
Averill Isaac esq. Southview, Broadway, Worcs VOLUNTEERS.
Bruce Samuel esq. Norton hall, Campden
Chadwick Robert Newton esq. Farncombe, Broadway, 2nd Volunteer Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment (K
Co.), Henry Montagu-Spencer, captain; Color-Sergt.
Worcester George New, drill instrucror
Flower .Edgar esq. Middle hill, Broadway, Worcs
Howard Philip John Canning esq. Foxcote, Shipston-on- PUBLIO OFFICERS.

Stonr Certifying Factory Surgeon, Medical Officer &; Public Va~
cinator, Campden district, Shipston-on-Stour Union,.
Knox Major Vicesimus, Spring Hill, Moreton-in-the-Marsh John Henry Dewhurst
Reynolds Joseph Crescens esq. Paxford, Campden S.O
Shekell Thomas Stevens esq. D.L. Pebworth manor, Clerk to the Lighting Inspectors, John Ellis
Collector of ;Rates &; Assessed Taxes, Lewis H. Horne
Stratford-on-Avon Town Crier. Thomas Smith
Shekell Thomas Stevens esq. D.L. Pebworth manor, Strat-

ford-on-Avon

Clerk to the Magistrates, William Higford Griffiths PLACES OF WORSffiP. with times of services.

Petty Sessions are he:d at the Police Court on the first &; St. James's Church, Rev. Thomas ·Carrington T.A.K.C.Lr
third wednesday in every month 3t 12 noon. With vicar; 10.45 s.m. &; 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m
respect to indictab:e offences a sessions is appointed to
be held on each Wednesday. The following places are Chapel of Ease, Broad Campden, 6.30 p.m
jncluded in the petty sessional division :-Admington, St. Catherine (Catholic), Rev. Bernard Lloyd, priellt;;
Aston Subedge, Chipping Campden, Clifford Chambers,
Cow Honeyoourne, Clopton, Dorsington, Ebrington, holy communion 8.30 >& mass 10.30 a.m.; even. serv.
Hidcote, Bartrim, Lark Stoke, Marston Sicca, Mickleton, 6.30; holidays of obligation, mass II a.m. &; even. serv.
Pebworth, Preston-on-Stour, Quinton, Saintbury, Wel- 7.30 p.m.; daily, mass 8 a.m.; thurs. benediction,
7.3 p.m
ford, Weston-on-Avon, Weston Subedge & Willersey Ooombe Manor Domestic Chapel (Catholic); thurs. in
winter, tues. & sat. in summer 8.30 a.m.; benediction,.
The magisterial business for the Kockley Division (Warcs.) wed. in winter, 6.30 p.m
is also transacted at this court &. includes the parishes Baptist, Rev. Phillip 'Lewis; 10.45 a.m. &; 6.15 p.m. ; moD..
of Blockley &. Cutsdean, & the hllmlets of Draycott, & thurs. 7.30 p.m
Paxford. Ditchford, Aston Magna, Dorne &. Northwick Wesleyan, 2.30 &; 6 p.m

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CHIPPL.~G CAMPDEN. 105

SOHOOLS. founders; the school is now managed by a governing

The Grammar School was founded by John Fereby in body appointed under a scheme of the Charity Com-
1487, & re-endowed by Sir Baptist Hicks in the 17th
century: 1&, attached to the school is a Townsend missioners framed in 1891; W. H. Griffiths esq. sec.;
scholarship, value £70 yearly, tenable for four years at
Pembroke C<>~lege, Oxford, with rooms rent free. Be- Mr. Francis Bazley Osborne, head master
tween the years 1860-7 the school premises were re- National (mixed &; infants), for 90 boys, go girls &:; 80

stored &; enlarged at a cost of £2,000, raised by sub- infants; average attendance, 66 boys, 65 girls &:; 66 in-
fants; A. H. Harris, master; Miss Winter, assistant
scription, the (lId schoolroom heing retained, the ancient mistress; Mrs. Adeline Harris, mistress; Mrs. Martha
oaken ceiling raised &; the windows heightened by the
introduction of transomed lights: a boarders' hall with E. Dunn, infants' mistress
open timber roof was appended on the east side, & Catholic (mixed), built in 1871 &:; enlarged in 1889, for
spacious dormitories in two storeys constructed over
the school, for 30 boarders; a residence, communicating 120 children; average attendance, -87; i& supported in
with the school & the dormitories, was also built for part by the Earl of Gainsborough; taught by Sisters
the master; in a gable over the principal bay window is of Charity ()f St. Paul
a sculptured panel with the carved arms of the two
Railway Station. Samuel Maun. station master

Carriers.-Edwin Ellis, to Evesham, mono &; thur!!.; to

Stratford, tues. &; fri.; to Shipston, on sat.; G.W.R

agent, Albert Tanner

CHIPPING QAMPDEN. Fox-Warner S. E. &; R. (Misses), Skey Agnes (Mrs.), dress maker

ladies' school Skey Charles Henry, carpenter

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Freeman George, Eight Bells P.B Skey James, carpenter

Cameron Archibald Henry F Gardener William, general dealer Skey John George, Swan family &:;

Careless Richard Gas &, Coke Co. Lim.(Jn. Ellis, sec) commercial hotel, good accommoda-
tion for cyclists; &; joiner &, undrtkr
Carrington Rev. Thomas T.A.K.C.L. Gibson James, Red Lion P.H
Grammar School (Francis Bazley Os- Smith John, builder
Vicarage

Dewhurst In. Hy. M.A., M.B., B.C borne, head master) Smith Richard, George·&' Dragon P.B

Fox-Warner Mrs Great Western Railway Co. carriers Smith Thomas, town crier

Freeman Miss CA. Tanner, agent) Stafford J ames, ehimney sweeper

Gainsborough The Earl of D.L., J.P. Griffin Harriett (Mrs.), Volunteer inn Stanley Ulric Chapple, farmer
Coombe manor; Carlton &; Junior Griffiths William Higford, solicitor &, Tanner .A.;ibert, Noel A.rIDS family &

United Service clubs, London commissioner to administer oaths & commercial hotel &; cyclist house;
Gillett John, Court house clerk t~ magistrates, Campden &; 'bus meets all trains
Taylor Charles, baker
Godson William Blockley divisions
Grosvenor A1fred .A.ugustus B.A.Cam.• Taylor Jesse,watch ma. &:; phot<lgraphr
Griffiths Mrs

Grosvenor Alfred Augustus B.A., M.B M.B., M.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon Taylor Tom, chimney sweeper
Timms Frederick, beer retailer
Grove Miss Grove Charles, stone mason
Guthrie Robert George, blacksmith Trinder Alfred Harris, shoe maker
Hands Mrs

Haydon Robert Henry Haines Jas. plumbr. &; t~pla·te workr Town Hall (Thomas Smith, caretaker)
Keitley Mrs Haines Jas.news agent & correspondnt Vallis John &; Son, tailors
Hancock, Simpson &; Hancock, soliei- Vallis Sarah (Mrs.), apartments
Lane John Vinn George, market gardener

Lewis Rev. Phillip (Baptist) tors, wednesdays 12 to 2 &, Vinn William, tailor
Volunteer Battalion (2nd) Gloucester.
Lloyd Rev. Bernard (Catholic) Hands Henry Joseph, chemist shire Regiment (K Co.) (Capt. Hy~
Lownds Mrs mineral water manufacturer
Montagu-Spencer, commander; Co-
Manton Mrs Hands Joseph, boot maker lour Sergt. George New, drill in-
structor)
Osborne Francis Bazley (head master Hartley Ann (Mrs.), baker

of the Grammar school) Hartwell William, builder

Penrith Miss Hayden Henry Green, blacksmith
Haydon Robert Henry, baker &, miller Waine John, hay cutter
Rowe Miss

Warnel' Miss (water) &; sec. to the Town trust Walker Joseph, miller (water) &:; far-

Heritage Thomas, baker mer, Berrington mill
Hiron John Eden, solicitor &; clerk t~ Walton Alfred, coal agent
COMMERCIAL.

Andrews Robert, farmer, Court pieces the highway board; attends weds Warner L. &; Son,watch maq.&'jewllrs

Aston Fanny (Mrs.), baker Bobbs John, grocer &, baker Warner William Wyatt, pianoforte

Badham Jane Amelia (Mrs.), gen. dlr Horne Elizabeth E. (Mrs.), farmer tuner &, organist

Beckett Wm. tobacconist &, hairdrssr Home John, seedsman &; news agent Withers James Henry, blacksmith

Blakeman Oharles, horse trainer Home Lewis Hadley, coal merchant Wixey Hel'bert, grocer &, agent for

Bowld William Henry. beer retailer &, farmer &; collector of rates &, as- W. It A. Gilbey Lim. wine &, spirit

Brace Thomas, tailor sessed taxes merchants

Capital &, Counties Bank Lim. (sub- Horne William (Mrs.), saddle & WESTI~GTO~.

branch) (R. L. Baker, manager; harness maker

H. J. Hands, agent); draw on head Ingles William, shopkeeper Izod Mrs

office,39 Threadneedle st.Londn.EC Izod Charles He~y, farmer Coldicott Robert, farmer

Chamberlain Wm. Collet,printr.& stnr James Joseph, farmer Gladwin William, farmer

Olleman T. W. Limited, grocers &; Jeffrey William, Ly~on Arms P.B Haines George, farmer

wine &; spirit merchants (W. Keyte Robert, grocer Haines Thomas, blacksmitij

Morrey, manager) Keyte Wm. metal-worker &, coal dlr Keen John, water miller

Cbmbes Frank, surveyor Ladbrook Edwin, butcher BROAD OAJ.'lPDEN.

Cook Edward,superintendent of police Macklin Fras. Hy. inland revenue off

Dease Louis George, land agent to Makepeace Anne (Miss), boys' &, girls' Bagnall Randolph

Eal'll of Gainsborough, Estate offices school Hawes Mrs

Dunn Richard, maltster Makepeace Fredk. Hy. (Mrs.), butchr Morris John Samuel

Dewhurst John Henry M.A., M.B., Metropolitan Bank of England & Wales COMMERCIAL.
RC.Cam., M.R.C.S.Eng., L.R.C.P. Limited (sub-branch) (S. F. Hun-
Lond. physician & certifying sur- ston, manager; Herbert 'Wixey, Aston Chas. beer retailer &, baker

goon under the Fact<lry Acts &; agent); draw on head office, 60 Bird Ilenjamin Henry, carpenter

med·ical officer &; public vaccinator Gracechurch street, London E C Hawks Thomas, farm bailiff to R.
to Campden district, Shipston-on- Neve Julius Robert, dra.per, Post off Bagnall esq

Stour union Parsons Thomas, plumber Herbert Richard, shoe maker

Ebborn George, beer ret. & butcher Pethard Frederick, wheelwright Izod Wm. jun. farmer, Rectory farm

Edge Alfred, butcher Restall J oseph, shoe maker Izod William Nathan, farmer

Ellis Edwin, carrier Richardson J oseph, baker Morris John Samuel, farmer

Ellis Harry George, fishmonger &; Rimell Edward., maltster,Dovers house RandaU Sam!. miller (water), Pie mill

game dealer Rimell Edward (Mrs.), private board- Roberts Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Ellis Henry, basket maker ing house, Dovers house Saddler Edwin Wilioiam, Angel inn

Farrell Jane (Miss), hardware dealer Rimell In. farmer, Wolds End house Warner Alfred &; John, farmers

Foster Thomas Charles, insur. agent Roberts &, Co. drapers &, outfitters Wyatt William, farmer

CHIPPING SODBURY is a parish, market and from Gloucester, 36 south-by-west from Cheltenham, 26
S<luth-west from Cirencester. 20 south-by-west from
union town, and head of a countv court district, on the Stroud, 15 north from Bath. and 108 from London, in
declivity of a hill near the river Frame. and s.urrounded the Southern division of the county, Grumbalds Ash hun-
by the parish of Old Sodbury, 11 miles south-east from dred, Sodbury petty sessional division, rural deanery of
Yate station on the Bristol and Birmingham section of
the Midland railway, 11 north-east from Bris't.<JI, 28 south Hawkesbury, archdeaconry of Bristol, and diocese of

. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

106 CHIPPING SODBURY•

.

Gloucester. The town is lighted with gas by a limited Post, M. O. &; T. 0., S. B. & Annuity &; Insurance Officel
company, from works in the adjoining parish of Y'ate, and Broad street.-Mrs. Elizabeth Oaradine, postInistress

supplied with water from the West Gloucester Water ARRIVAL OF :MAILS. Delivery
Commences. Callers.
Works Co. at Frampton Cotterell, as well as from pumps. From all parts .
7 0 a.m. 7 0 a.m.
The town is incorporated, and until 1681 was governed FroIn Bristol ..
- II 40 a..m.
by a bailiff and ten burgesses, but in that year a new From London & Bristol.........
2 30 p.ll. 2 30 p.m.
charter of incorporation was granted by Charles IT. recon. From Badminton - 6 30 p.m.

stituting the municipal body as a mayDr, six aldermen From Bristol, London & all parts 8 0 p. m. 8 0 p.m.

and twelve burgesses; this charter, at the request of the Parcels Mails........................ ... 8 20 a.m. S 15 a.m.
inhabitants, was 2nnulled by proclamation of James IT.
'I •••••••••••••••...•••.••••• 8op.m. 6 15 p.m.
in 16'88, and the previous form of government was then
Dispatch of Mails.
resumed, but under the provisions of the" Municipal Oor-

porations Act, 1883," the late members of the Cbrporation

now act as trustees of the town property, under the Badminton, 7.55 a.m.; London, Bristol and Gloucester,

control of the Charity Commissioners. The church of St. 10.30 a.m.; Mid T.P.O. 6.20 p.m.; Bristol, London &

.Tohn the Baptist is an ancient edifice of stone in the all parts, 7.30 p.m.; parcel mails &; letters, 3.30 p.m. >!

Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel with aisles, nave, parcel mail!, 7.30 p.m

aisles, Lady chapel and south chapel, south porch and Office opened for sale of stamps &; postal orders, issuing

an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing 6 of licenses & money orders &; telegrams, 7 a. m. to 8
bells: during the restoration an ancient stone pulpit sur-
mounted by a finely carved Iltone canopy was discovered, p.m.; for registering letters. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. On
which is now in use: 3 carved oak screen separates the sundays the office is opened for the sale of stamps &;
chancel from its aisles, and in 1893 an oak screen with registering of letters (no parcels), 7 to 10 B.m. Tele-
gates was erected between the chancel and nave in memory
of Richard Arnold: there is 8 reredos of alabaster and graph, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m
several stained windows: over the porch are figures of
Sundays.-Delivery commences 7.30 s.m. calleu 7 to 10
St. John the Baptist, the patron saint, Our Lord and St.
.Tohn 'the Evangelist: below the pulpit is a stone seat, a.m.; dispatches, 6.30 & 7.30 p.m

Wall Letter Box, RouncevaI street, cleared at 10.20 a.m.

& 2, 6, 6.30 & 7.30 p.m. week days only

supposed to be of the 13th century: the east and west COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR SODBURY PETTY
windows are stained, and there are memorial windows,
SESSIONAL DIVISION.
including those to Mr. John Arnold, d. 1895, and Mr.

.Tohn Wheeler, d. 1896. TJle register dates from the year Beaufort His Grace the Duke of K.G., D.L. Stoke Park,

1661. The church was restored in 1869, at a cost Bristol, chairman

of [,5,000, under the direetion of the late Mr. Worcester Marquess of D.L. Badminton park, Chippenham

G. E. Street R.A.: there are sittings for 515 persons. Codrington Sir Gerold William Henry 'hart. Dodington

The living is a vicarage, net yearly value. £Z]o, with park. Chipping Sodbury

residence. in the gift of the vicar of Old Sodbury, and Blathwayt George William esg. D.L. Dyrham piirk, Chip.

held since 1877 by:the Rev. William Hugh Peyton Harvey penham

M.A. of Exeter C<Jllege, Oxford. The Catholic chapel of Coney Herbert Frederick esq. The Poplars, Pucklechurch,

St. Lawrence, a small building in 'High street, was con· Bristol

flecrated in the year 1838 and will seat 80 persons. Here Fox 'Francis F. esq. Yate house, Chipping Sodbury

is a Baptist chapel, rebuilt in 1819, with 150 sittings. Hale Maj.-Gen. Robert, Alderley, nr. Wotton-under-Edge

and a meeting house for the Society of Friends. with 100 Hooper Robert Nathaniel esq. ,Stanshawes court, Yllte,

sittings. A cemetery of one acre, a short distance north ()hipping Sodbury .

of the church, has been formed at a eost of £5°0; it was Nash Rev. Canon Robert Seymour M.A. Vicarage, Old

consecrated January 13, 1865, and is under the control of Sodbury, Chipping Sodbury

a. Burial Board formed of members of the Parish Council. Sherborne William esq. Nibley, Iron Acton (ex-officio)

The Town HaIl, in Broad street, is a building in the Taylor Darcy Edmund esq. The Rocks, Marshfield. Chip..

Tudor style, and has a large ante-room, used for the meet- penham

ings of the Corporation, and a smaller room at the north- Olerk to the Magistrates, John Trenfield, High street,

east end; it is also used as a masonic lodge room by the Chipping iSodbury. .

members of the Tyndale Lodge of Freemasons, and by the Special i& Petty Sessions are held at the Petty Sessiona.l

Lyegrove Lodge of Mark Master Masons No. 218. New Court House, High street, the first 0& third Friday in

Hall, in High street, wail originally erected in 1886 as a each month, at 11.30 a.m

Baptist Sunday school, st a cost of about £1,200. but is The following places are included in the division :-.Acton

also used for concerts and pub:ic meetings, and will seat Turville, Alderlev, Great Badminton, Cold Ashton, Dyr-.

250 persons. The Literary Society has a reading-room ham & Hinton, Dodington, Hawkesbury, Horton. Marsh-

well supplied with daily and weekly papers and periodicals field, West Littleton, Pucklechurch, Chipping Sodburyt

and a library of 450 volumes, and recreation and dressing Little Sodbury. Old Sodbury. Tormarton, Wapley &

rooms have also been added at the sole expense of F. F. Codrington, Westerleigh, Wick t& Abson, Wickwar &;

Fox _esq. .T.P. of Yate house. In the centre of th9 High Yate

1'ltreet is an illuminated c~o-ek. erected as a memorial to iBAtLIFF &; BURGESSES.

0>1. George lVilliam Blathwayt .T.'P. of Dyrham Park,
Chippenharn, who died in 1871. The Bailiff and Burgesses As trustees acting under the "Municipal Corporations

acting as town trustees have the disposal of certain muni· Act, 1883."
cipal privileges called "stems," conferring on the holder (Practically abolished until the arrival of the Commis~
for the time being the right of pasturing so many sheep
or cattle on the mead and stub ridings, which are of con- sioners appointed under the" Municipal CorporationSo

Act.")

siderable extent; the letting of these "stems" produces B:liliff, John D. B. Trenfield.
a substantial income. The monthly market has been en-
tirely superseded by the establishment of a fortnightly .John Trenfield _ George Morgan
market, held on the first ,and third Tuesday in the month Isaac Limbrick Edmund Orchard timbrick
for cattle, sheep, pigs and cheese, which is generally well
William Higgs

attended. Fairs for hiring servants are he~d on the Fri- DISTRICT ffiG·RWAY BOARD.
days preceding LadV' Day and Michaelmas Day. Charities

-The Town Lands and Endowed School Charities, amount- Olerk, John Trenfield, High street
ing together to £360 yearly, are in the hands of certain Surveyor, Charles Henry Hopkins, Horse street
members of the extinct Corporation 8S town trustees; the

income, arising from lands and premises, is divided into _PUBLIO ESTABLISHMENrS.
three parts, two of which are assigned towards the main-

tenance nf a partly free school, and the remaining third Cemetery, Charles Henry 'Hapkins•. clerk to the burial

to the rl"lief 'Of industrious but worn-out artizans and board; J oseph Chandler, superintendent

others. The Church Lands Charity, of about 190 yearly, County Oourt, Bis Honor Dundas GardineI', judge;.

is also managed bV' trustees. On a. range of hills a,bout John D. B. Trenfield, registrar &; high bailiff. The

2 miles from the town are the remaing of British and county court is held at the Petty Sessional Court

Roman camp!!. L Little Sodbury Manor house is remark. house every alternate month. The following places

llble as the place where Tyndale, !loboub 1"j'20, commenced are within its jurisdiction, viz. :-Aaton Turville.>
his translation of the New Telltament. The nieces of the Alderley, Codrington, Chipping Sodbury, Dirh~

late W. H. H. Hartley esq. are ladies of the manor. The Dodington, FramptoR Cotterell, Frampton Common.

area is 106 acres; rateable value, £2,660; the population Watley's End, Frampton's End. North Woods, Brock..!

in I80I was I.028. .. ridge, Great Badminton, Hawkesbury. Hawkesburt.

Parish Clerk, Joseph Chandler. Common, Hillsley, Kilcot, Tresham, Hinton. Horton,.

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CHIPPING SODBURY. 107

Iron Acton, Latteridge, Little Badminton, Little Sod- S\OHOOL ATTEXDANCE .oo~,[MITTEE.
bury, Old Sodbury, Pucklechurch, Shortwood, Tor- Meets monthly at the Workhouse, on a day appointed
maroon, WapIey, Westerleigh, Coalpit Heath, Kendal-
shire, Rodford, Ram Hill, Lyde Green, Wick &; Ab- by the Board, at 2 p.m
son, West Littleton &; Yate Clerk; J. D. B. Trenfield, High street, Chipping Sodbnry
For Bankruptcy purposes this court is included in that Attendance &; Inquiry Officer, John B. Adams,Marshfield
of Bristol
Certified Bailiffs appointed under the "Law of Distress CHIPPIXG SODBURY RURAL DISTRICT COUNCIL.
Amendment Act," John Gerrish, Chipping Sodbury;
Robert Thomas Greenman, Chipping Sodbury; Moses ~!eets monthly on Board day, at the Workhouse, at
Smith, jun. Iron Acton; John ~icholls, jun. Chalkley 2 p.m.
County Police Station, High street, Edward Critchley,
superintendent, I sergeant &; 3 constables . Clerk, J. D. B. Trenfield, High street
Town Hall, Broad street, Charles Iles, keeper Treasurer, Robert Shapley, National Provincial Bank
Medical Officer of Health, Francis Thomas Bond B.A.,
CHIPPL.~G SODBURY U~IOS.
M.D. Gloucester
Inspector of Nuisances & Surveyor, John B. Adams,

Marshfield

The union comprises the following parishes :-Acl;()D PUBLIO OFFICERS.
Turville, Alder~ey, Chipping Sodbury, Oold .:\.shton,
Dirham & Hinton, Dodington, Doynton, Frampton Clerk to the Magistrates for Sodbury Petty Sessknal
Cotterell, Great Badminton, Hawkesbury, Horton,Iron Division, Commissioners of Taxes & Deputy Lieu-
Aet<m, Little Sodbury, Marshfield, Old Sodbury, tenants, Steward of the ~Ianors of Chipping Sodbury,
Pucklechurch, Tormarton, 'Wapley-cum-Codrington, Old Sodbury, Little Sodbury, Wapley &; Codrington,
West Littleton, Wester~eigh, Wick &; Abson, Wickwar John Trenfield, High street
&; Yate. The area is 63,284 acres; assessable "alue in
OJ~lector of Rates & Assistant Overseer, J oseph Roberts,
1896, £77,984; population in I89! was 16,795 Rounceval street

Board day, every alternate wednesday, at the Board Deputy Coroner for the Lower Division of G~oucester
room, Union Workhouse, Yate, at II a.m
shire, Alfred Grace M.R.C.S. High street
Inland Revenue Officer, Jo.seph Patrick MacGrath, Horse

Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, John street
Dennis Brookes Trenfield, Hill house Superintendent of Police, Edward Critchley, High street

Treasurer, Robert Shapley, National Provincial Bank PLAOES OF WORSIDP, with times of services:~

Relieving Officers, 1st dist. George Smith, Old Sod- St. John the Baptist Church, Rev. W:ilEam Hugh Peyton

bury; 2nd dist. William Higgs, High street, Chipping Harvey M.A. vicar; II a.m. &; 6 p.m.; holy com-
So~bu~y
VaccmatlOI?- ~fficers,. ?odbury: ~l.stl'1.ct,. v~cant; Iro~ - munion, 8 a.m mass, IO.3 0 a.m.; holy days,
Acton dl~trl~, William HIg",.S, Chlppm? Sodbury, St. Lawrence Oatholic, 8 a.m

mass, IQ a.m.; daily,
Hd.ort?n dJlsthrlct'BJafdes J. CoMllinhs, ~d0rton, Marshfield Society (If Friends' Meeting House; II a.m. &; 6 p.m.;
lstnct, 0 n . ams, aI'S fie. wed 7 30 P m
SuhPerintenddent ReRgibstrar'U7~ohn D. B: Thril~nl fiCelhd! ~ill Baptist, Rev. A.quila. Lemon; IO.45 a.m. &; 6 p.m.;
ouse; eputy, 0 ert H ilson, Bowhng , Ippmg thurs. 8 p.m

Sodbury SOOOOLS.

Medical Officers, No. I district, Alfred Grace, High

street, Chipping Sodbury; No. 2 district, William Endowed Grammar, for 40 children, closed for several
Frederick Bai~ey Eadon L.R.C.P.Edin. Hambrook; years, but re-opened in 1869 under a scheme of the
No. 3 district, William Isidore Cox, Hawkesbury Up- Court of Chancery, framed in 1867,. with the consent
ton; No. 4 district, Henry Hugh Williams, Wick; of the, Charity Commissioners: the endowment as
No. 5 district, H. Ward 61arke, ~Iarshfield
settled by the scheme consists of two-thirds of the
Public Vaccinators, No. I&;2 districts, Alfred Grace, income .derived from the Town Lands Oharity; the
High street, Chipping Sodbury; No. 3 district, D. R. Rev. James Dumas B.A., B.Se. master, High street
Forty L.R.C.P.Lond. Wotton-under-Edge; No. 4 & 5 National (mixed), erected, with master's nsidence, in
districts, same as medical officers
Registrars of Births &; Deaths, Chipping Sodbury "ub- 1825, the site being given by the late W. R. R. Rart-

district, George Smith, Old Sodbury; deputy, Mrs. ley esq. for 124 children; average attendance, 96;
M. A. Smith; Hawkesbury sub-district, Joseph Jas.
Edward Albert Freeman, master; Mrs. M. A. lies,
assistant mistress
CoIlins, Horton; Iron Acton sub-district, John Nichols, Infants', built m 1868, for 60 children; average attend-
jun. Ohalkley; deputy, William Henry Nichols, Iron ance, 55; Mrs. Sarah Freeman, mistress
Acton, Marshfield sub-district; John B. Adams,
Marshfield; deputy, Miss H. M. Adams, Marshfield . CONVEYANOE.

Registrar of Marriages, ~oseph Chandler, Broad street, Bees' omnibus to Yate station meets every train
Jones -& Son, omnibus to Bristol, daily
Ohipping Sodbury

The Workhouse, at Yate, is a building of stone, erected OARRIERS TO:-
Badminton-ReRben TIes, daily
in 1834, & wi:l hold 280 e•innsm, cahteasp;l .Alfred Pet herick ,
master; Rev. Hobert Stev a•m; Alfred Grace ,

medical officer; Mrs. Kate Petherick, matron Bristol John Thomas Slade &; J ones &; Son, daily

PRIVATE RESIDENT.,. Grace Alfred, High street Sanderd• Rev. James Bernar~ D.D.,

Alsop Mrs. High street Grace A:fred Henry, High .'1treet O.S.B. (Catho:ic), The Presbytei'y

Arnold Mrs. John, 2 Wailis place Harvey Rev. William Hugh Peyton Shapley!Robert, Bank house,Broad siT

.Arnold Mrs. Richard, Old Bank house M...!.. Vicarage Trenfield John, Holly house, High st

Bicks Mrs. High street Leman Mrs. Rounceval house Trenfield John Dennis Brookes, Hill ho

Branshy Samuel Rt. Knevett,High st Leman Thomas Curtis 1r.I.D. Rounce- Trenfield John William, East view

Dumas Rev. James B.A., RSc. (mas- val house • Watts, Miss, Melbourn~ JJ.ouse

ter), Grammar school Lemon Rev. Aquila (Baptist) Weare Miss, Parade

Edwards Mrs. ThePres'bytery,Broad st Pendred Mrs .. Parade Woodbridge Mrs. High street

Foxwell Andrew J.ame3, High street iPerrett Hel"bert. High street Worsfold Wil!,:4tpl John, ~orse l~freet

Gerrish John, Rounceval street Savory Joseph Jams, Horse street dHf,

• Chandler Joseph; boot &; shoe maker, newsagent, coffee

COMMERCIAL.

!ren William, basket maker &; New inn, Broad street house &; registrar of marriages,. Ohipping Sodbury dis-

Andrews George, baker & confectioner, High street trict, Broad street
Arnold "" SonJ grocers, drapers, stationers &;c.Broad 8t Codrington Elizabeth (Mrs.), The Port Oullis family &;.

Aston Richard Yoxall, draper &; boot dealor, Broad st commercial hotel; wine &i spiri" merchant &c

Ball John· Jsph. Alden, china &; glass dealer, Bro<td st Oodrington 8tephen M.R.O.V.S.L. veterinary surgeon.,
veterinary ;inspector to the Board of Agriculture et
Ball Stanley, hairdresser & tobacconist

Bees James Henry. fiy &; omnibus proprietor, Broad st . inspector to local authorities, High street .

Bidrhead iDaniel, grocer, Broad street Comley Louisa (Miss), dress maker, Broad street.

Bransby Samuel Robert Knevett,assist. surgeon, High s~ Cool Samuel, grocer &; provision. .merchant, Bro,ad street
County Court (Bis Bonor Dundas Gardiner, judge;
Oaradine Charles, mason, Parade

Oaradine Elizabeth (MrJl.), post office. Broad street John D. B. Trenfield, registrar &; high bailiff)

CaTter .Alfred James, beer retailer, Horse street Cricket Club (James Mills, sec. &; captain)

Cemetery (Charles Henry Hopkins, clerk to the bnrial Critchley Edward, superintendent of police, High street

board; Joseph Chand~e!', superintendent) . ! Dando Alfred, haulier &; shopkeeper,' Hatter's lane

108 CHIPPING SODBURY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Dando John, shopkeeper, Hatt.er's lane Nelson Francis Horatio,carpenter & gunsmith,locksmith

Dixon Arthur, ironmonger & plumber, High street &; cycle dealer &; repairer, sporting ammunition dl:u.

Dixon Henry, plumber, Horse street Broad street

Dowding Elizabeth (Mrs.), ironmonger, l:e!lt petroleum, Nicho~s Robert, George hotel, commercial, good stabling

benzoline, linseed & machine oils, Broad Slii'eet Nichols, Smith & Alder, auctioneers (branCh), Broad st

Edwards Charles, bill poster, Rounceval street Pegler Henry, tailor &;, outfitter, Broad street

Foxwell Andrew J ames, insurance a~ent for Pro1·ident Perrett Herbert, farmer &; assistant overseer for Old
Sodbury, High street
Life & County Fire Office, High Iltreet

Freegard Edwin J. & Son, millers (water & steam) Perrett John Hy. wine & spirit mer. &c. High street

&;, corn merchants, Brook street Phillips Alden Moses, saddler, Broad street

Freeman Edward Albert, agent for Phrenix Fire Insnr- Powell William, farmer, Horse street

anCe Co. National schools Pullen Thomas, jun. farmer, Broad street

Gale John, chimney sweeper, Horse street Pullen Thos. sen. Royal Oak hotel &; farmer, Broad st

Gerrish John, auctioneer, see Tayler & Gerrish Raggatt Alfred, shoeing smith, Broad street

Gloucestershire (Royal Gloucestershire Hussars Yeo- Ratcliff Thomas Hulse, china &; glass dealer, High street

manry Cavalry) (Dodington Troop) (Major Wyndham Roberts Henry, lime burner, Brook street

Quin M.P. commanding; Capt. Thomas Cardwell; Roberts Joseph, assistant overseer &; collector of rate~

P. Limbrick, quarter-master; Sergt.-Maj. T. H. Rounceval street

Holderness, drill instructor) Rose Benjamin, saddler, Broad street

Grace Alfred, surgeon & medical officer No. 1 district, Russell George, saddler, Broad street
& workhouse & public vaccinator, Nos. 1 & 2 districts, Russell John, grocer, tallow chandler &; corn dlr.High s\

Chipping Sodbury union, deputy coroner for Lower Russell Mary Ann (Miss), furnished apartments,High st

division of Gloucestershire & Surgeon-Lieut.-CoI. Savory Joseph William, baker &; corn &; flour dealer,

Royal Gloucestershire Yeomanry, High street The Parade

Grace Alfred, surgeon, High street Selman Hester (Miss), apartments, Broad street

Grammar School (Rev. J. Dumas RA., B.Sc. master), Shapley Robert, manager of the National Provincial Bank

High street &; treasurer to the union &; rural sanitary authority,

Greenaway William, haulier, Hatter's lane Broad street

Greenman Robert Thomas, auctioneer & bailiff & broker Short Catherine (Mrs.), dress maker, Horse street

to county court, High street Short James, boot & shoe maker, Horse street

Griffin Elizabeth (Miss), hosier, High street Short Thomas, coal haulier, Hatter's lane

Hawkins Charles, furniture dealer &c. Horse street Slade John Thomas, carrier, High street

Hawtin Minnie Theresa (Miss), ladies' school, pupils pre- Slade Joseph, beer retailer &; general dealer, Broad st

pared for Cambridge local exam. & for Trinity College, Stiff ~harles, plasterer, Horse street

High street Stiff Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, High street

Higgs Thomas & Son,carpenters & wheelwrights,Horse st Stone Robert & Son, watchmakers & cycle agts.Broad st

Higgs James, plumber & ironmonger, High street Stump Thomas, seedsman, High street

Higgs William, relieving officer 2nd district, Chipping Svveatman (Mrs.). baker, pastrycook &;, confectioner.

Sodbury union;' vaccination officer, High street High street

Hobb Harry, Grapes hotel, Rounceval street Tayler &; Gerrish, auctioneers, valuers & land agents,

Hobbs James, butcher, High street Rounceval street

Holderness Thomas Ellis, sergt.-major of DOdington Taylor Agnes (Mrs.), refreshment rooms, Broad street

troop of Royal Gloucestershire Hussars, Horse street Thompson Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Horse street

Hopkins Charles Henry, district surveyor to Gloucester- Thompson John Robt. carpenter & undertaker, Horse st

shire county council&Sodbury highway board,Horse st Thompson William, plumber, Broad street

Hudson William, grocer & draper, High street Tily Alfred Charles, wheelwright &; carriage builder,

Huff Charles, fishmonger, Rounceval street The Parade

Des Charles, lessee of town hall, High street Tily Thomas, builder, Horse street

Des Edgar, printer & stati{)ner, Horse street Tily William, butcher, High street

Des Reuben, posting establishment; hunters, hacks, Trenfield John, solicitor, &; clerk to the highway board,

ponies & traps let on hire, High street commissioners of taxes, deputy lieutenants & to tha

lIes Thomas Absalom, chimney sweeper, Horse street magistrates for Sodbury petty sessional division &

.Tones & Son, carriers, Broad street steward of the manors of Chipping Sodbury, Old Sod-

Jones Joseph, beer retailer, Broad street bury, Little Sodbury, Wapley &; Codrington

.Tones Richard, chemist &;, druggist &; insurance agent, Trenfield John Dennis Brookes, solicitor, registrar &;

Broad street high bailiff of County court, clerk to the Guardians,

Leman Thomas Curtis M.D., M.R.C.S. & L.R.C.P.Lond. assessment &; school attendance committees &; rural

surgeon, Rounceval house district council &; supt. registrar &; sec. to the Gas. Co.

Lemon Rev. .A.quila, private school (mixed), Horse st Hill house

Limbrick Edmund Orchard, butcher High street Trenfield John William, solicitor, High street

Limbrick Isaae, veterinary surgeon, :Broad street Trotman Hester (Mrs.), butcher, Broad street

Literary Institute (R. W. Arnold, sec.), High street Trotman William Robert, butcher, Broad street

Long Walter, plumber & glazier, Rounceval street Trueman Frank, blacksmith, High street

Love Alfred, butcher, Roungeval street Turner Bros. painters &; paperhangers, High street

MacGrath Joseph Patrick, inland revenue offr. Horse st Turner Edward, insurance agent, High street

Manning John T. colt trainer, horses & carriages for Turner John, plasterer, High street

hire, Horse street Turner Joseph, cooper & stationer, Broad street

Martin Eliza (Miss), dress & mantle maker, High st Turner William, shopkeeper, Broad street

Matthews Samuel, shopkeeper, Broad street UzzeIl Thomas, shopkeeper, Rounceval street

Matthews William Charle!, shopkeeper, Rounceval st Vizard Albert Henry, brewer &; aerated water manufac-

Mills James, builder & paperhanger, Rounceval street turer, High street

Mills William Thomas, boot maker, High street Wa.llis Matilda (Mrs.), laundress, Horse street

Milsom George, haulier, Rounceval street Warner William Hancock, farmer, Broad street

Moreton lsaac. boot &; l'lhoe maker. Rounceval street Watkins William, cowkeeper, Hatter's lane

Morgan George, sen. draper &; outfitter, High street Wilkins Charles, beet retailer, High street

Morgan George, jun. outfitter, Broad street Williams Jos.eph, beer retailer, Horse Shoe lane

National Provincial Bank of England Limited (branch) Wilson Robert, deputy supt. registrar, Bowling hill

(Rabert Shapley, manager), Broad street; draw on Woods &;, Son, nurserymen & florists, cut flowers, wreaths

head office, London E 0 & crosses to order, Burgage nursery

CHRISTCHURCH is an ecclesiastical parish, formed consisting of apsidal chancel, erected in 1885, double
1844, under the Act 5 and 6 Vict. c. 65, and including nave, south aisle, and an embattled western tower with
J oyford, Hillersland, Shortstanding and Edge End, in pinnacles, containing one bell: a pulpit of Caen stone
was erected in r885 as a memorial to the Rev. William
the township of West Dean: it has a scattered population, Henry Taylor RA. vicar, 1852-83. an organ being added
mostly employed in and around Coleford, of which place at the same time by public subscription: in 1895 four
catbedral glass windows were added at a. cost of £20:
it forms a suburb, and is 11 miJes north from Coleford there are sittings for 600 persons. The register dates
station on the Great Western and Severn and Wye rail- from the year 1814. The living is a vicarage, net yearly
ways, in the Forest of Dean division of the county, Mon- value £130, including 100 acres of glebe, with residence.
m{)uth union and connty court district, Coleford petty in the gift of the Crown, and held since 1883 by the Rev.
sessional division, rural deanery of South Forest, and Christopher Barnes, of St. Bees. The Crown is the prin-

archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. Christ Church,
erected in 1812, is a building of stone, in the Gothic style,

DIRECTORY.] G LO U C E,S T E R S H I R E . CHURCHDOWN. 109

cipal landowner. The soil is light, sandy; subsoil is here, but not paid. Coleford is the nearest money
sandstone and limestone. The chief crops are wheat, order &; telegraph office

barley and roots. The area is 3,149 acres; the population SCHOOL.
in 1891 was 1,424,
National (mixed), built, with master's residence, in 1812
Sexton, James Gwilliam. &; enlarged in 1870, &; now (1897) being again enlarged
for 450 children; average attendance, 212 mixed & III
Post Office, Christ Chureh.-Mrs. Sarah Young, sub- infants; Edward Ernest Smith, master; Miss FJIen
postmistress. Letters arrive from Coleford at 6.45 Prince, mistress

a.m.; dispatched at 6,45 p.m. Postal orders are issued

Bames Rev. Christopher, Vicarage Emmerson Edward, butcher Jones Charlotte (Mrs.), milliner &;

Fox Fred, beer retailer, Joyford dress maker

COMMERCIAL. Gardiner Henry, baker &; grocer Jones Thomas, farmer, Five acres

AstonEmanuel,boot ma.drpr.&;seedsmn Godwin Harriet (Mrs.), beer retailer Miles Caleb, baker &; grocer

Aston George, boot maker Gwilliam Milson, farmer Salter Ellen (Mrs.), drpr. &; boot dlr

BrainEdmd.Rising Sun PoH.Five acres Gwilliam Th(}mas, Globe P.H. &; col- Stephens George, shopkeeper &; quarry

Brown Joseph, blacksmith, Five acres liery proprietor, Farmer's Folly col- master, Short standing

Dickinson Samuel, quarry worker & liery, Short standing Tomlins Geo. New inn,Short standing

stone merchant Hawkins James, shopkeeper Worgan Ben, grocer &; draper

Dyke Ellen (Mrs.), Rock P.H Howell 1.'homas, beer retailer, Ivyfrd Worgan Thomas, farmer, Hawtbornes

Ebborn Mary (Mrs.), farmer, Short Jarrett Isabella (Mrs.), grocer Young Margaret (Mrs.), colliery pro-

standing Jones Jas.& Son, monumental masons prietor, Five acres

CHURCHAM is a parish on the Monmouth and Here- arable is in greater proportion than the pasture. and
ford road, with a station called Oakle Street on the
Gloucester and SO}lth Wales branch of the Great Western fruit trees are planted in the fields. The east side of this
railway, 4 miles west by road and 5 by rail from Glou-
cester and IIO from London, in the Northern division of parish lies advantageously to the morning sun, so that
the county, Westbury-on-Severn hundred and union.
the harvest is invariably a fortnight earlier than in most
Gloucester county court district and petty sessional divi-
of the adjoining places. The area is 2,168 acres; rateable
si.on, rural deanery Qf North Forest, and archdeaconry .and
diocese ~f ~loucester. .The church of ~t. Andrew IS a. value, £5,455; the population in 1891 was 4II
small buildl~go of stone ill the Early EnglIsh and Norman
styles, conslstmg: of c~ancel an~ ~ave, south porch and a BIRDWOOD is Q hamlet I mile west
western tower WI~h SpIre, contammg a clock and 6. bells:
the chancel arch IS Norman: t.he roof, wooden spIre and Post Office, Churcham. Mrs. Ellen Goatman. sub-post-
bells were destroyed by fire ill 1876: the church was
partly rebuilt in 1878, at a cost of £1,800, and ~he bells mistress. Letters arrive through Gloucester at 7 a.m.;
were recast by ~arner and rehung at the same tlme, the
chancel also bemg restored: the clock was presented to dispatched at 6 p.m. Postal orders are issued here.
the church in 1884 by the late Edmund Weight esq. and
in 1885 a stone font, an exa?t counterpart of the (\~g;inal, but not paid. Huntley is the nearest money order
was presented by Mrs. WeIght: there are 250 slttmgs.
The register dates from 154I. The living is a vicarage, office &; Minsterworth the nearest telegraph office
with the chapelry of Bulley annexed, joint net yearly .alue
£230, including 107 acres of glebe, with residence, in the Wall Letter Box at Oakle Street station cleared at 4.55
gift of the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester, and held p m week days only
since 1895 by the Rev. William John Selby 1\-LA.. of the
A School Board of 5 members was formed October 11,
University of London. Here is a Wesleyan chapel.
Oakle Street derives its name from an avenue of 1881, for Churcham &; Bulley United District; J. J.
oaks formerly standing here. The Ecclesiastical Com-
missioners are lords of the manor. The Ecclesiastical Carefield Natetwennhdaamnc~colfefrikcetro the board' William Mer-
Commissioners, Frederick Ha-rvey esq. and the vicar are rick Elli; '
the landowners. The soil in general is red clay; the
The school 'for Churcham &; Bulley is at Dulley

Police Constable Edward Collier

Railway Station' Oakle Street John Firth station master
' , '.

CARRIERS tro GLOUCESTER (passmg through

Churcham). .

George Gardiner, from Huntley, wed. & sat. returnmg

same days

Ruck Thomas, from Huntley, wed. & sat

Barnes, from Longhope, wed. & sat. returning same days

Blewitt, from Mitcheldean, wed. & sat. returning same

days

CottereI1, from Mitcheldean, wed. & sat

Heaven Godfrey, Handlow house Davis James, farmer, Birdwood house OvertonWm.ThosoFrench.frmr.New ha

Hall Louis Henry, Church Lane farm Dobbs George, farmer &; fruit dealer Parry Albt. Fredk. farmer, Oakle crt

Hewlett Joseph, Birdwood villa Ellis William Merrick, farmer, school Parry Edmund, farmer, Home farm

Selby Rev. Wm. In. M.A. Vicarage attendance officer &; sanitary inspctr Selwyn Joseph, farmer &; dealer,

Stephens Mrs Gough Mary Ann ,(Mrs.), blacksmith Birdwood farm

Gurney Arthur, farmer, Churcham hO, Stephens John, farmer, Oakle street

COMMERCIAL. Haine Edmund, farmer. The Lawn Stock Henry. haulier

Ackerman Thomas, butcher IHewlett Martin, farmer &; corn dealer Teakle Wm. Thos. farmer, Sainthill fm
"Ballinger George, farmer
Holder Mary Ann (Mrs.), beer retIr Wheeler Henry, hay & corn mer~
llennett Joseph, farmer, Birdwood Tmms James, farmer, Hill farm chant. Bleak house

Cadle Joseph, farmer Marsh An1hony Edward, farmer, Stone Wheeler Percy, asst. ovrsr. Oakle st
I Williams William, Oakle Street hotel
Davis lsaac, blacksmith End farm

CRURCHDOWN is a parish and straggling village, a three years previously by the Ecclesiastical Commis-
sioners, and in 1892 a vestry was added at a cost of
1!lhort distance south of the road leading from Gloucester £50: there are about 400 sitting!. The register dates
from the year 1563. The living is a vicamge. gross yearly
to Cheltenham, with a station adjoining 'On the Great value £300, including 28 acres of glebe, with residence~
in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Bristol, and held
Western and Midland joint line from Cheltenham to since 1858 by the Rev. Frederick Smithe M.A.• LL.D. of
Trinity College, Dublin, and F.G.S. The Primitive Metho-
Gloucester, and is n8 miles from London, 4 east from dist chapel here was built in 1877, and will hold 80 per-
Gloucester and 5 south-west from Cheltenham, and in sons. The 'Vesleyans hold their services in a barn at
Drew's Court Farm. The charities amount to about £35
the Northern division of the county, hundred of Dud- yearly; about half of this, derived from Cox's (Badge-
stone and King's Barton, Gloucester union, county court worth) charitt, is distributed on Christmas eve. There
~istrict and petty sessional division, and in the rural are four alInshouses for four poor widows, each
deanery, archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The inmate receiving £2 10S. yearly. The vicar is lord.
of the manor. The trustees of the late Joseph
tlhurch of St. Bartholomew, standing on the summit of a Lovegrove esq. J. H. Jones esq. the Gloucester Land
detached hill, is an edifice of stone in the Norman and Company, Thomas Robinson esq. of Maisemore
Park, G. V. Darby esq. Mrs. Martha Smith and Capt. R.
Late Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave of Child are the chief landowners. The soil is of a clayey
nature, and in some parts inclining to sand, but in-
three bays, south aisle, south porch with parvise and an variably 'Very fertile. producing good crops of corn, fruit.
vegoetables and grass. The area is 2,565 acres; rateable
embattled western tower with pinnacles containing 5 value, £8,947; the population in 1891 was 750.
J)ells: the following inscription remains on the inside wall
HUCCLECOTE, formerly a hamlet, is now a separate
of the tower :-" This belhows was byyldede in the yeer parish.
of our Lode God 1601 ": in the chancel wan is a piscina of

Early English date: the fonb consists of a deep octagonal
panelled basin, relieved by crocketed niehes in each panel.
~md supported on a. concave panelled shaft. with a wide
fiat base of the same shape: in the south aisle is a memo-

rial to John Danvers, ob. 1616: there is also a monument

with arms tQ Sir Robert Austen bart. of Hall Place, Dart·

!ford, Kent, and M.P. for New Romney, d. 1743: some of
:the P~Wjl are elaborately carved: the church was restored

in 18841lt a coat of £300, the chancel having been restored

110 CHURCHDOWN. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Parish Oerk, Mrs. Frederick Billingham. Board (formerly Endowed) School, built in 1873, for 130

Post, M. O. &, T. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office. children; average attendance, 34 boys, 32 girls & 34
-~lfrs. Ann Garness, SUb-postmistress. Letters through infants: it is endowed with £25 yearly, left in 1745 by
Cheltenham j delivery, week days, 7.10 a.m.; no sun- Henry 'Wyndowe, &; with £10 by Mrs. Blunt: there
is a house for the master: William T. Swift, master;
day delivery; dispatched at I & 7 p.m H. Brown, assistant master; Mrs. Elizabeth Brown,
Wall Letter Box, nr. Vicarage, cleared at 12.45 & 6,45 p.m assistant mistress
A School Board of 5 members was formed April 13, 1881; Railway Station (Great Western & Midland Joint rail.
way), Daniel Joseph Gilkes, station master
H. Tuthill, Rudford, clerk to the board; George Davis,

Brookfield, attendance officer

Ramiey iRev. .AlIen M.A. (curate r Garness George Henry, beer retailer
Parish church) Gilkes Daniel, coal dealer
PRIVATE RESIDENTS.

MIen joseph Theophilus, Summerwell Smith Horace, The Cottage I Guest E. & Co. bakers

Ballinger Mrs. The Avenue Smith Mrs. Herbert, Parton lawn Harris Wm. farmer, Chapelhay farm

Bayliss Miss, Tweentown Smithe Rev. Frederick M.A., LL.D., Holdey Chas. In. farmer, The Bratcb
Baynham Benjamin Oak, Th~ Limes F.G.S. (vicar), Vicarage
Houldey George, shoe maker

Beavan William, Blairgowrie Timberlake Frederick W. Tinlern viIs Kilminster George, farmer

Brown Lindsay, The Pines Villar Harry, Upper Pirton Liddington Isaac, farmer, Brookfield

Brown David, The Elms Merrett Francis John, general smitb
Merrett Thomas, builder, joiner &
Bubb William Clinch, Vermont house COMYERCIAL.

Cerrito Mrs. Fair view A:len J oseph, refreshment rooms, general contractor, decorator &c;

Chandler Mrs. Fairlie The Green estimates furnished

Ohild Capt. Robert, Chosen hill ArkelI Wm. farmer & butcher,Brookfld Morris Anthony, shoe maker

Cornock WaIter Wm. The Avenue Baker Brothers, grocers :Kicolle Elizabeth (Miss), apartments

Collis Frederick, Hillthorpe Baldaro Alfred Thomas Rose, Hare I Palmer William, farmer

Edis Mrs. Zenatta .& Hounds P.H P~kett Caroline (Mrs.), midwife

Finch Miss, :Brookfield Ballard John, farm bailiff to Capt. Payne Elizabeth (Miss), gen. stores

Fisher Frederick Wm. The Avenue Stanhope Haines, The Reddings Pearce Char~es, baker & grocer

Ford John Charles, Oak villas Ballinger Frederick, bicycle repairer, Poulton James Clement, farmer,

Goddard ~ohn Wm. Mirfield house Cheltenham road Brookfield farlll

Grosvenor William, Greville lodge Bellamy William Alfred, frmr. Parton PrE'paratory & Boarding School fOf

Haines Capt. Stanhope, The Reddings Bryden Miller Erown, frmr. Drewscrt Boy~ & Girls (Miss M. M. Kim-
~urchdown Land Co. Limited, far- ber,principal) (references permitted,
Hancock Edgar, Rosedale

Harris Mrs. Kelvin grove mers (John Robert ?IIullis, bailiff) correspondence invited),Malvern vii

Harrison WaIter John, Dumfries Cleverly Edwin, com. tray. Highfield Pumfrey Ann I(Mrs.}, farmer, Parton

Hawkins Edward, Sandfield Dancey Mark, black~mith Rogers Mary (Mrs.), The Old Elm inn

Hayes Miss, The Avenue Daniels Eliza (Mrs.), refreshment Smith William Robert, farmer, Brick-

J'aynes Fras.Chas. Augusts.Fern bank rooms, The Green hampton farm

Jones John Henry, Barrow hill Davis George, assistant overseer &, Swift Wm.Thos. organist & choir msh·

Lea Edwin, Annandale lodge school attendance officer & assessor Tombs Charlei, commercial traveller

Lucas James Henry, Chosen hill & collector of taxes, Brookfield Tombs Hy. carpenter, GIoucest~r rd

Mayer John Mountain, I Oak viIas Davis Hannah (Mrs.), frmr.Green frm Wilcox George, farmer & dairy pro-

Nicholls James, Hazeldean Davis Jsph: Jas. frmr. Woodfield frm duce, farm house apartments, good

Parry Robert, Holly bank Drinkwater .Alfred, bailiff to J. H. accommodation for visitors, lun-

PaJ"Ile William, Elmus, Hillside Jones esg cheons, teas &c. Parton Court farm

Peters Capt. John J. Watarah Fardon Silvia (Miss), news agent & Williams Charlotte (Mrs.),boarding ho

Preece George Lewis, Fairview shopkeeper

CINDERFORD is a small town forming part of the • There is an iron mission room at Bilson, seating 60'

Forest of Dean, and including Ruspidge and Soudley, in persons.

the township of East Dean; it is 3! miles north-west from Soudley mission room, a. building of iron, was erected

Newnham, with a terminal station on the Severn and in 1880, and will seat 120 persons.

Wye Joint Great Western and Midland railway, I mile The Public Hall, in Commercial street, built in 1897,

north-west, and Qne (for 'goods only) on the Great is a. structure of iron, used for entertainments, and is

Western Company's Forest of Dean goods and mineral capable {)f holding over 800 persons.

railway. The place is lighted by gas by the Bilston .A. fever hospital, containing four wards, was opened at

Gas Co. Limited, and supplied with wat-er by the East SoudIey early in 1894.

Dean Rural District Council from a reservoir near Little Parish aerk, St. John's, Thomas Meredith.

Dean Hill. The district comprises two ecclesiastical Post, M. O. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.

parishes, in the rural deanery of South Forest, arch- -Thomas Rhodes, sub-postmaster. Letters from Lon-

deaconry and diocese of Gloucester. don & all parts arrive from Newnham at 7.20 a.m. SI;

St. John the Evangelist's is an ecclesiastical parish, 3.40 p.m.; dispatched 9.15 a.m.; North mail, 5.45

formed in 1844, and comprises Rmpidge, Soudley and a p.m. & London mail, 7.45 p.m.; no delivery or dis-

portion of Cinderford: the church, erected in 1843, from patch on sunday

designs by Mr. Edward Blore, architect, of London, is a Post &, M. O. 0., S. B. & Annuity &, Insurance Office.

cruciform building of stone in the Early English style, Ruspidge.-Thomas Chivers, sub-postmaster. Letters

consisting of apsidal chancel, nave, transepts and a tower arrive from Newnham at 7.30 a.m. & 3.50 p.m.; di~

with spire containing one bell: there are siMings for 600 patched at 9 R.m.; North mail. 5.30 p.m.; London &;

persons. The register dates from the year 1844. The general, 7.30 p.m

living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £310, with Post Office, Soudley.-Francis Bedney, sub-postmasttlr.

residence, in bhe gift of the Crown, and held since 1878 Letters arrive from Newnham 8.30 a.m.; box cleared

by the Rev. William Lynes M.D. of the University 'Of St. 9 a.m. & 5.45 p.m. week days only. Postal ordere ar9

Andrew's, N.B. The population in 1891 wall 3.002. issued here, but not paid

There are Baptist, Wesleyan, Primitive Methodist and Wall Letter Boxes.-Commercial road. c1eflred at 9 a.m.

Bible Christian chapels. The Town Hall. the property of & 5.30 & 7.30 p.m. Belle Vue road, cleared at 9.15

the Cinderford Co-operative Society Lim. is a substantial a.m. & 5.50 & 7.50 p.m. Upper Bilson, clea:red at 8.50

building of stone, and has a large room for public meet- a.m. & 7.5 p.m. Ruspidge, cleared at 7 p.m. Steam

ings. mills, cleared at 6,45 p.m. Little Deanshill, cleared

ST. STEPHEN'S, WOODSIDE, is a.rt ecclesiastical 6,35 p.m
RURAL DISTRIGr COUNCIL OF EAST DEAN ll\D
parish, formed Aug. 13, 1880, out of the pa.rishes of Holy
Trinity, St. John the Evangelist and FIaxley. The church, UNITED PARISHES.
erecte~ in 1889-90, all a ~st ()f £4,70°, fro~ desi~s .by Meets at the SchO<JI Board offices, Cinderford, the first
Mr. Lmgen B~r~er, archItect, of Herefo~. III a building
of stone, <lOnslstmg of chancel, clerestoned nave of foup wed. in each month, at 2 p.m.
bays, and aisles ~ the chancel end stained east window For Officers see Westbury-on-Trym
were the gift vf Lady Crawley-Boevey, of FIaxley Abbey:
there are 500 sittingg. The register dates from 1880. . PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS. .
Fever HospItal, Soudle!, In. Shaw Carleton,medlcal officer
The living is 3 perpetual cnracy, gross yearly value £250 , T0'Yn Hall,. Charles WI1lcox, ke~per
in the gift of the Church Patronage Society; hald since Pohce StatIOn, Charles Hy. DaVls, sergeant, & 3 constables

1894 by the Rev. Thomas Longstaff M.A. of Oxford PUBLIC OFFICERS.

University. The population in 1891 was 4,454, Certifying Factory Surgeon, Medical Officer &:; Publill

St. Stephen's Church room, erect-ed in 1874 for Divine Vaccinator, No. 4 District, Westbury-on-Sevem Union,

service, is now used as a Sunday school. Richard Macartney

DIRECTORY.] GI..OUCESTERSHIRE. CL.~DEBFORD. I I I

Clerk to the Forest of Dean United District &; Walford girls &; 266 infants; John Hale, master; :Miss Bailey~
School Board, John Sm!. Bradstock, Post Office bldgs mistress; Mrs. Hale, infants' mistress
Board, Steam Mills (boys, girls & infants), built in 1882,
Registrar of Births & Deaths, East Dean District, Edwin for 416 children; average attendance, 87 boys, 84 girls
Henry Long, Cinderford; deputy, Mrs. Sophia Teague, & 87 infants; Harry' Darlington, master; Miss Eliz8-
Cinderford beth Clara Williams. mistress; Miss Mary Garner?
infants' mistress
Relieving Officer, No. 2 District, Edwin Henry Long
.Assistant Overseer & Poor's Rate Collector. Alfd. Ridler Board, St. White's (junior mixed &; infants). built in
1887, for 440 children; average attendance. IIO boys.
PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services. 100 girls & 120 infants; George Daniel Woodman~
master; Mrs. Annie Marfen, infanlls' mistress
St. John the Evangelist, Rev. William Lynes M.D.; 11
Board, Soudley (mixed &; infants), built, with master's
a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7 p.m -residence, in 1885, & enlarged in 1893.. for 231 children;
St. Stephen's Church, Rev. T. Longstaff M.A. incum- average attendance, 71 boys, 63 girls &; 83 infants;
Frederick Hull, master
bent; II a.m. & 6 p.m.; thurs. 7 p.m
Board, Double View (senior boys &; girls), built in 1895,
Iron Mission Room, Soudley, by the clergy of St. John's; for 600 children; average attendance, 210 boys &; 190
on sundays only, times various girls; John Alfred Emery, master. &; 9 assistant mas-

Iron Mission Room, Bilson. by the clergy of St.Stephen's; ters & mistresses
;KEWSPAPER.
6.30 p.m.; wed. 7 p.m
Baptist, Rev. John George; 10.30 a.m. &; 6 p.m.; wed. Forest of Dean Mercury, John Cooksey, propriet<lr &;
publish er; publI'Shed frl'day
7 p.m
Primitive Methodist; 2·30 & 6 p.m.; mono 7 p.m R.A.ILWAY STATIONS.
Wesleyan, Rev. J. Arthur .Aldington; 10.45 a.m. & 6
Cinderford (G. W. & M. R. Companies) (Severn & Wye
Wpes.mIey. a;nt,hRuUrsS.pl7Od p.m 2 .30 & 6 p.m.; wed . 7 p.m
ge; Joint railway), James Morris, station master
Cinderford (G. W. R.), for goods only; Peter F. Jo.ne.,
Bible Christian; IO.30 a.m. & 6 p.m.; mono 7 p.m
collector
Bible Christian, Ruspidge; 2.30 & 6 p.m.; wed. 7 p.m
Bible Christian, Soudley; II a.m. & 6 p.m. ; thurs. 7 p.m Ruspidge (G. W. R.), for goods only; Geo.Fagent,collectr

Plymouth Brethren; 2.30 & 6 p.m Bilson (G. W. R.), for goods only; Sml. Goodwin, collectr

SCHOOLS under the Forest of Dean United District CARRIER TO GLOUCESTER.
School Board. Joseph Brown, Cinderford. mono wed. &; sat

Board, Bilson Woodside (junior boys, girls &; infants),

built, with master's residence, in 1877, & since enlarged,

for 7IS children; average attendance, 190 boys. 200

CINDERFORD. Church George Frederick, butcher Foxes Bridge Colliery Co. Limited (G.

Aldington Rev. J. Arthur (Wesleyan) OindeTford Co.operative Society Lim. E. MbMurtrie, manager)

Bradstock John Samuel, Deneside (William Charles Ivins, sec) Freeman Samuel, builder

Bray Daniel Cinderford FootballJ Club (Richard Gabb George, blacksmith

Burdess John, Bowson house Marcartney, sec) Gable G. & Son, blacksmiths

Burdess Thos. Harrison,St. .Annals Idg Clark David, shopkeeper &; beer retailr Good Hezekiah In.paintr.& paperhangr

Emery John Alfred, Lyndhurst Clarke J ames. drapm- Gardiner William, stationer

George Rev. John (Baptist), Ty Hyfrd Clements George, Victoria P.H Gardner Albert, sh(}pkeeper

Griffiths Arthur D. Yorke villa Cole Mark, Royal Union inn Gardner Henry George, district supt.

Haleo Joseph. Bilson house Coleman Gertrude (Miss), dress maker Pearl Life Assurance Co. Limited

James George Hint<ln Cook Sarah Ann (Mrs.), grocer Gay Frederick In. shopkpr.&; beer retlr

JenlOns Henry Cooksey John, printer & publisher 01 Goymour Herbert, baker &; confectioner

Kear J ames J.P the "Forest of Dean Mercury" Green William, photographer

Longstaff Rev. Thomas M.A. (incum- Cooksey Sarah Jane (Miss). stationer GTeening Nathaniel, watch maker

bent of St. Stephen's, Woodside) Coombs Solomon, shopkeeper Griffiths Arthur D. :M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P.

Lynes Rev. William M.D.(vicar of St. Cooper Ernest, hair dresser Land. physician &; surgeon, Yorke vil

John the Evangelist), Vicarage Cooper Joseph George, school attend- Grindle David, butcher

Macartney Richard, St. Annals ance officer Hadingham Stephen Wallaoe, manager

McMurtrie G. E Cooper Rudge, hair dresser of Lloyds Bank

.spence- Mrs .The Shrubbery Cooper William, coffee tavern Hale William, confectioner

Teague Moses Edward, Steam mills Cooper William, shopkeeper Hale William, butcher

Whitehouse William, ISomers et place Cordwin William, chemist 1& stationer Hall Francis Edward, confectioner _

COMMERCIAL. & wine dealer Hanney George, alsistant superinten~

Baggett John A. watch maker Cordy Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper dent Prudential agent, Woodside rd

Baldwin Eliza Jane (Mrs.), baker,shop- Cowmeadow Tom, fish & fruit dealer, Hanney James. Prudential agent

keeper &I apartments, Steam mills Steam mills Harding Henry, hair dresser

Baldwin Henry. Upper Bilson inn Cox Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker HarrisArthur R.cycle factor & repairer,

Barnard Michael, butcher Orawshaw Henry & Co. Lim. colliery Dean Fore;st cycle works

Beardmore 'Villiam, carpenter & iron ore mine proprietors (William Harris Moses, Glow P.R

Bennett Georgina. Elizabeth (Mrs.), Crawshaw, mnging. dir.),Light moor Hartland Abraham,shpkpr.& beer retlr

day school Critchley William, butcher Harvey Charles, hair dresser

Iliddis Thomas, shopkeeper, Commer· Cross Edwin, butcher. Harvey William, saddler &c

cial road DavieS' Dan, tailor Hayward Isabella (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Bilson Ga8 Light &; O:Jke Co. Limited Davis Jo-hn James. grocer Hayward .Tn.Colman,paintr.& paprhngr

(James Robb, engineer &; manager) Davis William, shopkeeper Head William George, baker ~ grocer

Bingle William. beer retailer Dee George, grocer Heavens RhQdl\ (Mrs.), mason

Jlolton William Harper, grocer Dowse Richard, inland revenue officer HewletfJ .Tohn Samuel, clothier

Boud .Tn. Day, confectnr. &; ironmongr Dykins Alfred Enoch, auctioneer, Hirst Moses. wat-eh maker

Boughton Joh_'l, grocer valuer, house, estate &; oommission Hobbs .Tames. boot &; shoe maker

Bowkett .Alfred, haulier agent, Station street ° Hobbs Richard, shopkeeper

BradBtock John Samuel, solicitor, Dykins Emma (Mrs.), outfitter, hatter l'iook Timothy, tailor

commissioner for oaths & clerk to &I temperance hotel Hooper Mauriee Wm.mineral water ma

Forest of De,-an united district, &I Eastmans. Limited (Stephen Nichols, Horwood John, grocer .

Walford school boards, Post Oi$ce manager), butchers . Hughes Levi, watch jobber

buildings Edmunds. William H. sewing machine Buzzey Ellen (Mrs.), Fleece hotel

Brain .Ambrose. auctione€r & builder agent & refreshment rooms Jacobs &; Co. clothiers &-; drapers

Brain .:rames, beer retailer Evans Charles, monumental mason ,James Edward, beer retlr. Steam Ipill~

Ilrain Simeon, cab propriet<lr Fletcher W. &; R. butichers James Thomas. Old Engine inn

Brain William, butcher Forest of Dean Mercut'y (John Cook- JameS' Wm.Hy.shopJrpr.&; eoal mereht

Broad Moor Chemical Co. (Daniel Bray, sey, proprietor &I publisher; pub- J ames Goorge Hinton &; Henry, grocers

managing partner) lished friday) &; drapers, &; agents for W. &; A.

Brown Joseph, carrier Forest of Dean Recreative &; Medical Gilbey Limited, wine &; spirit mers

Ill-yant John, hoot maker Aid Association (p. L. Lucas & J. Jaynes Stephen, colliery proprietor

Bucklev George, greengrocer McAvoy, hon. secs) Jenkins Alice (MTS.), beer retailer

Ilurford Mary (~rs.), shopkeeper & Fox Henrietta (Mrs.), shopkeeper Jenkins Henry, timber merehant

beer reta~er Fox William Henry, carpenter & joiner, ironmonger, see Wilce &; JenkUls-

Capital &; Counties Bank Limited (IF. Upper Bilson Jenkins William, confectioner-

G. Washbourn, manager); draw on Fox William Henry, musical instru- Jenkins William, shopkeep.6r

head office, London E C ment & furniture dealer Jones Bros. grocers & p~sion mers

112 CINDERFORD• GLOUCESTERSHIRE. ( KELLY'S

.rones Mice S. (Mrs.), grocer &; beer Roberts Edwin, beer retailer order, &; oak railway waggon framing

retailer &; wine &; spirit merchant Ra binson Isaac, shopkeeper supplied

.Tones Georgina P. (~s.), dress maker Roe Edwin Fredk. &; Co. bill postirs Williams Brothers, furniture manufac.
Jones Caleb George, fish &; fruit dealr Rosser William, agent to the Provident turers &; fancy goods dealers

Jones Edwin, grocer Association Williams Edward, tobacoonist

Jones Fredk. Edward, photographer Rowlinson George; Henry, miners' Willstad Thomas, shopkeeper

J:roonrdeasnWTihlloiamma,s,gsrhooceprkeeper agent for Forest of Dean Labour \Vintle Francis, miller, Steam mill9

Association, Commercial road. Wood William, ironmonger &; smith

Jordan William, greengrocer RowlinS{)n Samuel John Thomas, boot Woodcock John, shopkeeper

Kear Alfred &; Co. sewing machine &; &; shoe maker, O>mmercial road RUSPIDGE.

cycle agents Rumboll Charles Alfred, soliciror

Kear Jas. &; Sons, bakers &; grocers (branch), Town hall Buffry James

Kear Florence (Miss), haberdasher Russell John, beer retailr. Haywood la Buffry John
Keel Sophia (MTS.), shpkpr.Steam mls Russell William, shopkeeper
Foxall Edward, Rock house
Kitchen Hannah (Miss), shopkeeper Saunders Henry, Seven Stars P.B Harris Arthur R. St. White's house
Knight Edwin, Swan hotel Selwyn Edward S. boot &; shoe repairer J arratt MTs

Lane Edmund William, butcher Sier J ohD:, mason Jenkins Henry, St. White's villa

Lane J oseph, shopkeeper Simmons Samuel, beer retailer Morgan Edwin William

Lane William, butcher Simmons William, grocer Mvrgan Gao. Frederick, Fores,t lodge

Leadbeater Frederick, haulier Simpson Robe-rt, colliery propri~tor, Smith Thomas, Ruspidge villa

Leighton William, Forge Hammer P.H New Regulator colliery Woodman George Daniel, Woodlands

Lloyds Bank Lim. (branch) (Stephen Sims Benjamin Thomas, furniture dh COMMERCIAL.

Wallace Hadingham,manager) ; draw Singer ManUfacturing Co. (Arthur

on London office, 72 Lombard st EC Pearce, manager) Ansley lWbt. .A.lsopp, White Hart inn

Long Edwin Henry, relieving officer Smith F . .&; D. boot &; shoe makers Baldwin Henry, New inIII

for No. 2 district &; registrar of Smith Dinah (Mlrs.), Lion inn Banks Christopher, beer retailer

births &; deaths for East Dean dist Smith Daniel, boot maker Beard Thos. Probin, baker &; shopkeepr

Lucas Wm. Wallace, tailor &; outfitter Smith Edwin, builder Bright Samuel, miller (water)

Lydney &; Crump Meadow Colliery Co. Smith Ernest W. wheelwright Butt .Ann (Mrs.), Rising Sun P.H

Limited (Joseph Hale, manager) Smith Harriett (Mrs.), beer retailer Chivers Thomas, grocer &; post office

Macartney Richard L.R.C.P.Edin. 8ur- Smith Joseph, draper &; milliner Cooper Benjamin, beer retailer

geon &; medical ufficer for No. 4 Stephens Mary (Mrs.), beer retailer Dean Forest Coal Co. coal factors
district ofWestbury-on-Severn union Steward William, agent to the Carlton Gaudern James, shopkpr. t& beer retlr

&; certifying factory surgn.St..A.nnals Bank Limited Greenwood William, shopkeeper

Major Wesley, watch ma. &; jeweller Taylor Mary Ann (Mrs.), greengrocer Griffiths Thomas, grocer

Marshall J ahn, haulier Taylor Peter M. hair dresser Hall Thomas, ooer ret.a.iJ.er

Marshall Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper Teague, Ohew &; Fleming, engineers & Hawker James, Bridge inn

Martin Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper millwrights Head Henry, shopkeeper

Martin Rd. Prudential Assurance agt Teague Sophia (Mrs.), deputy regis- Hudson John Owen, grocer

Meredith Reuben, grocer ~ 'beer retlr trar of births &; deaths for East Merrick Frederick Charles, saddler

Meredith Samuel, beer retailer Dean district Morse Wm. shopkeeper i& beer retailer

Memman Ellen (Miss), dress maker Teague Thomas, quarry owner Mountjoy Elijah, Mount Pleasant inn

Millard J ames Fraucis. outfitter Thomas John E. boot &; shoe dealer Ruspidge Institute &; Library (F. L.

Millwaters Jeannette (Mrs.), beer retlr Thomas Wm.Prudential Assurance agt Lucas, sec)

Moberley Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Thomas William Henry, 'brewery agent Sale Charles, beer retailer

Mooreo John, tailor Tingle Brothers, iron founders & engi- Sale Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Morgan John, butcher neers; castings of every description Smith Caroline (Mrs.), shopkeeper

:Mbrgan Leonard, mason to the trade Stevens John Henry, coal agent

Morgan Wm. painter & plumber &c Tingle Caroline (Mrs.), greengrocer Underwood James, greengrocer

Mudway Thomas, shopkeeper Town Hall (Charles Willcox, keeper) Walkley Daniel, ha.ulier

Monn Frederick H. ironmonger Trotter Frederick, draper

Nash Edwin, coffee house Trump George, shopkeeper SOUDLEY.
Marked thus * receive letters viA
New Public Hall (Alfred E. Dykins, Tucker Alfred, boot maker

lessee), Commercial stl'eet Turner Frederick, butcher Blakeney.

Newman Job, lodging ho. (registered) Turner rrhomas, shopkeeper

Nicholas Thomas Alfd. boot &; shoe dlr Tyndall Priscilla (Miss), shopkeeper *Adams Miss, Viney hill

Nicholls Alfred, agent to the :Pearl Tyndall '8lllJnuel, baker &; corn dealer *Adams Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer

Life Assuranoe Co. Limited Underhill Henry, shoe maker *Adams Mary (Mrs.), Tump inn

Orpin Lucy (Mrs.), shopkeeper Vines George, Prudential Assum.nce *Adams Joseph, lime burner

Paradise George, district superinten- agent, Pembroke road *Adams Thomas, carpenter, Viney hill

dent London, Edinburgh &; Glasgow Washbourn F. G. manager Capital &; Bedney Francis, insurance agent, shop-

. Assurance Co. Limited Counties Bank Limited keeper &; post office

Parry Charles, mason Westaway Richard Ernest, grocer Briscoe Walter, Tent &; debt collector

Pope Joseph. ladies' &; gentlemen's Westaway Wm. beer ret. The George *Buck William, farmer, Aylesford

taIlor, woollen draper & boot maker White Frank, confectioner. *Collins Thomas, bear retailer

Powell Martha(Mu.) ,beer ret.&; shpkpr Whitehouse Edward, shopkeeper Duffer George, grocer

Preece Frank J. clothier Whitehouse Mary (Mlrs.), shopkeeper Fever Hospital (Mrs. '~fullyneux,

Probert Thomas, draper ,&; milliner Whitehouse William, surveyor to the matron)

Prosser Daniel, beer retailer rural district council, East Dean i& Godfrey George, haulier

Rabenowitz Myer, clothier united parishes, &; water rate collectr Grail Geo. manager of millboard mills

Rawlings Frederick,agent to theRe-fuge Whitmore Arth. water works inspectr Herbert John, haulier &; shopkeeper

Assurance Co. Limited Whitson Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeepr Hunter Henry, agent to the Wesleyan

Reece Edward James, grocer &le Wilce &; Jenkins, timber merchants, &; General ASS'llrance Society

Reeves William, beer retailer ironmongers, oil &; paint merchants, Jeffries William, quarry owner

"Rhodes &; &m, grocers, drapers & &; hay & straw dealers *Jones Edward, farmer, Aylesford

confectioners Wilce Levi, beer retailer, farmer &; Mason Jane (Miss), millboard maker

Ri.ddle Isabella. (Mrs.), day school timber merchant Powell William, shopkeeper

"Ri.dler .Alfred, assistant overseer & Wilce Timothy, grocer &; draper, &; *Surr William, shopkeeper

'l"ste collector colliery proprietor *Taylor Charles, beer ret. The Victoria

ltobb James, enRineer &; man8Jler to Williams Brothers, steam sawing .&; Thomas William, White Horse P.R

Bilson Gas Light .&; Coke Co. Bilion planing mills, dealers in foreign &; Turley James, shopkeeper

Roberts Andrew, shopkeeper english timber; oak. timber cut to Wellington William, farmer

DIRECTORY.] GJ.,jOUCESTERSHIRE. ClRENCESTER. 113

C 1 R E NeE S '1' E l{' .

CIRENCESTER is a market and union town, head of a figures: the window has been filled with modem stained

county court district and petty sAssional division, and glass at the expense of Joseph Cripps esq. as a memorial

hundred of itself, in the Eastern division of the county, of his family: northward of this is the chllipel of St. Mary,

rural deanery and archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese 1440, and on the south side of the chancel is St. John's'

of Gloucester; it is the terminus of, a. branch of the Great chapel, containing some good modern .stained glass, and

Western railway from Kemble junction, and also a station between which and the chancel is a short pillar with a

on the Midland and South Western junction railway from foliated capital SlUpporting an acute pointed arch in the
.Andover, opened for traffic in 1884> and extended to Chel- Early English style, evidently part of a building much

tenham in 1891; it is also connected by a. short branch older than the nave or tower: in St. .John's chapel for-

with the Thames and Severn canal, and is 95 miles from merly stood a handsome carved oak screen inclosin2 the
London by railway, Bri9tol 60 north-east, Cheltenham 36 east end, or Jesus chapel, but now removed into the Lady

8Outh-by-east, Gloucester 28 iSOuth-east, Stroud 16 east; chapel, to form a choir vestry: the fine three-storied porch

by road i1;l is 17 from <Gloucester and 12i from Stroud. or gate house, erected about 1500, has fan-traceried groin-

The river Churn, which rises in th-e Cotswold hills, and is ing and pierced battlements with pinnacles; the upper

QUe of the first feeders of the Thames, intersects> the story, lighted by three large windows; is used as a Town

to~. . Hall, by the permission of the churchwardens: there are

Cirencester has been a parliamentary borough from the a number of curious brasses and some monuments, inter-

13th of Elizabeth. By the Reform Act of 1832 the esting as memorials of local families: the church was

boundaries of the borough were made co-extensive with thcroughly resotored in 1866-7, from designs by the late

the parish, and by the" Boundary Act, 1868," the parish Sir G. G. Scott R.A. at a cost of about £14,000, and has

of Stratton was included in the borough; it formerly since been decorated at a further cost of £2,500: the

ret·urned two members, but the "Representation of the organ was built in 1896 at a -cost of over £1,75°, and

People Act, 1867," reduced its representation to one only, placed in St. John the Baptist's chapel: the choir stalls,

and by the "Redistribution of S-eatSl Act, 1885," it was arranged by the late Sir G. G. Scott, outside the chancel

deprived of exclusive representation. Among the persons al'(,h, have been moved into the 'Chancel, within the

of note who have represented this place may !be named screen: there is' a memorial window, erected in 1873, to

Sir Thomas Fairfax, afterwards 3rd baron Fairfax, a dis- Mrs. Crippsl and others to Mrs. F. Cripps, placed in

tinguished Parliamentary commander during the Civil 1877, and to Mr. F. Cripps, in 1888, and there is another
War, d. 1671; Henry Powle P.C. a member of the Con- to .AlIen .A1exand.~r, 6th and late Earl Bathurst, d. 1893:

vention ParliamentS' of 1660 and 1689, the short Parlia- the communion plate includes two flagons of Queen

ment of 1680, and the Oxford Parliament of March, 1681, Elizabeth's reign, dated re9pootively 1570 and 1576, and a

and also Master of the Rolls, d. 21 Nov. 1692; and Sir covered cup. dated 1535, and S1Urmounted by a crowned

Bobert Atms, M.P. for Gloucestershire, and the historian and sceptred falcon, the badge of Queen Anne Boleyn:

of the county, d. 29 Oct. 17II. The town, which was the east end and reredos were restored and decorated in

governed by ,a Local Board from 1876, is under the 1889, from designs by Mr. J. O. Scott: there are 1,498

provisions of the" Local Government Act, 1894" (56 and sittings. The register dates from the year 1560, bu'

57 Vict. c. 73), controlled by an Urban District Council there is a lapse of four years from 1581: there is also a

of 15 members. book containing the minutes of the vestry, from 1586 to

The town consists of four principal streets with other 1886. The living is! a vicarage, net yearly value £223,

smaller ones, and although of great antiquity, the busi- with residence, in the gift of the (Bishop of Gloucester,

ness portion of Oirencester has ,generally a modern ap- and held since 1881 by the Ven. Henry Rudge Hayward

pearance; the houses are chiefly built of stone. The M.A. late fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford, archdeacon

town is supplied with water by the Cirencester Water of Cirencester and ~urrogate.

Works Co. Limited, from oB well in Lewisl lane, from The church of Holy Trinity at Watermoor, erected in

whence it is pumped to oB reservoir in the park; it is 1850, is an edifice in the Early English style, from

lighted with gas by the Cirencester Gas Co. Limited designs by the late Sir G. G. Scott RA. and consists of

from works at Watermoor. chancel, nave, aisleS', north porch and a western tower

The church of St. John the Baptist is a fine structure with a. light and graceful spire, and containing 6 bells,

in tne Early English, Early Decorated and Perpendicular hung in 1889: a richly carved stone font was presented

styles, with traces of Norman work, and consists of chan- by Mrs. Sandys, and an organ was erected in 1893 at a

c:el with one south and three north chapels, clerestoried cost of £400: there are 430 sittings.

Mve of six bays, north aisle, with chapel, south porch or The Catholic church in AS'hcroft, dedicated to St. Peter,

gate hOllse anll. an embattled western tower of Perpendi- and opened in February, 1896, is So building of stone in

cular date, with -pinnacles, and cont3ining a peal of 12 the Early English gtyle: the altar, which is very hand-

bells, with a. chiming apparatus, which strikes the quar- some, was the work of Messrs. Boulton and Sons, of

ters, and plays the II3th psalm at three, six, nine and Cheltenham, and is designed in the style of the 13th

twelve o'clock; in 1870 a clock was placed in the tower, century: there are 300 sittings.

the belLs re-hung, and other improvements made, and in The Congregational church, in Dyer street, erected in

1895 one bell was re-cast, and a new fire-bell, the gift of place of the former chapel in Sheep street, iSJ an edifice

the Cirencester society in London, ihung and so tuned a8 of '8tone in the Italian style, from designs by Mr. W.
to be capable of making one of a second peal of eight Gilbee Scott A.RI.B.A. of London: in rear of the chapel

bells: the nave, rebuilt in 1514, is Late Perpendicular. is a long building, containing vestries, parlour, kitchen,

hij!hly enriched, but the style is pure and not overloaded large sohoolroom, infants' school and class rooms: the

with ornament; there are six lofty arches on either side, total cost was about £5,200, and the chapel will seat 424

supported on clustered columns; at the spring of the persons. The Primitive Methodist church in Ashcroft

arches are figures bearing shields, with the armorial is an edifice of red brick with -stone facings, erected in

bearings of the various contributol"ll' to the work, mostly 1896 at a cO'Mt of about £900, and win seat 250 persons.

woolstaplers and inhabitants of the town: the tOWPT onens For full list of places of worship, see p. II7.

to the nave by a fine arch: the east and west windows The Cemetery, in Chesterton lane, about a mile from

contain ancient glass, arranged about the year 1790, from the town, was formed in 1871; it has an area of about 6

detached pieces collected from variou:s windows of thE' acres, with two chapels and a mortuary, and is under the

church, the designS' being' furniEohed by Samuel Lysons, control of a Burial Board of nine members.

the famous antiquary, and executed by a plumber of the The Royal Agriculturail. College, with a larg-e farm. at-

town: the chancel :is Early Decorated; the piers on the tached for practical instruction, was established in 1845

south side being very Early English: Trinity ohapel, on under the patronage of H.R.H. Prince Consort, and was

the north side of 'bhe nave aisle, is a Pel"pendicular work, incorporated at the same time by Roya:l Charter, for

erected about 1440, and retains its altar stepsl and the- "Encomaging and supporting the study of Agriculture."

sedilia, and on the wall is' a curious painting in fresco, Under this charter it has six residentiary professors, an~

representing the martyrdom of St. Erasmus, with a sin- grants -certificates of proficiency and diplomas of memo

gular list of the benefits to be derived from the worship bersliip and associateship. In 1870 a Supplemental

of t,hat holy saint, bishop and martyr: here also are Charter with new powers was obtained, and in March.

several busts of the Bathurst family:' St. Catherine's 1880, Her Majesty was graciously pleased to command

chapel, on the north side of the chancel, as narrow, but that the college be styled the "Royal Agricultnral Col-

has a fine stone roof of fan tracery, taken from the Abbey lege." The buildings, forming a handsome pile in the

church, and dates from 1508: on the wall to the right of Gothic lJtyle, erected from the deS'igns of the late Mr.

the altar is a representation of St. Oatherine and other Daukes, architect, of London, in the midst of the College-

GLOU. 8

114 CIRENCESTER. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Farm, on the flank of the Cotswolds, li miles from the reign of Edward m. for two poor widows: an endowmen5
town of Cirencester, and in the vicinity of the picturesque for a third widow was added by: Henry, 3rd Earl Bath-

Stroud valley. The (principal front, 190 feet in extent, urst K.G. in 1800, from rent arising from allotments of

has a southerly aspect, and commands a distant view of land in the neighbourhood.

the uplandSl of North Wiltshire. The buildings comprise St. Thomas' Hospital, in Thomas street, was founrl.ea

a museum, lecture theatre, class rooms, laboratories, under the will of Sir William Nottingham, dated 1483,

private rooms, studies, chapel, dining hall, out-students.' and endowed with a. rent-charge of £6 18s. 8d. yearly,

common room, library, reading room and dormitories, arising out of an estate in the parish of Thornbury, which

and apartments for resident professors: the establishment sum is divided between four poor weavers, two of whom

also includes a botanic garden, veterinary hospital, forges have an apartment in the hospital.

and workshops. The chapel, a. Gothic structure, built in Thomas Smith, of Cirencester, by his will dated 7f.h

1846, is furnished with oak seats and stalls and has an Feb. 1882, gave £20,000 to be invested in Consols for the

organ: the reredos, erected by the profesrors and stu- founding of a charity to be called "Smith's Cirencester

dents, is a memorial to the Rev. Principal Haygarth, who Poor Oharity," the income to be given to poor persons

died in 1850' The object of the institution is to train who have for 3 years been resident in the town, and who

young men for agricultural employments and the manage- have been regular attendants at some place of worship.

ment of landed property at home and abroad. A farm Cirencester is '30 place of gI'eat antiquity, and is sup-
of 500 acres is atta~hed to the college. The entire man- posed to have been the site of a British camp before th
agement is committed by the governing body to the invasion of the Romans, and on their occupation of th

principal, who is assisted by a staff of professors in the country it became, under the name of COl'inium, a mili.

various departments. Nine scholarships, three .of £25 tary station and the capital of the surrounding district.

and m of £10, are awarded annually; and six other The remains of tessellated pavements, baths, columns,

scholarships, each of £200 a year, created by the Govern- statues, and other works of industry and art which have-

ment of Bengal, two becoming! vacant annually, and ten- been frequently uncovered, afford abundant evidence that

ablo for 2! years, are open to certain native Indian the Latin conquerors made it a favourite dwelling place,

graduates of the University of Calcutta. .A.n entrance and brought the resources of their superior civilisation t()
scholarship of £20 yearly, tenable for 2~ years, has been aid in its construction and embellishment. Four great con-
founded by Charles Pooley esq. of Cheltenham, to com- sular ways Fosseway, Icknield Street, .Akeman Street.

memoratethe late R. J. Brown esq. one of the founders and Ermine Street intersect each other at this point;1

of the college. and these roads, after the lapse of fifteen centuries, are-
Cirencester was once noted for the manufacture of edge still used as the highways of the district: the course of

tc·ols used by curriers; theSle are still made here, but a wall, supposed to be a Roman work, is still distinguish-
they are no longer peculiar to the place: in the 14th and able at intervals encircling the town; outside this rampart
15th centuries it was an important market for wool, large to the south, appears to have been the cemetery, where-

qvantities being brought herd from the surrounding monumental stones and urns have been frequently dug

counties: there are malting houses, flour mills, a factory up. On the western side of the town, amidst some

for curing and drying bacon, and So brewery: it is, how- curious mounds of earth, known as the "Querns," is an

ever, as the centre of a. large corn-growing district that elliptical amphitheatre, called the" Bull Ring," also at-

Cirencester i& chiefly supported. tributed to the Romans. At Barton farm, So fine tessel...

The marke1:t day is Monday, when a great deal of corn lated pavement is still preserved. Two other pavements.

is usually sold. hardly .surpassed by any yet discovered, were found in
The Corn Exchange was erected and opened in the year Dyer street in 1849, and have been removed from their
1862, and adjoining is a butter and poultry market. The situation to a museum erected by Earl Bathurst. Mter

market for live stock is held in the Cattle market on the the departure of the Romans, Cirencester fell into the

Tetbury road, the first. and third mondays in every month, hands of the West Saxons, and became part of the king-

is' an inclosed market, contiguous to the railway !station, dom of Wessex. As a Saxon town it is associated witb
and the property of Earl Bathurst.

Two "mops," or statute fairs, for the hiring of Iser- the name of Alfred the Great, who, having defeated the

vants, are iheld on the Monday before and the Monday Danish chief Guthrum, and taken him prisoner, released.

following Old Michaelmas day; a fair, ,called Holland fair, him on his consenting to be baptised, and suffered him

is also held in November: the fairs are held in the Market to dwell some time in Cirencester. In the reign of Henry

place, excepting the sheep fairs, which are held in the IV. the inhabitants rendered a great service to that King
Cattle market. by suppressing a rebellion headed by the Earls of Surrey

There is a .wbscription new.s room in the Corn Hall and Salisbury. .As a reward for their loyalty, Henry

building, <supplied with the London daily and other granted to the men and women of Cirencester four does and

papers, and various periodioals. six bucks from his forest of Brandon, and two hogsheads of

A School of Art is also held here. wine from his port of Bristol, to be delivered yearly during

The "Wilts and Gloucestershire Standard," establis,hed pleasure. He also, on petition of the citizens, granted

in 1837, is published every Saturday morning; George them a charter of incorporation, but this was afterwards-

Henry Harmer, printer, publisher and proprietor; office, cancelled in the reign of Elizabeth. At the breaking out
Dyer street. of the Civil War the inhabitants warmly espoused the

The Temperance Hall, erected in 1846 by Christopher Parliamentary cause: Lord Chando's, lieutenant of the
Ilowly, a member of the Society of Friends, is open for county, coming here to execuM the King's commission of

public meetings and lectures generally, and will hold 500 arr'ay, was defeated and taken prisoner: the place was

persons. put into a posture of defence, and a garrison formed t()

Apsley Hall, in Sheep street, is let for concerts, lectures maintain it; but in February, 1643, whilst a part of th6'

&c. and will seat 400 persons. garrison were away on an expediti'On against Sudeley

The Reading Room, in Cricklade street, was erected Oastle, Prince Rupert, with a strong force, carried it by

for the militia and poorer residents by Miss Bowly. The assault, and committed great slaughter upon its defend-·

Oakley rooms, in Dyer street, the property of the trustees ers: in the autumn of the same year, Lord Essex, having

of tee late Mr. W.• Cole, are let for public meetings, and obliged Charles to raise the siege of Gloucester, made a.

will hold 200 persons. night march upon Cirencester, and surprised the Royalist

The Constitutional olub has rooms at the Crown hotel; forces quartered there, capturing a large quantity of

the LIberal club is in Castle street. provisions and ammunition, to the gI'eat relief of his army,

The Royal North Gloucestershire Militia, forming the which was much straitened for supplies. At the Revolu-
4tli battalion of the Gloucestershire Regiment, is quar- tion of 1688 this town was again the scene of warfare ~

tered ill this town when called out or embodied; the Lord Lovelace, with about 100 followers, on his way to

armoury and stores, on Cecily hill, is a large building in join the Prince of Orange, found the county militia drawn

the castellated style, erected in 1856 at a cost of upwards up to dispute his further progress; a conflict ensued;

of £7,000, paid from the county rate. Lovelace was overpowered, and sent as a prisoner to

. The Cottage Hospital, Sheep street, was established in Gloucester Castle.

1875, and contains 9 beds; the average annual number of The mitred Abbey of SS. Maryand James was founded
by Henry I. in IIn, for canons of the order of St.
in-patients is about 100.

The total income derived from about 40 charitable A.ugustine, and endowed with considerable possessions,

beQuests, lsome of ancient date, is about £800, which is afterwards increased by some of his successors: its

appplied in various ways for the benefit of the poor of the annual revenue at the time of the general dissolution of

parisIi. the monasteries, was estimated at £1,051 7s. Id.: John

IThe Hospital of St. john the Evangelist, in Spitalgate Blake, the last abbot, with sixteen monks, subscribed to

lane, wall founded by King Henry I. and enlarged by the King's supremacy in 1534, and received from the
Thomas Cobham, Bishop of Worcester, in 1317. . Commissioners certain pensions in return for their com-

St. Lawrence's Hospital, in Gloucester street, was pliance: the abbey and appurtenances were granted to one

founded by Edith, lady of the manor of Wiggold. in the Roger Bassinge, and the buildings were ordered to be

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CIRENCESTER. 115

polled down and removed; one gateway, called the Spital is about 50 yards wide, and extends from Cirencester
gate, of Transitional or Early English date, alone remains. to Sapperton, a distance of 5 miles, flanked north and
south by extensive woods: there is a deer park, in which
This was the birthplace, in the 14th century, of Richard is a considerable number of deer.
of Cirencester, a monkish historian, who died in 1401.
Thomas Ruthall, bishop of Durham 15°9-23, was also born Cirencester Abbey is the residence of John Croke esq.
here; and later (19 Dec. 1790), Admiral Sir Edward Earl Bathurst, who is lord of the manor, and T. W.
Parry kt. RN. the first explorer of the Polar regions, Chester Master esq. are the principal landowners.
The soil of the parish, township, and district generally
who died at Ems, 7 July, 1855. is stone brash (oolite) and light clay; subsoil, oolite,
The Vale of White Horse hounds, the kennels of which limestone rock. The area. is 5,248 acres, and of urban
district 2,633 acres; rateable value, £31,668; the popula-
are situated here, meet in the neighbourhood. Tetbury, tion in 1891 was in parish 7,521, including 26 in the
Fairford, and Malmesbury, with this town, are convenient Militia armoury and 145 officers and inmates of the work-
places for hunting visitors. house; urban district, 7,44L

Cirencester House, the seat of Earl Bathurst, stands B.!.RTON, 1 mile north-west; Chesterton, half a mile
in a park adjoining the town; the mansion was originally south, and Wiggold, 2 north-east, are places here.
built by Henry, Earl of Danby, and was purchased by
.AlIen, first Earl Bathurst (d. 1775): the fine park and Sexton, Frank JefIeries, I White way.
woods are about 3,000 acres in extent, and, with slight
restrictions, are ope~ed to the public: the principal avenue

OFFIOIAL ESTABLISHMENTS, LOCAL INSTITUTIONS &c.

Post, M. O. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Cator .Albemarle esq. RA., D.L. Trewsbury, Coates,

9, Castle street. Postmaster. James Weatherill Cirencester

Dispatches.of Letters &c. Cole William Henry esq. Querns Lane ho. Cirencester

*Cheltenham, Gloucester, North & West of England, Cripps Edmund William esq. .Ampney park, Cirencester
Cripps Wilfred Joseph esq. C.B., M.A., F.S.A., D.L.
Scotland & Ireland, 7.50 a.m.; London, East &; South Walnut Trees, Cirencester
of England, Scotland & Cirencester, 9.15 a.m.; *Lon-
don, Bristol, Cheltenham, Gloucester, Stroud, Tet- Elwes .Algernon Leveson esq. Stratton house, Cirencester
bury, East, West &; South of England & Scotland, 11.30 Elwes Henry John esq. F.Z.S., F.L.S. Colesborne park,
a.m.; *Northleach, Chedworth, Fossebridge, Stratton,
1.30 p.m.; -London &; places through Bath, Bristol, .Andoversford
Ohipping Norton, Ireland, Oxford, Reading, Scotland &; F'Oster Rev. J. PriestJey M.A. Cotswold park, Cirencester
Swindon, 2.45 p.m.; *Ireland, Midland Counties, North Hyde John esq. Southleigh, Chesterton .
of England &; ScotJand, 4.30 p.m.; *London &; places
through, 6,40 p.m.; Night mail & for all parts of the James Arthur John esq. Edgworth manor, Cirencester
United Kingdom &c. 8.20 p.m.; local post (Cirencester Leatham Arthur William esq. Cerney house, Cirencester
district), 4 a.m. &; 1.30 & 5.30 p.m.; North mail (on Leatham Edward .Aldam esq. M.A., D.L. Miserden park,
sundays, 5.40 p.m)
Cirencester
*On sundays these mails are not dispatched. Master Thomas William Chester esq. D.L. Knole park,.

Deliveries. Cirencester
Wykeham-Musgrave Wenman Aubrey esq. D.L. Barns··

ley park, Cirencester
Zachary Henry esq. Park street, Cirencester
First, 7 a.m.; from all parts of the United Kingdom &c Clerk to the Magistrates, Rabert Ellett, 12 Park street
Second, 9.45 a.m.; from London, Ireland, Midland coun- Petty Sessions are held at the Police court every monday
ties, North of England & Scotland
at I p.m. The following places are included in the
Third, 1.50 p.m.; London, Cheltenham, Swindon & Petty Sessional Division: Ampney Crucis, Ampney
Tetbury
St. Mary, .Ampney St. Pet-er, Bagendon, Barnsley,
F'Ourth, 6 p.m.; London, Bath, Bristol, Cheltenham, Baunton, Brimpsfield, North &; South Cerney, Ciren-
Ohippenham, Gloucester, Ireland, Oxford, Reading, cester, Coates, Colesborne, Daglingworth, Driffield,
Scotland &; Stroud
Down .Ampney, Duntisbourne A.bbots, Duntisbourne
Money &; postal oroer &; savings bank business transacted Rouse, Edgworth, Elkstone, Harnhill, Preston, Kemble,
daily from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m
Pool Keynes, Rendcombe, Rodmartin, Syde, Sapper-
Telegraph messages are received &; dispatched from 7 ton, Siddington, Somerford Keynes, Stratton & Win-
a.m. to 9 p.m. week days &; from 8 to 10 a.m. sundays, stone
including Christmas day & Good Friday
On bank holidays the office is closed at noon, except for URBAN DISTRIar COUNCIL.

the sale of stamps &; for telegraph &; parcel post business Offices, Park street.

Parcel Post. Ordinary meetings, the last thurs. in each month at the.

Dispatches. 6 & 11.30 a.m. & 1.30 & 8 p.m Council chamber.
Deliveries.-7, 7.30 & 9.30 a.m. & 2 & 5.50 p.m
Members.
Receiving Offices.
*Henry Zachary J.P. Park street, chairman.
Post &; M. O. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office,
*Robert .Anderson, The Barton
Gloucester street. Charles Price, sub-postmaster.
Cleared at 9 &; lI.I0 a.m. &-1.35, 5.20 &; 7.55 p.m.; tRaymond .AlIen, Barton mills
sundays, 7.55 p.m
Post &; M. O. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, *Richard Cole, Wiggold
Queen street. James Millington, sub-postmaster. Box
cleared 7.45 & 11.5 a.m. &; 2.15, 5 &; 7.40 p.m.; sun- tWilliam Henry Cole J.P. Quern's Lane house
days, 7.40 p.m
tWilliam Richard Geyton, Crown hotel
Wall &; Pillar Boxes, cleared as follows:-
*George Henry Harmer, Apsley villa
Dyer street, 8.20 & 11 a.m. &; I.20, 5.10 &; 7.50 p.ro.;
sunday, 7.50 p.m :tEdward Brownlow Haygart:.h, Siddington manor

CrickIade street, 8.20 &; 11.15 a.m. &; 1.25, 5.15 & 7·55 tJohn Hyde J.P. Southleigh, Chesteroon
p.m.; sunday, 7.55 p.m
tJohn Lord, Black Jack street
Thomas street, 9 & 11.10 a.ni. & I.40, 5.20 &; 8 p.m. ;
sunday, 8 p.m :tJohn Moulder, 159 Cricklade street

Chesterton road, 7.30 & 10 a.m. &. 2. 15 &; 7.25 p.m.; *Thomas Matthews, Dyer street
sunday, 7.25 p.m
tThomas O. Ovens. Victoria road
Corin street, 8.:15 &; n.lO a.m. & 2.1Q, 5.5 &; 7.45 p.m.;
:tEdward Clare SeweIl, The Beeches
sunday, 7.45 p.m
Gloucester street, 9 &; IX.I0 a.m. &; 1.40, 5.20 & 8 p.m. ; :tJesse Smith, Black Jack street

sunday, 8 p.m Oerk, Robert Ellett, 12 Park street

Treasurer, William Wearing, County of Gloucester

(branch (If Lloyds) Bank Limited

Medical Officer of Health, F. T. Bond B.A., M.D.G1o'ster

Surveyor, Collector & Sanitary Inspector, Thomas Bib-

bert, 2 Dollar street ,

Assistant Inspector. John Williams, Chesterton

Marked thus * retire in 1898; thus t in 1899; thug t in

:19°0.

COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR CIRENCESTER PETTY DISTRICT illGHWAY BOARD.
SESSIONAL DIVISION.
Meets at the Clerk's Office on the 2nd monday in the
Master Col. Thomas William Chester, Knole park, . m(lnth at 4 p.m
Almondsbury, chairman
Joint Clerks, William Lawrence Cooke & Henry Law·
Bathurst Earl D.L. Cirencester house, Cirencester ranee Cooke, Corn Hall chambers

Barkley H. C. esq. 6 Oricklade street, Cirencester Treasurer, Joseph Rawlins, Capital &; Counties Bank
Surveyor, William Payne, I Grosvenor villas
Bowly Chriswpher esq. Siddington house, Cirencester

GLOU. 8*

116 CIRENCESTER. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'~'

ROYAL .A.GR'IOULTURAL COLLEGE. PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS.

Patron. H.R.H. the Prince of Wales K.G Apsley Hall, Sheep street, H. Roads, sec
President of the Council. His Grace the Duke of Rich- Cemetery, Chesterton hne, Robert Ellett, clerk to the

mond &; Gordon K.G burial board
Chamber of Agriculture, James Joicey esq. Poulton priory,
Committee of Management.
Fairford, president; Robt. Anderson, Cecily hill, hon.sec
The Right Hon. the Earl of Dude, chairman Constitutional Qub, Grown hotel, Job Saunders, hon. sec

The Right Hon. the Earl of Bathurst D.L Corn Hall & Corn Hall chambers; offices, 45 Dollar street;
The Right Hon. Lord Moreton
001. Sir R. Nig-el Fitzhardinge Kingscote K.C.B Frederic H. Sealy, sec.; J ames Ashdown, hall keeper
George T. J. Sotheron-Estcourt esq
Ambrose L. GQddard esq Cottage Hospital, Sheep street, O. H. Fowler, E. C.
Col. T. W. Chester Master Cripps L.R.C.P.Lond. W. R. Cossham M.D., C.M., O.
M. H. N. Story-Maskelyne esq
The Right Hon. Viscount Cobham P. Hooker L.R.C.P.Lond. & Charles Mackinnon M.A.,
Sir John E. Dorington bart. M.P M.B., C.M. medi<:al officers; R. Anderson, hon. sec.;
Miss M. S. Warner, matron
Secretary &; Solicitor. Edward Brownlow Haygarth County Court (cireuit 5~): office, Park street, His Honor
Arthur Becher Ellieott M.A. judge; Robert Alexander
Principal. Anderson & Robert Ellett, joint registrars & high
bailiffs; the court is held monthly at the Petty Sessional
The Rev. John B. M'Clellan M.A. double first-s:lassman in court house, Castle street. The following places are
honours .& late Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge
within its jurisdiction :---lAmpney Orucis, Ampney St.
Professol's, Lecturers & Practical Instructor,s.
Mary, Ampney St. Peter, Ashton Keynes (Wiltshire),
Practical Agricultural & Rural Economy, Professor E. Bagendon, Barns:ey, Baunton, Brimpsfield, Oirencester,
Blundell Coates, Colesborne, Daglingworth, Down Ampney, Drif.
field, Duntisbourne Abbots, Duntisbourne Rouse, Edg-
Occupier of the College Farm, Russell Swanwick M.R.A.C. worth, Elkstone, Fairford, HarnhilI, Hatherop, Kemble,
Maisey Hampton, North Cerney, Poole Keynes, Poulton,
Pra~ical Instru<:tor on the College farm, Professor E. Preston, Quenington, Rendcombe, Rodmarton, Sapper.
ton, Shorncote, Siddington, Somerford Keynes, South
Blundell Cerney, Stratton, Syde & Winstone
Assistan~ Practical Instructor, Mr. Thomas Woodward,
For bankruptcy purposes this court is included in that
college bailiff
Practical Dairying, Professor E. Blundell; Thos. Nuttall of Swindon (Wilts); Harry Bevir, Swindon, Wilts,
official receiver
esq. Beeby manor, Leicester (visiting Lecturer & Certified Bailiff under the "Law of Distress Amendment
Demonstrator) Act," WaIter Hawes, Old Grammar school
Bookkeeping, Professor Paton County Police Station, Castle street, George Morgan,
Assistant Practical Instructor in Dairy, Mrs. E. Woodward
Chemistry, Professor Edward Kinch F.C.S., F.LC.; As- superintendent; I sergeant & 5 constables
sistant Lecturer, C. Duncan esq
Fire Brigade, Engine house, King's Head hotel, Thomas
Geology, Botany & Zoology, Professor T. T. Groom RA., Hibbert, superintendent, & 12 men

D.Se Inland Revenue Office, 3 Corin villas, Henry McAfee, officer
Mensuration, Mechanics & Physics, Professor H. Ohm Museum, Tetbury road, Christopher Bowly J.P. curator;

M.A., F.R.Met.Soc.; first-class honours natural science Mrs. Martha Biggs, keeper
tripos, Emmanuel College, Cambridge Oakley Rooms, Dyer street, W. Cole (exors. of), proprs
Land Surveying & Estate Engineering, Professor George Overseers' Office, Corn Hall corridor, Dyer street,
Paton C.E., M.r.E.S.S
-Veterinary Surgery, Professor William Thomas Wilson Frederick Harmer, assistant; W. R Harmer, col·

F.R. C.V. S.L lector of rates
Smith's Charity, George Lafiord, sec. Ashcroft villas
-Lecturer on Agricultural Law, E. R Haygarth esq. Stamp Office, Market place, Alfred Thomas Harmer, dis-
Cirencester
tributor
'Building Materials & Construction, F. W. Waller esq. Temperance Hpll, Thomas st. Edward Brewer, keeper
Town Hall, Market place
F .RI.B.A. of Gloucester
."Estate Management & Practical Forestry, R Anderson OIRENCESTER UNION.

esq. F.S.I. &; resident agent on Lord Bathurst's estate, Cirencester Union comprises the following parishes:-
Cirencester Ampney Orucis, Ampney St. Mary, Ampney st. Peter,
Architectural &; Mechanical Drawing, Mr. Charles Stolle, Badgington, Barnsley, Baunton, Brimpsfield, Cirencester,
art master Coates, Colesborne, Daglingworth, Down Ampney, Drif.
field, Duntisbourne Abbots, Duntishourne Rouse, Edg·
Honorary Professors. worth, Elkstone, Fairford. Harnhill, Hatherop, Kemble,
Kempsford, Maisey HamptQn,KorthCerney,Poole Keynes,
Professor G. T. Brown C.B. Principal of the Royal Veteri· Poulton, Preston, Quenington, Rendeombe, Rodmarton,
nary College, London Sapperton, Shorncote, Siddington, Somerford Keynes,
Syde, South Cerney, Stratton, Winstone. The popula-
Sir J. H. Gilbert F.R.S., LL.D. The Laboratory, tion of the union in 1891 was 20,3'98; area 86,183 acres;
Rothamsted, professor of Rural Economy in the Uni. rateable value in 1897, £II3,095
versity of Oxford
Board day, every alternate monday, at the Union work.
Professor William M'Cracken F.H.A.S. resident agent Lord house, at 11 a.m
Crewe's estates, Cheshire, la.te Professor of AgriCulture
at the R. A. College Treasurer, Joseph Rawlins, Capital'& Counties Bank,
Cirencester
Board of Consulters.
Clerk to the Guardians &; Assessment Committee, Henry
President, The Principal Lawrence Cooke, Corn Hall chambers, Oirencester
The Professors & Honorary Professors of the College.
Relieving Officers, 'Centre district, ·Samuel J ames Pantoll,
Sir J. B. Lawes bart. Rothamsted, St. Albans 17 Thomas street; Eastern district, John Wade, Fair-
J. Clutton & J. H. Glutton esqs. surveyors, of Whitehall ford; West district, William Fred. Parsons, Duntis-
bourne .&bbots
place, London
Daniel Watney esq. surveyor, 33 Poultry street E 0 Medical Officers & Publio Vaccinators, Centre district,
Albert Pell esq. M.P. assistant commissioner, Royal Com- Wm. Raymond Cossham M.D. II4 Dyer street, Ciren'
eester; Eastern district, Charles Harald Bloxsome
mission on Agrieulture L.RO.P.Edin. Fairford; Northern district, T. D. Stuart
Clare ,Sewell Read esq. assistant commissioner, Royal Shaw M.B. Rendcombe; Southern district, Charles
Mackinnon M.A., M.B., O.M. Davaar, Dyer street, Ciren·
'Oommission on Agriculture cester; Sapperton district, Edwd. Brown M.D. Chalford
Sir Jacob Wilson M.R.A.C., F.H.A. S. member of the
Superintendent Registrar, Henry Lawrence Cooke, Olrn
Royal Commission on Agriculture &c. &c Hall chambers, Cirencester; deputy, George Gostling,
Dr. Eug. Risler, director of the National Institut Agro- Corn Hall chambers, Oirencester

nomique of France (corresponding member) Registrars of Births & Deaths-Cirencester sub-district;
Dr. E. Wolff professor of agrieultural chemistry, Hohen- Robert Chappell Freeman, Workhouse; deputy, Ernest
Newcombe, Corin villas, Cirencester; Cotswold sub-
heirn., Germany (corresponding member) district, William Fred. Parsons, Duntisbourne Abbotts ;
E. O. Ozanne esq. M.R.A.C. Bo. C.S. director of agricul- deputy, James Loveday, North Cerney; Fairford sub·

ture for Bombay Presidency, India. (corresponding
member)

Pandit Sri Lab M.R.A..c. ,gtat. O.S. N.W.P. & Oudh (cor-

responding member)
K. B. Yadhava M.RA.C. Bo. O.S. director of agriculture

for Baroda, India ( eorresponding member)
Praotical carpentry & wheelwright work, Charles Wild-

smith; smith work &; shoeing, Sergt. Terry; saddlery
& harness, Geo. Mills; garden work, Rowland Weaver

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CIRENCE8TER. 117

district, John Wade, Fairford; deputy, John Taylor, each, open to boys from the elementary schools of the

Fairford district: Powell's school was established in the early

Registrars of Marriages (Cirencester), Rober,t Ohappell part of the last century, principally by Mrs. Rebec~a
freeman, Workhouse, Cirencester; deputy, Ernest New- Powell; but under the scheme of the Charity Com-
missioners, dated November 28th, 1876, this educational
eombe, Corin villas, Oirencester; (Fairford) William foundation has been re-modelled, &; new school premises
Yells, Horcott, near Fairford; deputy, Charles Baker, have been erected at the rear of the old building in

Fairford Gloucester street, at a cost of nearly £3,000
Workhouse, a building of stone, erected in 1836, for 330

inmates; Ven. Archdeacon Hayward M.A. chaplain; GOVERNORS.

Chas. Mackinnon M.A., M.B., O.M. medical officer.; The Right Hon. Earl Bathurst D.L. Cirencester house
Robert Ohappell Freeman, master; Miss Florence Free- Wilfred Joseph Oripps M.A., C.B. WaInut trees, Ciren-
man, matron; Miss Lucy Dyball, industrial trainer
cester

SOHOOL ATTENDANCE OOMMITTEE. The Ven. Archdeacon Hayward M.A. vicar of Oirencester

Meets the second monday in the month in Board room at 0>1. Thomas WiIliam Chester Master jun. Knole park,
12 noon.
Almondsbury
Clerk, Henry Lawrence Cooke, Corn Hall chamberil, The Rev. John B. M'Clellan M.A. principal of the Royal
Cirencester
Agricultural College, Cirencester
Attendance Officers, The Relieving Officers Ohristopher Bowly esq. J.P. Siddington ha. Cirencester
Frederick Thomas Essington Boulton esq. Ingleside,

OIRENGESTER RURAL DISTRIar COUNOIL. Cirencester
John Hyde esq. J.P. Southleigh, Ohesterton, Oirencester
.Meets at the Board room, Union Workhouse, on last mon- Henry Zachary esq J.P. Park house, Cirencester
day in each month, at 12 o'cIoek.
Henry Tovey esq. Cirencester

Clerk, Henry Lawrence Cooke, Corn 'Hall chambers, Clerk to the Governors, Robert EUett, solicitor, 12

Cirencester Park street

Treasurer, Joseph Rawlins, Capital &; Counties Bank, Head Master, Rev. George Richd. Faulkner M.A.Ohrist's
College, Cambridge M.A. &; D.D. Trin. ColI. Dublin
Oirencester

Medical Officer of Health, Francis Thomas Bond RA., Second Master, Arthur Harris

M. D. Gloucester Drill Master, Sergeant Collett

Inspector of Nuisances, William Bishop Harmer, 7 Vic- School of Art, Corn Hall chambers, Chas. Stolle, master

toria road, Cirencester A School Board of 7 members was formed in 1877;

MILITARY. Robert Ellett, 12 Park street, clerk to the board;

Alfred Burton, Ashcroft road, Cirencester, attendanCe

Gloucestershire Regiment 4th Battalion (Royal North officer
Gloucestershire Militia), head quarters, Oecily hill; Col. Board, Lewis lane (boys, girls & infants), built in 1879,

Walter Bentley Marling, commanding; Earl Bathurst at a cost of £,8,000, &, enlarged in 1895, at a cost of
£1,600, for 700 children; average attendance,263 boys,
& A. L. Paget, majors; Capt. Joseph Hobbs, adjutant; 133 girls &; 128 infants; William Harrisan, master;
'Oapt. B. N. Spraggett, quarter master Miss Annie Ball, mistress; Mrs. Mary Evans, in-

PUBLJ1C OFFIOERS. fants' mistress

High Steward of the Borough, Robert Alexander ADder- National (girls & infants), Watermoor, for 132 girls &;
143 infants; average attendance, III girls & 123 in-
son, Park street
Certifying Factory Surgeon, William Raymond Cossham fants; Mrs. Kate Lewis, mistress; Miss Harriett Hol-
lins, infants' mistress
M.D. 114 Dyer street
Uerk to the Commissioners of Taxes, Robert Ellett, 12 Powell's Endowed Elementary (late Blue &; Yellow),
Gloucester street, for 197 boys, as many girls & 150
Park street infants; average attendance, 184 boys, 150 girls &;
High Constables, Frederick Boulton, 124 Dyer street &; 125 infants; Frederick Brett Foote,master; Miss Mary
Ann Harvey, mistress; Miss Emily Travess, infants'
Alfred T. Harmer, Market plaee mistress
Town Crier, James Hawker,s Silver street

PLAOES OF WORSHIP, with times of services. NEWSPAPER.

Parish Church (St. John the Baptist), the Ven. Henry Wilts & Gloucestershire Standard; office, Dyer street,
Rudge Hayward M.A. vicar; Rev. Ernest Rorace published every sat.; George Henry Harmer, printer,
Townsend M.A. Rev. George Le .Strange Amphlett M.A. publisher & proprietor. See advert;
Rev. Richard Charles S. Jones M.A. Rev. Lewis H.

Evans M.A. Rev. Arthur Ogle B.A. &; Rev. Geo. Richard RAILWAYS.

Faulkner M.A., D.D. curates; 8 a.m. II a.m. 3 p.m. & Great Western, Robert Murch, station master
6.30 p.m.; daily, IQ a.m. &; 6 p.m
Midland & South Western Junction railway, Henry
Holy Trinity Chapel of Ease, Watermoor, 8 a.m. II a.m. Baker, station master
3 p.m. &; 6,30 p.m.; wed. II a.m. &; 6 p.m.; fri. 11 a.m
RAILWAY CARRIERS.
St. Peter's (Catholic), Ashcroft, Rev. James Moysius Mar-
tin, priest; mass 8.30 et II a.m.; devotions, sermon & Smith R. T. et Co. goods station
benediction, 6.30 p.m.; daily mass, 8 a.m.; holidays ot Pickford & C{).; agent, Mrs. Jane Cox, 28 Chester st
obligation, 8.30 & II a.m.; thurs. devotions &; benedic- Foster & Co. (small parcels); agent, Geo. Cox, 29
tion, 7 p.m
Chester street
Friends' Meeting House, Thomas street, 10.30 a.m.; wed. G. W. R.; agents, The Cirencester Hotel 00. Limited

10.30 a.m.; seats 500 M. & S. W. R. J.; agent, H. F. Sare, Fleece hotel

Baptist, Coxwell street, Rev. Henry James Wicks; Il a.m. Sutt.on & Co. (small parcels); agents, G. F. & E. New-

& 6.30 p.m.; seats 400 combe, Cricklade street

Baptist (Particular), Park street; 10.30 a.m. &; 6 p.m.; Omnibus to Fairford (' The Trout '), about 4.30 p.m.
thurs. 7 p.m.; seats 80
daily from Fleece hotel (sundays excepted)
Brethren, Ashcroft Hall; 6.30 p.m.; thurs. 7,.45 p.m
Congregational, Dyer street, Rev. John Frederick Brown; CARRIERS.

Il a.m. &; 6.30 p.m.; wed. 8 p.m With inns they call at &; days of departure.

Primitive Methodist, Ashcmft, Rev. John WiIliam Reed; Ablington & Barnsley-W. Smith, Bull &; Waggon &;

Il a.m. &; 6.30 p.m.; mono 7 p.m Horses inns, mono & thurs

Unitarian, Gosditch street, Rev. Henry Austin; 11 a.m. & Ablington, Arlington, Bibury & Barnsley-Pritchett,

6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m.; seats 500 Bear &; Waggon & Horses inns, daily; Fairford, sat.;

Wesleyan, Gloucester street, Rev. William Thomas Gill; Miles, 'Bull,' mono wed. & fri

Il a.m. &; 6.30 p.m.; tues. 1& fri. 7 p.m.; seats 200 Ablington, Barnsley, CoIn Rogers & CoIn St. Dennis-

SCHOOLS. Smith, Bull & Waggon & Horses inns, man. & fri

Powell's Boys' Upper S~hool, Victoria road. .Aldsworth, Sherborne, Bibury &c.-W. T. Hawse, Bear

&; Waggon & Horses inns. mono wed. & fri.; to Bur-

A Grammar school was f(' unded here in the reign of ford on sat

Henry VII. by Thomas }:.lthal, Rsl}')p of Durllam, who Ashton Keynes-F. &; W. Mason, '13ear' &; 'Wheatsheaf,'
was a native of Oirenct'ster, with an endowment of £30 mono wed. &; fri.; T. Tilling, 'Wheatsheaf,' mono
yearly. This foundatiJn is now merged in the Boys' wed. & fri.; W. James, 'Three Horse Shoes,' mono

Upper school, erect;(' l in 1881 by the governors of & fri
Powell's schools, in a ~ordance with a l'chrme framed Barnsley & Bibnry-See Arlington
pby the Charity Comn ~issioners: the school will hold Beech Pike & Winstone-Newman, Bear & White Lion

200 boys, & has attachl ten scholarship. of £10 a yeaI' inns, mono &; frL; Holder, 'Swan,' mono &; fri

118 CIRENCESTER. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KEILY'S

Bibury-See Arlington Lechlade Stevens,' Bear' & 'Waggon & Horses,' mon

Brimpsfield & Caudle Green-W. Butler, Crown & White Leigh John Skuse, 'Wbeatsheaf,' mono & fri

Lion inns, mono to the Crown inn, Cheltenham, tues. Maiseyhampton-Hedges, Bear inn, mon

thurs. &; sat. j Rarris, Crown .& White Lion inns, Malmesbury-Fry, Barley Mow inn, mono & fri

wed. & fri Minchinhampton &; Nailsworth-Nicbolls, Three Com-

Brinkworth-John Franklin, Wheatsheaf inn, mon passes inn, mono &; thurs

Burford-See Aldsworth Minety-Read, • Wheatsheaf,' mono &; fri.; W. Tidmarsh,

Castle Eaton-See Kempsford , Wbeatsheaf,' mono &; fri.; Fry, W'heatsheaf inn,

Cbalford See Stroud mon.; Clarke, Wheatsheaf inn, fri

Oharlton &; Malmesbury-Rndman, King's Arms inn,mon Miserden, Sutgrove &c Booth, 'Swan,' man. & fri

Ohedworth-Mrs. Bowles, Nag's Head inn, mono &; tri.; North Oerney-C. Brown, Crown inn, mono wed. & fri

Hicks, Red Lion inn, mono & fri.; Reuben Sly, • Red Northleach-8troud, Sun & Nag's Head inns, mono &

Lion,' mono wed. & fri fri.; to Cheltenham, tues. thurs. & sat.; Hayward,

Cheltenham James A. Maslin, tues. thurs. & sat. 7 Swan inn, mon

a.m. from his shop, 56 Oricklade street to Crown inn, Oaksey-See Eastcourt

High street, calling at Perrott's Brook, North Cerney; Poole Keynes John Medlicott, 'Three Compasses,' mono

Rendcomb, Colesborne, Cowley &; Cubberley each way, k fri.; Clark, 'Barley Mow,' mono &; fri

returning at 3.30 p.m. the same evenings Poulton Joseph Poole, 'Nag's Head,' mono wed. &; fri. ;

Caates-S. Roberts, Barley Mow & Bell inns, mono wed. Luckett, 'Bear' &; 'Waggon & Horses,' mon.wed.&; fri

fri. &; sat. 5 p.m Purton-Barnes, Wheatsheaf inn, mono &; fri.; to Swin.

Colesborne Hunt, King's Head tap & White Lion inn, don on thurs.; J. Selby, 'Wheatsheaf,' mono et fri.;
man. &; fri. calling at 'Bathurst Arms,' North Cerney to Swindon on wed

CoIn Rogers &:- CoIn St. Dennis-See Ablington Quenington-Lander, mono wed. & fri. to 114 Dyer at

CoIn St. .Aldwyns-See Hatherop Rendcomb See Cheltenham

Cowley-See Oheltenham Rodmarton-Bond, 'Three Compasses,' mono wed. & fri
Cricklade William Clark &; Son, passengers & goods to Sapperton-Bendall, 'King's Head' & 'Three Cocks,'
Purton station 3 times daily; to Sun &; Wheatsheaf mono &; fri.; Arnold, Barley Mow inn, man. wed. &
inns, Cirencester, mono &; fri
fri.; &; Pepworth, • Three Horse Shoes,' mon

Crudwell-See Malmesbury Sherborne See AIdsworth

Down Ampney-W. Haines, • Sun' &; 'Wheatsheaf,' Shurdington-See Cheltenham
mono & fri
Somerford Keynes-See Minety
Duntisbourne Richard Smith, 'King's Arms,' mono &; South Carney-Gassor, King's Head tap, mono wed.&; fri
fri.; to North Cerney &; Cheltenham, tues. & sat
Southrop-See Eastieach

°Eastcourt &; Oaksey-George Richmond, 'Wheatsheaf,' Stroud & Cbalford-Bendall, King's Head tap, & Three
mono &; fri
Cocks inn, mono & fri.; Whiting, Three Horse Shoes
~astleach-Tanne'r, Sun inn, mono &; fri
inn, mon.; Clark, 'Wheatsheaf,' man

Elkstone See Brimpsfield Sntgrove Moore, 'Crown,' mono &; fri

Fairford-Scarrott, Bear inn, mono &; fri Swindon-See Purton

Hankerton-Chivers, 'Wheatsheaf,' man. &:, fri.; Cooper, Syde See Brimpsfield &:, Caudle Green

, Wheatsheaf,' mono &; fri Tarlton-Bond, Three Compasses inn, man. wed. & fri. ;

lIankerton, Eastcourt, Oaksey &; Somerford Keynes- Blowing, mono &; fri

James Chivers, 'Wheatsheaf' & 'Barley Mow,' mono Tetbury-Price, Sun & Three Compasses inns,mon.kfri

& fri Whelford-See Kempsford

Hatherop, CoIn &; Quenington-Lander, mono wed. &; fri. Winson-W. Smith, 'Bear' &:; • Waggon & Horses,' mono

rI4 Dyer street & fri

Highworth-Samuel Beasley, • Wheatsheaf,' mon Winstone See Beech Pike

Kempsford, Maisey Hampton, Castle Eaton, Marllton & Withington-Hiscock, 'Crown,' mon

Marsden-Stroud, 'Bear' & • Waggon &; Horses,' man. Witney-See Faringdon
& fri
° Yanworth John Smith, 'Waggon &:; Horses,' mon

Kemble Radcliffe, Barley Mow inn, man. & fri.; More-

ton, Swan inn, man. wed. &:, fri

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. 1Boulton Frederick Thomas Essing- Curtis Thomas, 6 Grosvenor villas

JJathurst Earl J.P., D.L. Cirencester ton, Ingleside, Lewis [ane 'Darby Robert, 2 Cumberland terrace,

house, & 20 Grosvenor gardens i& Bowly William, 28 Cecily hill Ohurch street

Bachelors' & Carlton clubs, Lon- Brain Thomas Jas. 14 Gloucester st Davis 'George Frederick, 13 Dollar st

don S W Brewin Mrs.Wm.Birchfield,Querns la Drew George, Springfield villa, Vie-

...A.damthwaite Mrs.The Firs,Victoria rd Brittle John Nightingale, 63 Dyer st toria road

Alexander Hy. Brighton viI. Lewis la Brown Rev. John Frederick (Congre- Drewett Miss, King's Head hotel

.AlIen Raymond, Barton Mill house gational), 2 Corin villas Edwards Mrs. Foss lodge, Sheep st

.AlIen Hobert, Park street Brown Misses E. & J. Further Barton Ellett Robert, Oakley cottage

Alien Vincent, 19 Ashcroft road Brown Miss L. Bartonbury Faulkner Rev. George Richard M.A.,

Alien William, 4 Mount viJllas, Somer- Brown Mrs.Laurel cottage,Watermoor D.D. (curate of Cirencester &; head

ford road Bullock Thos. Bridge ho. Chesterton master Powell'.s boys' upper school),

.A.mphlett Rev. George Le Strange Buncombe Arthur Hy. 4 Victoria I'd Lindum house
M.A. (curate), 7 Corin street
Buncombe Miss, 8 Victoria road Fay Samuel, Querns Hill house

Anderson Robert, The Barton Burnett Edward, log Dyer street Flux Misses, I Bromley ter. Tower st

Anderson Robert Alexander, Park st Burrows Charles, 4 Ashcroft villas Foote Fredk. Brett, 192 Gloucester st

Andrews George Henry, Victoria cot- Butler Major Francis John Paul J.P. Forrest Thomas FO:l'syth, The Quems

tage, Queen street 15 Dollar street Fowler Mrs. 2 Ashcroft villas

Andrews Mrs. 3 Roman villas, Vic- Clappen Mrs. 24 Lewis lane Fowler Oliver Humphrey,25 Dollar st

toria road Clark William, 23 Lewis lane Frazer Geo. 3 Cirencester ter.Corin st

Arnold Oharles, Watermoor road Clow William, 48 Victoria road Freeman Mislses, 53 Lems lane

Arnold Wm. Edward, 6 Laurel villas Cock John Henry, 30 Cricklade street Fry William Henry, Glenside, Asherft

Ashdown Arthur, 43 Victoria road Cole Arthur Abel, West Market place Gardner Charles, 6 Tower street

Attwood Mrs. Gwynfa vils.Victoria rd Cole Edward James, 5 London road Gardner Henry Tom, Compton villa,

Baker William James, 8 Watermoor I'd Cole Mrs. Glifton lodge, Ohesterton Victoria road •

Banbrook John, 2 Galba villas, Vic- Cole WaIter, 10 Tower street Gegg Joseph, II Tower 'street

toria road Cole WilIiam Hy.J.P. Querns Lane ho Gegg Joseph Henry,183' Gloucester st

Barkley Hy. Ohas. J.P.6 Cricklade st Ooles W. Crosbie, West Lyn, Ashcroft Giboons Arthur Henry, 2 Tower st

Bartlett Ernest, 26 Dollar street Collas Ernest John, 2 Chesterton ter Gifford the Hon. Mrs. 115 Dyer at

Barton Robert, 22 Lewis lane Compton Mrs. 10 Church street Gill :iev. William Thomas (Wesleyan),

Beecham Edward Miles, Watermoor Cossham William Raymond M.D. 114 Epw~rth lodge, Ashcroft

Berry Harry, 48 Dollar street Dyer street Gillett George, Hillside

iBishop Fras. Wm.Horton bo.Sheep st Cox Francis, 25 Dollar street Gillett Jl')m Alfred, 1 Black Jack st

Bishop Henry, Ceylon villas, Tower st Creese Edward Jas. Edgell, Leaholme Gobey George William, 5 Tower street

Bland Miss, 2 Ashcroft villas Cripps Edwd.Chas. Thomas Street ho Gorton Richard, 32 Chester street

Blandford Clement ,Smart, Worcester Cripps Miss, 15 GosditCh street Gostling Gf'Orge, 57 Lems lane

house, Cbesterton Cripps Wilfred Joseph M.A., C.B., Gould John' Chester street

Blundell Prof. Edward, At-gyle house D.L., J.P.,F.S.A. The Walnut Trees Green Char'ks, Chesterton

Blunsom Mrs. 48 Dyer street Croke John, The Abbey Green Wm:\m Frederick, I Bath ter-

lBlunsomWilliam,Gloucester ho.Dyer st Cullis Edmund, 55 Dyer street race, Wrlermoor road

DIRECTORY.] •GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CIRENCESTER• 119

Groom Prof. T. T., RA., D.Sc., B.A. Low John Ling, The Limes, Dyer st Saunders JOhn, 16 Ashcroft road.

College M'C1ellan Rev. J.ohn B., M.A. (prin- Scriven Mrs. 6 Che.stert<on-terrace

Habgood James, 158 Cricklade street cipal), Royal Agricultural college Sewell Edward Glare, The Beeches

Hamper )lrs.1 Cirencester ter.Corin st Macltinnon Charles M.A., M.B., C.M. Shayler Mrs. 25 Blac~ Jack street

Harmer Geo.Hy.Apsley viI. Victoria I'd Davaar, Dyer street Sims Samuel Smith, 8 Corin street

Harmer William Scotford, 3 Tower st Mann William Cha.rles. 9 Victoria road Smith Charles, I Chesterton terrace

HarrisonWm.Wimborne vil.Victoria I'd Martin Rev. James Aloysius (Catho- Smith Miss, 25 Queen srtreet

Hawes Walter, The Old Grammar '8chl lie), .Presbytery, Ashcroft Smith Mrs. Corinium house

Hawkins Wm. Corin viI. 1 Victoria rd Master Digby Chester, Elm grove Smith Mrs. 69 Dyer street

Hayward Ven. Henry Rudge M.A. ~faster Mrs. Augustus, Ellp grove Smith Mrs. The Cranhams

(vicar & archdeacon of Cirencester Matthews Frederick, 15 Thomas st Smith Wm.Edwd. 2 Bath ter.Watermr

&; chaplain of the workhouse), The Matthews Thos. Williams, 104 Dyer st Snowsell Elijah WaIt. 56 Lewis lane

Vicarage, Thomas street Widwinter James, 4 Coxwell street Snowsell James, 103 Watermoor road

Hewer Mrs. 7 Lewis lane Milligan Miss,2 Roman viIs.Victoria st Souter Chas.2 Cirencester ter.Corin st

Hibbert Thomas, 21 :A.shcroft road Mitchell Mrs. Coxwell court Staples Edward, 3 G1"Osvenor villas,

Hill Herbert, 80 Gloucester street Mome Charles Fredk. 44 Dollar street fWirutermoor road _

Hill Isaac Charles, 12 Dyer street M,oss Harry, 1 Dollar street Svruples Goorge, 5 Grosvenol" villas,

Hiscock In. 2 Oakley vils. Chesterton Mullings John, 12 Dollar street 1'-atermoor Toad

Houre Miss, Charlton house Murcott Ja-spar, 1 Mount villas Stevens Miss, Ceylon vils. Tower st

'Hobbs Capt. Joseph. 1 Roman villas, Newcombe Ernest, 1 Corin villas Stevens-Guille Rev. Hubert M.A. 20

Victoria. road Newcombe Geo. Fdk. Cricklade street A:shcroft road

Hobbs Frank, Chesterton lawn Newcombe Mrs. 4 Tower street Swanwick Russell R.A. College farm

Holland Charles, .A:bergele, Victoria rd Ogle Rev. Arthur B.A. (curate), 59 Taylor Frederick Wm. 24 The Beeches

'Hood John, Mount street Lewi's lane Tidmarsh Albert, 29 Cecily hill

-Hooker Charles Paget, Dollar 'Ward Ohm Professor Hugo M.A., F.R.Met. Tinker Mrs. 54 Dyer street;

house, GQ.sditch street Soc., R.A. College Tovey Henry, Oxford ho. London road

Hyde In. J.P. Southleigh, Chesterton Ovens Mrs. 12 Ooriu street Tovey Joseph, 33 Cecily hill

..James WiUiam, 2 MOUIl!t villas Ovens Thomas Oogswell, The Shrub- Tovey Mrs. Charles, 2 Gro-svenor viIs

..Tarratt Miss, The Gables, Coxwell st bery, Victoria road Townsend Rev. Ernest Horace M.A•

..Tefferies John, 2 Minerva villas Parry Maj.-Gen. Frederick William (curate), 48 Dollar street

..Tefferies Mrs. Edwd. Watermoor cot Hest, Park house, Dollar street Townsend Fras. James, I Ashcroft vils

..Jf\:fferies 1Vm. John, I Minerva villas Parry William. The Croft, Lewis la Tranter Alfred, 27 Black Jack street

..Joachim Mrs. 3 Cumberland terrace, Parsons Miss, 4 Grosvenor villas Trotman Mrs. 47 Victoria road

Church street Paton Professor George C.E., Tl"Otman Mrs. Richard, 10 Victoria rd

Jobbins Charles George Berriman'l M.LE.S.S. The College . . Trouncer Percy J ames, Chester ho.

Fernleigh, Ashcroft Peacock Lady Georgiana,Cecily Hill ho Lewis lane

..Tones He-v. Richard Charles S., M.A. Peck John, 64 Dyer street Tudway Clement, 23 Cecily hill

(curate), 7 Dollar street Peel Mrs. Gwynfa viis. Vi<rtloria road Verschoyle T. S. 38 Cecily hill

..Tones Chrisbopher Frank, 8 Silver st Perring Edward, Glendower, Ashcroft Wakefield John Edward, 60 Lewis la

..Tukes Samuel, 3 Mlount villas Perring Edward Hy. 43 Watermoor rd Walden James, 3 Bath tar. Watermoor

Kinch Professor Edward F.C.S.,F.LC. Pitt Goorge, 5 Ashcro£t villas Waters Chas. Thomas, 2 Black Jack st

2 The Leauses~ Victoria road Plumbe Mrs. I The Leauses. Vic- Waugh MisS', 24 Victoria road

Kingscote Thomas, 37 Cecily· hill toria road Wearing Wm. Castle ho.. Castle SG

Lafford George, 4 Ashcroft villas Plummer Edward Henry Deane, 3 Webb Mrs. 9 Tower street

Lane Mrs. Edward, 12 Tower street Chesterton terrace We1sford Lindsey Winterbotham, Rose

Lawrence Oharles Arthur M.A. Ches- Pole Henry Van Nobben,Watermoot ho bank, Watermoor road

terton house Pride Miss, Ashcroft cottage Whatley Aug. Fdk. 48 Watermoor rd

Lawrence James, 28 !Black Jack ,street Puxley Herbt.Riversoourt,The Beeches Whatley Ernest, 5 Chesterton terrace

Lawrence Mrs. Chesterton house Rawlins J1oseph, Bank ho. Go,sditch st White Miss, 68 Dyer street

Leanard Capt. Henry Arthur Hallam R'eed Rev. John William (.Primitive Wicks Rev. Henry James (Baptist),

Farnaby. 26 CDxwell street Methodist), Elim, Ashcroft road Sunnyside, Chesterton

Lewis Henry Thomas, East Cranhams Reid Col. Harry, Cotswold 10.Watermr Wiilett Mrs. 1 Oakley vils. Chesterton

Lewis Miss, Ashcroft cottage Riddler Harry, 37 Thomas street Wilson Professor 1Villiam Thomas.

Lewis Thoma.s, Ashcroft house Risely Mark, Bedford vil. Victoria I'd Royal Agricultural college

Little Mrs. 45 Victoria road Ross Hume James Alex. Golden farm Witts Samuel, 7 Tower street

Littleford Alfred, 4 Chesterton terrace Saunders Alfred, 12 Black Jack street Young Miss, Watermoor villa

Lock William George, 65 Dyer street Saunders Fredk. John, 9 .!Jshcroft rd Zachary Henry J.P. 13 .Park s-treet

Lord John. 1 Illack Jack street Saunders Job, .A.shcroft

COMMERCIAL. Baldwin C. &; R. tobacconists &; cigar merchants. 37

Adams Emily (Mrs.), dress maker, 70 Dyer street Castle street

.Adams Frederick William, tea &; provision merchant, 2 Baldwin Emma (Mrs.), Swan hotel, 24 Gosditch street

Cricklade street Barnes Eliz3 (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker, 171 Cricklade st

'!dams William, carpenter, Chester street Barnes John, Bull inn, 60 Dyer street

Aldridge Frederick John, hair dresser, II6a, Dyer street Barry Richard (Mrs.), Black Horse P .H. 79 Castle st

Allaway John, boot maker, 5t Gloucester street Bartholomew 'Wm. David, draper, 2, 3 & 3Rt Gosditch 8t

AlIen Brothers, millers (steam &; water) &; corn mer- Bartlett WaIter, carpenter, 39 Chester street

chants, Barton mills & Park street Bartlett WaIter Charles, watch maker &; jeweller, 25

..Anderson Robert, land agent &; hon. sec. to the Chamber Gosditch street

of Agriculture, The Barton Barton Emily (Mrs.), shopkeeper, JIg Gloucester street

.Anderson Robert Alexander, solicitor, high steward of Barton Robert, valuer &; generaJ agent. 22 Lewis lane

the borough of Cirencester & joint registrar of the Baston John, Waggon &; Horses P.H. 6 London 1'000

county courts of Cirencester, Stroud, Northleach & Beecham Edward Mills. manager, Gas 'Works

Stow, Park street Beecham John Pinnock, plumber. house decorator,

.Andrews John & Son, grocers, 13 Watermoor road artists' colourman & picture frame maker. 76 Castle st

.Andrews Sidney Geor!!e, baker, 36 Victoria road Bennett Charles, baker, 107 Dyer street

Andrews Joseph Price, shopkeeper, 179 Gloucester st Berry William, jobmaster, 39 C-ecily hill

.Andrews William Raymond, boot maker, 27 Queen st Bingham Ohas. Henry, confectioner &; caterer, 12 Dyer st

.Ange:!l Joseph, baker &; beer retailer, 166 Gloucester 1It Bingham Harry Seymour, confectioner, 16 Castle street

Apsley Hall (H. Roads, sec.), Sheep street Bishop Brothers, grocers, 173 Cricklade street

.Armer John, second-hand bookseller, 131 Cricklade street Bishop James, beer retailer, 39 C{}xwell street

Arnold Charles, grocer, see Moulder & Arnold Bishop Ruth (Mrs.), apartments, 4 Bromley terrace

Arnold Joseph, beer retailer, 5 Chester street Blunsom John & Son M.R.C.V.S. veterinary surgeons.

Arnold Thos. head gardener to Earl Bathurst, Cecily hi Gloucester house, Dyer street

Aston &; Son, watch makers, 84 Castle street Band Frederick, cabinet maker, 39 Castle street

Axton Joseph, shopkeeper, I Ashcroft garden§ Boulton Edwin William, Dolphin Inn P.H. 18 Cecily hill

13ailey F. &; Co. hat &; boot manufrs. 1 & 2 Coxwell st Boulton Frederick, draper, silk mercer &; carpet ware~

}Jailey Henry, laundry, 34 Victoria road houseman, 124 Dyer street '

Baily & Woods, booksellers, printers, stationers &; music Boulton Joseph Jefferi.es, draper, ]; Dyer street

sellers, 128 Dyer street Bower Frederick, beer retailer, 41 Cast:e street

Baker Hen rv•R, asiltwataioy,n master Midland & South Western Brain Thomas James M.R.O.V.S. veterinary surgeon.
Junc tion 8 Tower street
14 Gloucester street

120 CIRENCESTER. GLOUCESTERSHIRE [KELLY'S

Bransby Russell Stuart, liberal agent Cole Richard. coal, coke &; fine & agricultural salt

Brewer Lonisa (Miss), fancy dealer, 41 Dyer street merchant, The Depot, G. W. Railway statien; offic~,

Bridges Brothers, builders, 12 Gloucester street 5 London road; & at Fairford, CrickIade, Minety, &I

Bridges Annie (Mrs.), dress maker, 22 Gloucester st Fosse Cross; firewood bundles kept in stock

p.n.Bridges Robert, farmer, Cranhams Cole WaIter, Sun inn, II8 Dyer street
182 Glou- Coles Charlotte (Miss), apartments, 23 Black Jack stree'
Bridges William Cole, Loyal Volunteers
cester street
Coles W. Crosbie, gen. printer &c. see Savory & Coles
Briggs Alfred, stud groom to Earl Bathurst, The Stables, Compton Charles, tailor, 6 Dollar street
Cirencester house
Constitutional Club (Job Saunders, hon. sec.), 'Crown hil
Brind Edward, professor of music, 32 Cecily hill
Cook John, blacksmith, 63 Gloucester street
Brown William, farrier, 25 Cricklade street
Cooke Henry Lawrence, solicitor, clerk to the board of
Brownnett James, baker, 6a, Dollar street guardians, school attendance & assessment committees
&i to the rural district council, joint clerk to the Ciren-
Bruton Alfred, chimney sweeper, 19 Dollar street cester highway board & infectious disease!t hospitalB
committees &; superintendent registrar of births, deaths
Bullock T. & Co. coal & coke merchants, The G. W. R. &; marriages, Corn Hall chambers

wharf Cooke William Lawrence, solicitor & perpetual commis-
sioner & commissioner to adIninister oaths, joint clerk
Bunce Robert, butcher, qI Gloucester street to the Cirencester highway board &i infectious diseases
hospitals committees, &; district· clerk to the Gloucester
Buncombe Arthur Henry (late Henry Buncombe), county council, Corn Hall chambers

wholesale Ironmonger, bar, sheet iron &i steel Corn Hall &; Corn Hall Chambers (Jame.i Ashdown, ha!

merchant, fire brick, grindstone, plaster, cement, lath, keeper; Frederic H. Sealy, sea.), hall, 10 &; II Dyer st

nail, oil & color warehouse, Cricklade street Cossham William Raymond M.D. physician; medical
officer &; public vaccinator, centre district, 'Cirencester
Burge Edward James, grocer &; butcher, 29 Queen st union, certifying factory surgeon &; medical visitor to
the Fairford Lunatic Asylum, II4 Dyer street
Burnett Edward R.'S.D.E. dentist, log Dyer street
Cottage Hospital (0. H. Fowler, E. C. CripPs L.R.C.P.
Burr()ws William, ironmonger, 6 Gosditch street Lond. W. R. Cossham M.D., C.M. C. P. Hgoke:r
L.R.C.P.Edin. & C. Mackinnon M.A., M.B., C.M.
Burton Alfred, tailor &; school attendance officer, 7 Ash- medical officers; R. Anderson, hone sec.; Miss M. S.
Warner, matron), Sheep street
croft; road
Cotteswold School (Chas. Green, principal), Chesterton
Burton Robert, dairyman, 51 Castle street Couling John, jobmaster &; beer retailer, II Black Jack s~
Councer Charles Wm. commercial traveller, II Corin si
Callow James Henry, shoe maker, 47 Dollar street
Conncer Elizl\ Ann (Mrs.), registry office, II Corin st
Canter George Henry, cabinet maker, 97 Cricklade st Councer Elizh. Ann (Miss), preparatory scbl. IX 'Corin st
County Court (Robert Alexander Anderson & Roberl
Canter John Frederick, painter & plumber, 52 Lems la
Ellett, joint registrars), Park street
Capital &; Counties Bank Lim. (branch) (.Toseph Bawlins, County of Gloucester ·Bank Lim. see Lloyds Bank Lim
County Police Station (George ,Morgan, supt.), Castle st
manager); open 10 to 3, except mondays, 10 t() 5 &; Cowley Daniel, carpenter, 5 Black Jack street
Cox Edward, coal merchant, Railway siding, WatermOOl"
saturdays, 10 to I, Gosditch street; draw on head Cox Geo. agent for Foster &; Co. carriers, 29 Chester st
Cox Jane (Mrs.), carrier &; agt. for Pickford,z8 Chester si
office, 39 Threadneedle street, London E 0 Cox Thomas, stationer, fancy goods &; agent for th8'

Carpenter O>rnelius, saddler, 23 Dyer street "Cheltenham Free Press," 17 Gosditch street
Crew Willie Edmund, apartments, Tower view, Lewis ta
Car;~ Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 36 Gloucester street Cripps Edward Charles M.R.C.S.Eng.. L.R.C.P.Lond.

Cemetery (Robert Ellett, clerk to the burial board), surgeon, see Fowler &; Cripps
Crook Ernest, fellmonger, Castle street
Chesterton lane . Crook George, slater & plasterer, 11 Spitalgate lane
Curtis John, shopkeeper, 68 Chester street
Chamber of Agriculture (James Joicey esq. president; Cuss Henry, beer retailer, 8z Cricklade street
Dale, Forty &; Co. pianoforte dealers, 128 Dyer street.
Robert Anderson, The Barton, hone sec) Davis George Frederick, tailor, 9 Park street

Cherry Henry, photographer, 38 Castle stre~t

Church Institute (E• .T. Wallis, sec.), 25 Park strpet

Oirencester Bath Co. Lim. (E. B. Haygarth, hone sec.);

secretary's office, Castle street

Cirencester Brewery Lim. brewers &C. (T. :Matthews,

sec.), Cricklade street .

Oirencester Working Men's Conservative Benefit Society

(T. Davies, sec.), 7 Park street

Cirencester Corn Hall Co. Lim. (Frederic H. Sealy,

sec.); offices, 45 Dollar street

Oirencester Cricket Gub (Sydney Bonlton, hone see.),

Ingleside

Cirencester &i District Liberal Association (Ernest New-

combe, sec.), Oakley Rooms, Dyer "treet

Oirencester Division Conservative Association (T.Davies,

registration agent), 7 Park street .

Cirencester Gas Co. Lim. (J. P. Beecham, hone sec.;

M. R. Risely &; F. H. Sealey, collecturs); office, 1:1
Silver street; works (E. M. Beecham, manager), Davis William, grocer, 57 Castle street
Denly Ernest, jobmaster, V. W. H. mews, Dyer street
Watermoor
Oirencester Horse ShoW' (H. F. Sare, hon.sec.),Fleece htl Dike Frederick, upholsterer, 8 Waterloo, Dyer street
Cirencester Improved Dwellings 00. Lim. (Robert Dike George, stone mason, 27 Chester street
Dike Joseph, news agent, II6 &; 117 Cricklade street
Ellett, sec)
Oirencester Independent Society for the Prevention of Dike Thomas Alfred, brewers' traveller, 80 Cricklade si
Cruelty to Animals (E. B. Haygarth, sec.), Castle st Dobson William, shopkeeper, 74 Watermool' road
Cirencester Infectious Diseases Hospital (Mrs. Elizabeth Downer William Henry, shopkeeper, 44 Watermoor road
Drew Brothers, builders, Victoria road
Newell, matron), Chesterton
Cirencester Juvenile Conservative Benefit Society (T. Drew Jonathan, carpenter, 7 Dollar street
Dunn Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 49 Castle street
Davies, sec.), 7 Park street
Oirencester Liberal Working Men's Club (Thomas Cox, Durham John, Three Horse Shoes P.H. 13 Crieklade si
Durnell George, wheelwright, Watermoor road
sec.), 78 Castle street
Cirencester Military Band (Thomas Smith, bandmaster), Dyer Harry, florist, 29 Dollar street
East Gloucestershire Liberal Association (Russell Stuari
Querns lane
Bransby, agent)
Oirencester Sanitary Laundry Co. Lim. (E. Whatley, Eastman's Limited, butchers, 12 Cricklade street
Eclipsem 'Cycle Co. (Alfred Jordan, manager), Thomas si
sec.), II3 Dyer street; laundry, Chesterton Edmonds Edward Nash, corn merchant, Canal wharf;

Cirencester Steam Press (Savory &; Odes, proprietors),
I&;2 Black Jack street
Oirencester Water Works Co. Lim. (Robert Ellett, sec) &; at Whelford
Oirencester Women's Conservative Benefit Society (T. Edwards Charles, hay cutter, 18 Park street
Edwards Thomas, shoe maker, 17 Gloucester street
Davies, sec.), 7 Park street
Clappen Bros. clothiers &; boot dealers, 7 Cricklade st Ellett Robert (firm, Mullings, Ellett &i Co.), solicitorr
aaridge Henry (Mrs.), milliner, 4 Lansdown \'illas, perpetual commissioner &; commissioner for oaths,
joint registrar of county court, clerk to the magis-
Asheroft
Olarke Hannah (Mrs.), fishmonger &ic. 18 Gosditch st trates, commissioner of taxes, urban district council,
the burial &i school boards &i to the governors of
Clinch William, tailor, IIO Dyer street
Cock J. H. &; Co. ironmongers &; coach builders, Market Powell's schools & sec. to the Thames Valley drainaglt
commissioners, 12 P8J'k street
place &; Cricklade street
<Jole Henry &; Co. Lim. millers (steam), Lewis lane Elliott Israel, head gamekeeper to Earl Bathurst, Tb&

Cole &; Lems, bacon curers, Cotswold bacon factory Woodhouse

Cole k Tranter, butchers, 4 &; 5 West Market place &i Evans Albert, fly proprietor, 86 Dyer street

143 Oricklade street Evans George, beer retailer, 6 Querns lane

Cole Edwin, Queen's Head P.R. Watermoor Evans Jacob, dairyman, 36 School lane

Cole Richard, farmer, Wiggold farm

DIREGrOBY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CIRENCESTEB• 121

Farrell et Co. house furnishers, 11 to 14 et 18 et 19 •

Castle street Hawker James, town crier. 5 Silver street
Hawker Mary (Mrs.). servants' regis. office,S Silver st
Fay Samuel, general manager Midland et South Western Hawkins Jane (Mrs.), mantle maker. 1 Victoria road
Hawkins Sarah (Miss), apartments, 30 Cecily hill
Junction railway, Quems Hill house Hayes Albert William, insurance agent, 18 Watermoor rd
Hayes James, shopkeeper, II2 Dyer street
Ferris et Co. general dealers, 90 Cricklade street
Haygarth &; Lawrence, solicitors, 73 Castle street
Fire Brigade (Thomas Hibbert, supt.), Engine house, Haygarth Edward Brownlow (firm, Haygarth &; Law-

King's Head hotel rence), solicitor &; commissioner to administer oaths;
sec. &; solicitor &; lecturer on agricultural law to the
Fletcher Henry, news agent, 137 Cricklade street
Royal Agricultural college, 73 Castle street
Fowler et Cripps, surgeons, 25 Dollar street
Heath Charlotte (Mrs.), apartments, 58 Lewis lane
Fowler Oliver Humphrey M.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon, see Hemmings Henry, greengrocer, 42 Dyer street

Fowler et Cripps Hemms James, shopkeeper, 7 Stepstairs lane
Herbert Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 8I: Watermoor ra
Frazer George .• Son, hunt tailors, military out-
Hewer Alfred, tailor. 41 Coxwell street
fitters, habit et breeches makers, shirt makers &, gentle- Hewer Henry, shopkeeper, II6 Gloucester street
Hibbert Thomas, surveyor, collector &; sanitary inspector
men's hosiers, 131 Market place; &; Long st. Tetbury
to the urban council, z Dollar .street
Freeman Constance &; Ethel (Misses), young ladies' Hilton & Son, boot warehouse, 169 Cricklade street
Hinks Henry, Anchor inn P.H. 162 Gloucester street.
school, 53 Lewis lane Hinton Sophia (Miss), dress maker, 63 Chester street
Freeman Charles Wallace, tailor, Waterloo, Dyer street Hobbs Albert Frank, auctioneer & valuer; agent to the

Freeman Robert Chappell, registrar of births & deaths
for Cirencestersub-district &, marriages for ~he Ciren-
cester union district &; master of the union work-

housa, The Workhouse
Frewin Rosa (Mrs.), dress maker, 46 Dyer street
Fry William Henry, tailor, see Hamper &; Fry

Gale Ann (Mrs.), boot & shoe dealer, 66 Gloucester st Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society & to the Em-
Gardner James, farmer, 'Chesterton farm
Gardner Thomas, registered plumber, '90 Dyer street ployers' Liability C{). Corn Hall buildings
Gegg Frank & Co. coal merchants, Canal wharf
Gegg Joseph Henry &; Son, grocers, 184 Gloucester st Hodge Thomas, saddler, 28 Dyer ·street
George Mary (Miss), apartments, 68a, Dyer street
Geyton William Richard, ·Crown hotel, 21 Gosditch st Holmes Kate (Mrs.), midwife, 20 Coxwell street
Gibbons .Alfred, decorator, 20 Gloucester street
Gibbons Arthur Henry, professor of music &; organist of Holtham Richard Francis, butcher, 56 Castle street

Holy Trinity Church &; Royal Agricultural College, 2 Hooker Chas. Paget L.R.C.P. surgeon,Dollar Ward house
Tower street
Gibbons Frederick, plasterer, 19 Thomas street Hugill Augustus John, deer keeper to Earl Bathurst.
Gibbs William, beer retailer, 54 Watermoor road
Deer Park lodge
Gillett &; Co. wholesale & retail grocers et provision
Hyde .John & Son, general drapers &; silk mercers,
dealers, 19 & 20 Gosditch street
Gillett John Alfred, grocer &c. see Gillett &; Co Bon Marche stores, Market place
Gillman & Sons, general smiths, 3 Black Jack street
Gillman Jane (Miss), apartments, 31 Cecily hill rnd Elizabeth (Mrs.), apartments, Cecily villa
Girdler Charles, baker & confectioner, 72 Castle street
Gladstone Club (William Ormond, hon. sec.), Globe Inland Revenue Office (Henry McAfee,officer),3 Corin vis

temperance hotel, Silver street International Tea Co.'s Stores Limited, tea dealers, 23
Gloucestershire Regiment, 4th Battalion (Royal North
Gosditch street .
Gloucestershire Militia) (Col. WaIter Bentley Marling,
lieut.-col. commanding; Earl Bathurst &; A. L. Paget, Jackson John Henry, edge tool maker, 22 Cricklade st
majors; Capt. J osephHobbs, adjutant; Capt. B. N.
Spraggett, quartermaster); head quarters, Cecily hill Jackson Samuel, lime burner, 4 Querns lane
Glover David, draper, 164 -Cricklade street
Gostling Geo. deputy supt. registrar, Corn Hall chambers James Francis, cabinet maker, 12 &; 22 Black Jack st
Gough .& Griffiths, cycle mfrs. &; gunsmiths,g Glo'ster st
Granger &; Co. confectioners, 172 Cricklade street James Percy William, shopkeeper, 28 Watermoor road
Grant Sarah (Mrs.), rope &; twine dlr. 10 Black Jack st·
Gray Herbert William, baker, 21 Gloucester street James William Harbottle, hardware &; fancy dealer, 43
Green Charles, boys' middle class school, Chesterton
Green William Frederick, builder & timber merchant, & 71 Castle str@eat.
Railway siding, Watermoor
Greenslade John, fruiterer, 81 Castle street Jarvis William, agricultural engineer, 21 Watermoor road
Griffiths Robert, cycle manufacturer &c. see Gough &
Griffiths Jefferies John & Son, seed merchants, nurserymen &
Griffiths Waldron, pharmaceutical chemist &; mineral
water manufacturer, 134 Dyer street florists, Market place; nurseries, Watermoor, Sid·
Guest George, baker, 48 Lewis lane
GwiIliam Henry, dining rooms, 4 &; 5 Dollar street dington &; London rd.; & at Somerford Keynes
Gwynne Thomas, nail &; rivet manufacturer,68 Castle st
Habgood Edward, baker, 156 Cricklade street Jefferies Thomas, basket maker, 64 Gloucester street
Habgood Edward, butcher, 180 Gloucester street
Raines George, boot maker, 170 Gloucester street Jew John, Railway inn P.H. 10 Sheep street
Hale Anne (Mrs.), Horse & Drill P.H. Watermoor road
Hall Da '(Miss), dress maker, 12 Quems lane Joachim Edwd. Frank Wm. pork butcher,76 Cricklade st
Hamper & -Fry, tailors (ladies' &; gents.'), breeches &;
legging makers, gentleman's outfitters, hatters, hosiers J(}bbins Fredk. Geo. grocer &; beer retailer, 28 Park st
&; glovers, Market place
Jones Christopher Frank, clothier, I Gosditch street
Handley Fanny (Mrs.), outfitter, 45 Cricklade street
Hanks Thomas, glass &; china dealer, 7 Gosditch street Jones Emma (Mrs.), apartments, 59 Lewis lane
Harding Ethni, Woodbine inn P .H. Chesterton lane
Jordan, Gorton & Co. pawnbrokers, 23 &; 24 Dollar st.
Harman Albert Edwd. lloyal Oak P.R. 70 Gloucester st
Harmer Alfred Thomas, printer, stationer, stamp dis- Jordan William, beer retailer, 78 Cricklade street

tributor &; emigration agent, Market place Jukes Samuel, iron &; brass founder, Watermoor road
Harmer George Henry, printer, publisher & proprietor of
Keates William, tailor, 14 Cricklade street
the " Wilts &; Gloucestershire Standard &; Swindon
Express," Dyer street. See advertisement Keene Reginald, provision dealer, 89 Cricklade street
Harmer William ·Bishop, collector of poor rates &; sani-
tary inspector to Cirencester rural district council, Kennett Charles, carriage proprietor. 19 Lewis lane
Cornhall corridor &; 7 Victoria road
Harris Henry, Duke of York P.H. 53 Gloucester street Kilminster Mark, beer retailer &; shoe ma. 22 Sheep st
Harrison Joseph, woodreeve to Earl Bathurst, Beech
Copse lodge King William, cook, confectioner &, flour dealer, pleasure
Hart Hannah (Mrs.), news agent, 30 -Castle street
Hawes Waiter, certified bailiff under the "Law of Dis- &; wedding party caterer; all orders receive prompt
tress Amendment Act," Old Grammar school
attention, 157 Cricklade street

King'. Head Hotel (Cirencester Hotel Co. Limited),

first-class family & commercial hotel; posting in a:ll

its branches; parcels agents for the G.W.R. Market pI

Kittow John, hair dresser & umbrella maker, 67 Castle st

Knowlson Richard, hair dresser, 25 Gosditch street

Lait Frederick William, farmer, The Beeches mill

Lait George William, provision dealer, 46 Cricklade st

Lait Richard, baker, 43 Dollar street

Lambert Henry J ames, insurance agent, 9 Ashcroft gdns

Lane Emma (Mrs.), apartments, 3 Bromley terrace

Lapper H. E. & ·Co. watch makers, 20 Dyer street

Larkin William, old clothes dealer, 96 Cricklade street

Lamer Henry, rope &; twine dealer &; fishmonger, 149

Cricklade street

Lawn Henry Bentley, hair dresser, 20 Sheep street

Lawrence Charles Arthur M.A. solicitor, see Haygarth k

Lawrence

Lawson Vincent Alexander A.M.I.C.E. consulting en-

gineer, II3 Dyer street

Leaholme College for -Boys (Edwd.Jas.Edgell Creese,prm)

Leaholme College for Young Ladies (Mrs.E. J. E. Creese,

principal)

Leaholme College Natura Society (E. J. E. Creese. pres)'

Legg G. & Son, boot &; shoe makers, legging makers &>

leather merchants. leather bags, 14 Gosditch street' ,.

Legg Fredk. grocer & wine &; spirit agent, 16 Dollar SI;

Legg Thomas, boot maker, Gordon place, l)ollar street

Lewis Henry Thomas, bacon curer, see ~ &; L~wis.
Lewis Thomas, bacon curer, see Cole &; t~w~

122 CIRENCESTER. GLO UCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S



Limon Jane Emma (Mrs.), milliner, 163 Gloucester st Parry &; Son, gmcers & agents for W. I&; A. Gilbey Lim.

Little William, apartments, 26 Park street wine &; spirit merchants, 3 Dyer street

Lloyds Bank Limited (Oounty of Gloucester Bank) Paternoster & Son, chemists, 170 Oricklade street

(branch) (William Wearing, manager), 70astle street; Payne Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, lI8 Gloucester street

open 10 to 3 except mondays 10 to 5, &; saturdays 10 Payne William, surveyor to the Gloucester County Coun.
to I; draw on head office, 72 Lombard st. London EO cil &; to the Oirencester highway board,I Grosvenor vils

Lock Jane (Mrs.), Nag's Head P.H. 1 London road Pearce Frederick, ohimney iSlWeeper, 95 Cricklade street;

Lock John, haulier, Querns lane Peckham John, butcher, 21 Cricklade street

Lock Meriel (Mrs.), beer retailer &; haulier, 9 London rd IJerrett Francis, baker & corn dealer, Park street
Lock William, timber merchant &; general carrier, I PelTing Edward, currier & leather cutter, 10 Castle l!It
Phronix Firewood Co. (The) (agents, T. Bullock & Co.
London road &; Victoria road .
coal merchants), Sheep street
Long Alfred, saddler, see Mills &; Long
Phrenix Fish & Game Supply Co. Loo. (Charles Stallard,
Long &; Gillett, cheese factors, Black Jack street
Maberley Geo: horse ,breaker, Barton ter. Gloucester st manager), ISO Cricklade street
McAfee Henry, inland revenue officer, 3 Corin villas Pinnegar Bridget (Mrs.), apartments, 31 Chester street .
Mackinnon Oharles M.A., M.B., O.M.surgeon, medical Powell &; Sons, musriC} warehouse, 46 Dollar street
officer &; public vaccinator, Southern district, Ciren- Pcwell David, teaoher of music, 55 iLewis< lane
cester union &; medical officer to the cottage hospital, Powell's Boys' Upper School (Rev. George Richard Faulk·
ner M.A., D.D. head master; Arthur Harris, seoond •
workhouse &; post office, Davaar, Dyer street
master), Victoria road
Mahoney Patrick, Bishop Blaize inn, Cricklade street
Price Annie (Miss), apartments, 54 Lewis lane
Maisey Thomas, tailor, II Dollar street
Price Oharles, shopkeeper, & post office, 138 Gloucester llt
Mann &; Cox, printers, I I Oricklade street
Mann Thomas, furniture dealer, II Cricklade street Price Edmund, Nelson inn, 48 Gloucester street
I'rice George, bill poster, Galba villas, Victoria Il'oad
Marriott Frederick Lanham, tailor, 6 Park street
Maslin Jas• .Alex. greengrocer &; carrier, 56 Cricklade st Pullan Henry, cycle agent, 69 Oastle street
Maslin Joseph Henry, dairyman, 9 Oorin street RawlinSJ Joseph, manager Capital & Counties Bank Lim.

Mas~:)Dic Lodge (Cotteswold No. 5'92) (Samuel Fay, sec.), & treasurer Oirencester highway board &; the union &;
King's Head hotel rnrl,\l district council, I Gosditch street

Master &; Paget, land agents &; surveyors, 47 Dyer st Heeve J ames, farmer, Bowling Green farm
Matthews Arth.Jas.cycle mfr. 139, 140 &; 141 Cricklade st Rellie Alexander, King's .Arms P.R. 80 Castle street
Ricliing;; William, shopkeeper, 22 Steps<tairs lane
Matthews John, blacksmith, 20 Park street
Matthews Beatrice (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 20 Park street Riddler Emily Agnes &; Mary (Misses), laundresiles, 50
Coxwell street
Matthews Henry, accountant, 27 Cecily hill
Risely Mark, collector to Gas 00. Bedford viI. Victoria rd
Matthews Joseph, tobacconist, 16 Dyer street
Matthews Thos. sec.Oirencester Brewery Lim.Oricklade st Roads Harry, sec. to Apsley Hall, 131 Dyer street
Robertson George Meyla", dentist, 12 Black Jack street
May George, baker, 79 &; 80 Dyer street
Rogers. William, picture frame maker, 181 Gloucester it
Miller James (Mrs.), apartments, 7 Oorin street
Millin .Ann (Mrs.), Foresters' Arms P:H. 30 Queen st Rooke Albert, watoh: maker, 16 Gloucester street
Millington James Edward, grocer, Post office, Queen st Rocke William Richard, insurance agent, Ashcroft l'oad
Royal Agricultural College (Rev.' John B. M'Clellaa M.A.
Millington John, coach bUIlder, Victoria road
principal)
Mills & Long, saddlel\!l, 163 Cricklade street
Moore Charles I<'rederick, auctioneer &c. Corn hall, Dyer st Sare Henry Frank, Fleece hotel, Il7 Dyer street
Saunders .& Sons Llm. builders, contractors &; deco-
Moreman Walter, watch maker, IS Oricklade street
Mcrgan Sarah &; .Ann Mary (MiS'Ses~, shopkeepers, 33 rators, Ashcroft
Saunders Job, building ISIll'veyor & licensed valuer, &;
Gloucester street
agent to the Royal Insurance Co. A:s:heroft
Morgan George, oSllpt. of poli~e, Castle street
Morris Alfred Edwin, saddler, 8 Dyer street Saunders Michael, boot maker, 37 Victoria road
Saunden William Henry, house decorator &; furnisher,
Moss Edward, farm bailiff tQ Earl Bathurst, Cecily hill
dealer in antiques &; removal contractor, 5 Market pI
Moss Harry, grocer, 22 Dollar street Savory & Coles, general printers, publishers, litho-

Moulder &; Arnold, grQcel'SI, 159 Cricklade street graphers, bookbinders. booksellers, stationers & account

Moulder Martha (Mis's), teacher of music, 8 'Dhomas st book manufactrs. (established ,1852), 1'& 2 Black Jack st

Mullings, Ellett &; Co. 'solicitars, 12 Park street Savory Frederick Mortimer, art photographer, 8 Oastle st
Mullings John (firm, Mulling~, Ellett &; 00.), solicitor &
Sawyer Albert Edward, boot &; shoe ma. 4 Black Jack st
commissioner to administer oath~, 12 Park street
Murch Robert, station master, G. W. Railway, 2 Bromley School of .Art (Charles Stolle, master), Corn Hall chmbrs
Scott &; 00. tailors, 83 Oastle street
terrace, Tower street Sealy Frederio Hudson, gas rate collector & sec. to the

Murphy John, shopkeeper, 52 Gloucester street Cirencester Oorn Rall Co. Limited; office, 45 Dollar

:Museum (Chrisropher Bowly J.P. curator; Mrs. Manha street; residence, 32 Stepstairs lane, Watermoor
lliggs, keeper), Tetbury road Selby Albert, tobacconist &; hair dresser, 8~ Oastle street

Xewcombe G. F. &; E. (late W. Newcombe), builders,
contractors, sa.n:itaI1y &; .building material merchants, Sevrell & Sous, .solicitors, 45 Dollar street
stone &; monumental masOns, steam.saw millS! &; joinery Sewell Edward Clare (firm, Sewell & ISons), solicitor, per-

"Works, Cricklade street; stone quarry, Tetbury road; petual commissioner & commissioner to administer
oaths, 45 Dollar street
lime kiln, near R.A. College
Newoombe Ernest, deputy registrar of births &; deathlt for Shave John, inspector to Oirencester Independent Society
Cirencester district &; of marriages for the union 1 for the Prevention of Cruelty to .Animals, Castle 6treet
' Shilham John, shopkeeper, 18 Dollar street
Corin villas
:Kic~lin George Edric, cigoar & tobacco merchant &; cigar- Shore 'rulomas William, fancy warehouse, 74 Castle street
Singer Manufacturing Co. (John May, branch manager),
ette manufacturer &; importer, 130 Market place
17 Oasrtle street
NOl'ris Herbert Ellis, watch maker, 15 Dyer street
'Oakley Rooms (W. Cole (exors. of), proprietors), Dyer st Skuse Henry &; Sons, boot makers, 137 Dyer street
Smith C. & Son, grocers, 9 Gosditch street
Organ Edward, Three Cocks P.H. 50 Castle ..treet
Smith John & Son, corn dealerS'. :130 &; 160 Oricklade st
'Organ John, whiteSllDith, x Sheep street
()rmond William, draper, 4 Market place ~mith R. T. & Co. carriers I&; shipping agents, Great

()rpet Owen, florist, 18 Dyer street ·Westem railway ,station; &; at Gloucester, Stonehouse,

Orum Joseph, grocel'l &; provision mer. 49 to 5,1 Dyer Bt Stroud, Brimscombe & Tet/bury

Ovens Thomas O. &; Son, house furnishers & auctioneers, Smith & Co. ironmongers, SI Coxwell street
Smith Charles William, chemist & drnggist, 14 Dyer st
43, 44 &; 45 Dyer street
OVl'rseers' Office (Frederick Harmer, assistant; William Smith Edward. butcher, 42 Dollar street
B. Harmer, collector of poor rates), Corn H~ corridOl', Smith Jesse (established over 60 years), family bureher,
sausage maker, bacon curer &c. 6 St. John street
Dyer street
Smith Thomas, coach maker, Querns lane
OwenSl Thomas, booking clerk G.W.R. Irmin lodge Sm~th Wm. Hy. fishmonger & dealer in game, 17 Dyer st
Pace Frederick, White Lion P.B. 10 Gloucester street
SmIth Wm. In. Cotswold coffee tavern, 19 Gosditeh street
Padbnry Maria (Miss), corset maker, 16 Thomas street Smith's Charity (George Lafford, ~ec.), Ashcroft villas
Paget Arthur Leopold, land agent, see Master &; Paget
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (A. T. Har-
PaiSlh Daniel, basket maker, 77 Castle street
Paish Reuben, basket maker, 29 Dyer street mer), Market place

Palmer Williaro,. ooalmerchant, G.W.R. wharf Somers William George, bandmaster 4th Battalion (Mili-

Pant'OIl Samuel James, relieving officer Centre district, tia) Gloucestershire. Regiment, 21 Dollar street
Oirencester union, 'S.7 Thomas street
Sparrow James, foreman to urban d~strict council, 13
Parsons John, general smith, 58 Dyer stre~t Somerford road .

Spencer Ellen Jane (Mrs.), Phrenix P.H. 22 Park street

DIRECTORY. ] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. CLEARWELL. 123

Stallard ChaTles, Red Lion inn; licensed to let horses, Wakefteld & Son, tailors, breeches makers &; hosiers,

traplP & carriages &, furniture remover, 20 Dollar street; 122 Dyer street

&; fishmonger &; marine store dealer, 150 Criqklade 1St. Walden Jesse, butcher, 26 &, 27 Dyer street

& Phrenix brick works, South Cerney Walker 'fhomas, King's Head Hotel tap, 162 Oricklade st

Stamp Office (Alfred Thomas Harmer, distributor), Wa-rd Henry, Talbot P.H. Victoria road

Market place Warner Mary Sophia (Miss), matron, Cottage hospital,

Star Tea Co.' Lim. tea &; provision dealers,168 Oricklade st Sheep street

Stevens Isabella (MM.), shopkeeper, 53 Chester street Watts George, Wheatsheaf P.H. 129 Oricklade street
Wearing Willia~, manager of the County of Gloucester
Steven, James, furniture dealer, 142 CrickIade street

Stradling Alfred, watch maker &; jeweller, 132 Dyer street branch of Lloyds Bank Lim. treasurer to the urban

Stuart Robert Edward, .solicitor, 113 Dyer street council, the school board, infectious diseases hospital &;

Swan hotel (l\Irs. E. Baldwin, proprietress), family, Chamber of Agriculture, 7 Castle street

commercial &, posting house, mail contractor &, agent Weatherill James, postmastel', Post office, Castle street

for the Nailsworth Brewery Co. Limited; hunters & Webb C. F. &; Son, wheelwrights, prize cart, wagon &;
. harne;ss horses on hire or for 'sale, 24 Gosditch street . implement manUfacturers, 8'tratton works

Taylor :Fredk. Wm. architect &, surveyor, 24 The Beeches Weskett Frederick, milk dealer, 18a, Chester street

Taylor George, shoeing smith, Canal wharf Whatley Ernest, land &; estate agent & valuer, II3 Dyer st

Taylor .lane (Mrs.), shopkeeper, S9 OrickIade street Wheeler Harry, Three Compasses P.H. 40 Castle 'Street

Taylor Thomas, caretaker, Apsley hall White John, dairyman, 17 Park street

Taylor William, haulier, Gas lane Whitfield James William, confectioner, 19 Dyer street

Teago Thomas, a.partments', 3 Silver street WickS Fl'<.'derick, Bell P.H. 85 Castle street

Telling George, poulterer, 31 Castle street Wicks George Hy. Twelve Bells P.H. & smith, 51 Lewis la

Temperance Hall (Edward Brewer, keeper), Th().mas st Williams Chas. Jas. baker & bacon curer, 134 'Gloucester st

Thomas Mary (Mrs.), apartmentS', 26 Black. Jack street Williams James, hair dresser, 105 Dyer street

Tovey Henry, ironmonger, manufacturer, hot &; cold water Williams John, assistant inspector to the urban district

engineer &; implement agent, 121 Dyer street council, Cheste-rton

Town Hall, Market place William.. Jo~eph, tobacconist, 44 Cricklade street

Tranter Alfred, butcher, see Cola &; Tranter Wilts & DOl'set Bank Lim. (branch) (Gement Smart

Tranter Mice Margaret (Miss), dress maker,61 Dyer 'Street Blandford, manager); open 10 to 3 except mondays,

Tranter John Townsend, tailor, 61 Dyer street . 10 to 5 & saturdays 10 to I; draw on London & West-

Trinder Joseph, chemist, 136 Dyer street minster Bank. Limited, London E C

Trinder William, manure agent, 5 Querns hill Wilts &; Gloucestershire Standard (George Hy. Harmer,

Trinder William, Jun. wheelwright, Canal wharf pUblisher; published saturday); office, Dyer street.

Trotman Oharles, grocer, 16 Park street See adverti~ement

Trowbridge Samuel, Bear inn, 24 Dyer street Wiltshire United Dairies Lim. (The), Ashcroft road

Tuck Ruth (Mrs.), apartments, 7 Silver street Wilton Annie (Mrs.), eating' house, 120 Dyer street, &

Tudway Clement (firm, Mullings, Ellett &; Co.), soliciwr temperance hotel, I&;2 Silver streQt

& commissioner to administer oathS', 12 Park street Winstone & Son, boot makers, I Cricklade street

Turner Edmund & Co. Lim. boot &; .shoe mas. 7 Dyer !it Witts .Alfred George, wool stapler, 21 Cecily hill

Turner Daniel, eating house, II9 Cricklade street 'Vitts David (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 40 Gloucester street

Tyler John, boot & shoe dealer, 161 Crick1ade street Woodward Emma (Mrs.), assistant practical instructress

Uzzell Frederick, beer retailer, 9 Chesterton lane in College dairy, College dairy

Vale of White Horse Hounds (Lord Bathurst's) (George Woodward Thomas, college bailiff, The College dairy

Drown, huntsman), The Kennels ",,"oolls Waiter, mineral water manufactr. 57 Gloucester st

Viner Edw!ll'd James, cook & confectioner, 21 Dyer street Wright Catherine (Miss), apartments, Belle vue, A8lhcrott

Voyce James Henry, coffee house, 10 Gosditeh street Young Henry, insurance supt. 71 Dyer .9treet

WakefiQld John Edward, draper, 13 Dyer street Zachary &; Butler, wine &; spirit merchants, Gosditch st

CLAPTON is a. parish, 21 miles south from Bourton- Oxford, and held since 1888 by the Rev. Llewellyn
on-the-Water station on the Banbury and Cheltenham Paganus Williams M.A. of Hert:t1ord College, Oxford.
branch of the Great Western railway, 6 south from Stow Col. H. Cholmondeley, of Keyham Old Hall, Leicester,
and 4 north-east from [Northleach, in the Eastern divi- who is lord of the manor, and Ernest Wood esq. of London,
sion o~ the county, Lower Slaughter hundred, Stow-on- are the principal landowners. The soil is stone brash
the-Wold petty sessional division, union and county court and clay; subsoil, stone brash and clay. The chief
district, rural deanery of Stow, archdeaconry of Oiren- crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The areB is 783
cester and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. acres; rateable value, £596; the population in 1891
James is a small, ancient edifice of stone, chiefly in the was IIS.
Early English style, with some debased PerpendiCUlar Parish Clerk, Francis Hughes.
insertions, consistin~ of chancel, nave, south porch and Wall Letter Box cleared at 12 noon. Letters from BoUl'-
a. sman turret containing one bell: there are sittings ton-on-the-Water S.O. arrive at 10.30 a.m. Bourton
for 100 persons. The separate register dates only from is the nearest money order & telegraph office
.the year 1873, the registers of Bourton-on-the-"Vater A School Board of 5 members was formed in 1893; Charles
and Lower Slaughter having been previously used. The Pettifer, clerk to the board
living is a chapelry, annexed, together with that of Lower Board School (mixed), built in 1896, at a cost of about
Slaughter, to the rectory of Bourton-on-the-Water, joint £900, for 4.2 children; average attendance, 32; Mrs.

net yearly value £250, in the gift of Wadham College, Relen Pettifer, mistress

Goodway Edward Humphries Frederick William, farmer Page In.E:kinghon, frmr. Manor farm

Gardner Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Jenkms Nichol!ll9, farmer Reynolds Richard, farmer

Hall J osiah, carpenter & shopkeeper

CLEARWELL is a. village and tithing, formed April credence table, sedilia, and richly ornamented reredos,
18, 1856, into an ecclesiastical parish from the civil parish the latter being a memorial to Capt. the Hon. Windham

of Newland; it is on the road flrom Coleford to Chep- Henry Wyndharn Quin, Grenadier Guards, who died 24th

stow, 2! miles south from Coleford station on the Severn October, 1865, erected by his widow: the stained east
and Wye and Severn Bridge and Great Western rail- window was placed to the memory ()f the same gentle-
ways, and 6 south-east from !Monmouth, in the Forest man, by his mother, the late D{)wager Countess of Duil-

of Dean division of the county, hundred of St. Briavels, raven: the pulpit is enriched with symbolical panels and
county court district of Monmouth, union of Monmouth, medallion heads of Evang'elist~ and Prophets, the ground
petty sessional divisi.o-n of Coleford, roral' deanery of work being exquisitely diapered: the lower stage of the

South Forest and archdeaconry and diocese of Glouces- tower serves as a baptistery: the font consists of an
ter. This place was formerly called "Clowerwell," and octagonal basin on a shaft of polished red granite: there
at one time "Wellington," and takes its name from the are 390 sittings. The register dates from the year 1830.
beautii1ul spring which supplies the village, and which The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £260. inc1ud-
has never been known to fail. The church of St. Peter, ing 10 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the
erected through the munificence of the late Dowager Bishop of Gloucester, and held since 1895 by the Rev.
Countess of Dunraven, and consecrated April 5, 1866, Charles Frederick Goddard. Here is a. Primitive Methodist
is a building of local red sandstone, with Bath stone chapel, built in 1852. There is a Cemetery, three-quar-
dressings, ;n the French Gothic style of the 13th cen- ters of an acre in extent, with a mortuary chapel erected
tury, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of four bays, in 1867, upon the site of the old church, from designs

aisles, south porch, org-an chamber and vestry on the by Mr. J. Middleton, architect. The beautiful village

north side, and a tower with a spire at the south-west cross, restored in 1876, is supposed to be of the 14th

angle containing a clock and 4 bells: the chancel has a century. The Scowls. or old mines (considered to be

124 CLEARWELL. GLOUCESTERSillRE. [KELLy'a

Roman), at Dean Pool, in this parish, are very interest~ Post Office.-.l\.f:rs. Elizabeth Yarworth, sub-postmistress.

ing. Clearwell Court, now (1897) vacant, is an ancient Letters through Coleford are delivered at 6.30 a.m.·

mansion of stone, standing in a park of 95 acres, and dispatched at 7 p.m. Postal orders are issued her~,
commands extensive views of ~he surrounding country. but not paid. The nearest money order & telegraph

The Crown is lord of the manor and the principal land~ office is at .coleford

owner. The soil is loamy and gravelly; subsoil, clayey, National School (mixed & infants), built, with master's

sandstone and limestone. The chief crops are wheat, residence, in 1858, chiefly by the late Dowatrer Countess

barley, oats and roots. The population of the parish in of Dunraven & enlarged in 1867, for 150 children; aver-

1891 was 999. age attendance, 87 mixed & 28 infants; George Henry

Parish Clerk, John Richards. Dickason, master

Cooper Arthur Purton, Perry grove Fox James, market gardener Miles Thomas, blacksmith & farmer

Oooper Miss, Perry .grove Fox Mary (Miss),Wyndham Arms P.H Moore William, art metal worker,agri-

Fryer William Henry, Rose bank Griffith J ames, farmer cultural implement maker, cycle

Goddard Rev. Charles F. Vicarage Harris James, beer retailer agent & general smith. See advert.

Langham The Misses, Mill end Harris Samuel Eli, farmer, Stow farm Powell David, farmer

Payne iRichd. Townsend, Lambs quay Jones Edmund, carpenter Rees Alfred & Son, stone proprietors

Roberts William, Perry grove Jones George, grocer & baker Rees Sarah (Mrs.), grocer & prov. dlr

COMMERCIAL. Keyse Charles, Ore Pool inn Richards John, shoe maker

Brown William, boot maker Lewis Jeremiah John, Butchers' Simmons William, farmer, P:atwell

Clarke Martin, farmer, Stow Arms P .H. &; farmer Teague Jas. M. farmer, Trowgreen

Curtis Edwin, beer retailer, Stow Matthews Richard, shopkeeper & Court farms

Dixon Mark Thomas, farmer, Scatter- Miles Henry, farmer, Candle Thomas Geo. farmer, Tannery farm

ford farm Miles James, farmer, Noxon Yarworth Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer &

Edward6 George, beer retailer Miles John, farmer, Longney farm po~t office

Fox Henry, haulier Miles John, jun. farmer, Platwell Yarworth William, butcher & farmer

CLIFFOBD CHAMBERS is a village and parish, Annesley M.A. and held since 18g6 by the Rev. William •
on the river Stour, which here divides the county from Archibald Pippet, of St. Aidan's. The charities amount
Warwickshire, Il miles from Milcote station on the Strat- to £u5 Ss. lod. of which £75 is applied to education
ford and Honeybourne branch of the Great Western rail- and the remainder distributed in kind. James Roberts-
way, 2 miles south from Stratford-on-Avon, 9 north-east West esq. of Alscot Park, Preston-on-Stour, who is lord
from Chipping Campden, 14 north-east from Evesham, of the manor, the Rev. Frands H. Annesley !M.A. vicar
40 north-east trom Gloucester and 96 from London, in of Gay ton, near Stafford, and the Coventry charity are
the Eastern division of the connty, upper division of the principal landowners. The soil is a rich loam and
the hundred of Tewkesbury, union and county court dis- clay; subsoil, stiff clay. The crops are wheat, beans,
trict of Stratford-on-Avon, petty sessional division of barley and roots. The area is 2,500 acres; rateable value,
Campden, rural deanery of Campden, archdeaconry of land, £990; buildings, £823; the population in 18g1
Oirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The church 01 was 348.

St. Helen is a small building of stone in the NQrman Parish Clerk, John Lifely.
and later styles, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch
and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, con- Post Office.-Thomas Matins, sub-postmaster. Letters
troning a clock and 5 bells: it contains several ancient through Stratford-on-Avon, which is the nearest money
monuments to the Raynsford family: the church was order & Preston-on-Stour the nearest telegraph office,
restored in 1885-7 at a cost of £1,556, and affords 170 arrive by mail cart at 6.30 a.m.; dispatched at 6.40
sittings. The register dates f,roOm the year 1'538. The p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
living is a rectory, net yearly value £106, induding 68 Kational School (mixed), built in 1882, for 100 children;
acres {)f glebe, in the gift of the Rev. Francis Hanbury average attendance, 90; Miss Annie Wilding, mistress

Pippet Rev.William Arc;hibald (rector) Coldicott WiIliam, shoe maker Jordan William Thomas, farmer

Smith Miss CrossIey Henry George, farmer MaIins Thomas, shopkeeper

Studdy Col. Thomas James Charles Day Albert E. farmer Pearson William, farmer

Aylmer J.P. Manor house Dodd William, carpenter Smith Harrieht (Mns.), blacksmith

COMMERCIAL. Fa~kuner John Thos. markt. gardener Smith Richard Sidney, miller (steam

Bailey Martin, carpentr.& wheelwright Hancock Frederick, farmer & water)

Bygrave Susannah (Mrs.), landowner Hodges Thomas, farmer Woodward Joseph, New inn

&; farmer HoUand William, farmer

COALEY, or Cowley, is a parish and picturesque viI- "Local Government Act, 1894," has been apportioned

lage, 2 miles south-east from Ooaley junction and 2 south- by the Charity Commissioners as follows :-half for the

west from Frocester station on the Birmingham and repair of the church and half for the relie~ of the poor

Bristol section of the Midland railway, 2! north-east from not in receipt of parish pay. Here is an extensive edge-

Dursley, 12 south fu"om Gloucester, 7! south-west from tool manufactory, which gives employment to many hands.

Stroud and 108 from London, in the Mid division of Lord Fitzhardinge, 'Who is lord of the manor, and Thomas

the county, Berkeley hundred, Dursley union, petty ses- Morse esq. J.P. are the chief landowners. The soil is

sional division and county court district, and in the gravelly and clayey; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops

rural deanery of Dursley and archdeaconry and diocese are wheat, barley and some land in pasture. The area

of Gloucester. The Birmingham and Bristol branch of is 2,463 acres; rateable value, £5,096; the population in

the Midland railway passes through the parish. The 1891 was 654.

church of St. Bartholomew is an edifice of stone, re· Dead Hill was transferred to Slimbridge under the

built (with the exception of the tower) in 1857, at a ., Divided Parishes Act, 1882."

cost of £2,000, under the direction of Messrs. Jacques Parish Clerk, Charles Cooper. .

and Son, architects, in the Early English style; it con- Post Office.-Thomas Webb, sub-postmaster. Letters

sists of chancel, nave of five bays, north aisle, north arrive from Dursley at 8. IS a.m. & 4 p.m.; dispatched

porch and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, at 8.25 a.m. & 4.30 p.m. The nearest money order

containing a clock and 6 bells: there are 300 sittings. office is at Cam. The railway station is the nearest

The register dates from the year 1581. The living is a telegraph office for collection & Cam for delivery of

vicarage, net yearly value £180, with residence, in the telegrams

gift of the Bishop of Gloucester, and held since 1883 Wall Letter Boxes, The Mills, cleared at 4.45 p.m. week

by the Rev. William Jones Evans. Here is a Wesleyan days only; Far Green, 8,45 a.m. &; 5 p.m

chapel. Thert~ is an endowment of £38 12S. yearly for National School (mixed), built in 1864, for 130 children;

the repair of the church and the relief of the second poor average attendan<le, 101; Hy. Richard Caddy, master;

of the parish. This charity, under the provisions of t,he I there is a house for the master

Bozworth Henry, Cypress house Camm Hesther (Mrs.), frmr. Elms Hadley Charles, farmer, Silver street

Clarke Geo. Henry, OatriJge house Camm Thomas, farmer, Knapp farm Hill George, farmer, Betworthy farm

Evans Rev. William Jones, Vicarage Chamberlain Llewellyn, shopkeeper Hill Richard William, farmer, Pin-

Plnllips William, Mill house Curtis & Son, wheelwrights & buildl'l nie:s End farm

Savage Thomas, Silver Street farm Edwards N. (Miss), poultry farm Hobbi William, farmer, Mauley farm

COMMERCIAL. Hadley Ernest & Bernard, farmers Joyner Henry, farmer, Leigh farm

Adey Edwin, Heart of Oak. inn, wheel- Hawkins John, farmer, Hill House Parker Geo.Grantley,frmr.Lapley frID

wright & smith farm (letters via 'Oambridge, Stone- Pegler .Ann (Mrs.), butcher

Bailey George, farmer, Westfield farm house) Prout Ann (Mrs.), farmer, Silver st

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. COLD ASHTO~ • 125

Prout Chas. Wm. farmer, Elmcote Smith Jas. Lusty, farmer, Field farm Smith Robert, Swan P.R. &; farmer

Prout Robart, farmer, Corner farm Smith Jesse, farmer &; cattle dealer, Thomas Leonard &; Co. edge tool mfrs

Prout Wm. A. farmer, Silver St. frm Church farm Webb Thomas, grocer, Post office

Smith Charles,farmer,Pidgeon Ho.frm Smith J olln, blacksmith Wilkins William, cattle deal2r

Smith George, Fox &; Hounds P.R

COALPIT HEATH is an ecclesiastical parish, includ- Wilts. The soil is clay. The chief crops are wheat,
barley, oats and pasture. The population in 1891 was-
ing the hamlet of Nibley, formed April 29, 1845, from the 1,78r.
parishes of Westerleigh and Frampton Cotterell; it is 2
miles south-west from Yate station on the Bristol and NIBLEY is a hamlet, I mile north, on the river Frome.
Sexton, .A.lbert Williams.
Birmingham section of the Midland railway and 4 west-
by-south from Chipping Sodbury, in the Southern divi- Post Office. Joseph Newman, sub-postmaster. Letters
sion of the county, petty sessional division of Lawford',g arrive from Bristol at 8,40 a.m. &i 5 p.m.; dispatched
at 3.15 &; 5.45 p.m. Postal orders issued here. but not
Gate, Chipping Sodbury union and county court district, paid Frampton Cotterell is the nearest money order &;
rural deanery of Bitton, and archdeaconry and diocese of telegraph office. Letters for Mays Hill received through
Bristol. The church of St. Saviour is a building of stone Bristol, via Frampton Cotterell
in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave of
three bays, aisles, south porch and a small western tower Wall Letter Boxes, Mays Hill, cleared at 9 a.m. &; 5.25
containing one bell: there are sittings for 320 persons, p.m. week days only; Nibley, cleared at 5.10 p.m. week
all free. The register dates from the year 1845. The days only

living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £150, with resi- Manor School (mixed), erected. with master's residence.
dence, in the gift of the Bishop of Bristol, and held since by the lords of the manor in 1868, for 340 children;
1881 by the Rev. Frederick William Griffiths B.A. of average attendance, 49 boys, 41 girls &; 57 infants; &;
University College, Durham. In this parish are exten- is supported in part by Sir John Henry Greville Smyth
sive collieries. The principal landowners are Sir John bart. & Charles Edward H. Athole Colston esq. M.P.;
Lambert Moss Weston, master; Miss Frances Dunster,
Henry Greville Smyth bart. M.A. of Ashton Court, Long infants' mistress
Ashton, Somerset, and Charles Edward Hungerford Athole
Colston esq. M.P., D.L.• J.P. of Roundway Park, Devizes,

COALPIT HEATH. Flook Henry, farmer Payne William Henry, baker &; grocer

Griffiths Rev.Fdk.Wm.,B.A. Vicarage F~rd Henry, farmer Shepherd Christopher, frmr.Mays hill

Hewitt Geo.Colthurs't,Serridge house HGIaMbrrbaIs.Sy'.sGAlheboI~l.rl\rtJo,VJ~lfdaernmeHr , Oxbridge farm, Skinner George, farmer, Henfield
Hewitt Miss, Heath cottage a rt P .H.K endeI<lh Smith Francis Jesse, farmr.Mays hill
Stabbins Daniel, frmr. Frog lane farm
Hollister George, weighing clerk to Stabbins Moses Bernard, farmer, Box
COMMERCIA.L.

.A.damrs Thos. beer retailer, The Star CoaJpit Heath Co Hedge farm
Bennetii Stephen, farmer, Says art. fm Hollister Joe, storekeeper to Coalpit Stone Samuel, Half Moon &; farmer

Bryant John, farmer Heath Co. New Engine Stone William, saddler

Bryant Jonathan, Ring of Bells P.H Jarrett Thomas, farrier Turner Charles, head clerk to Coalpit

Bryant William, shopkeeper Luton Thomas, farmer, Kendelshire Heath Colliery Co. Kendelshire

Caple George, farmer, Kendelshire Matthews Ann (Mrs.), frmr. Kendelsh Wilcox Daniel, dairyman

<Joalpit Heath Colliery Co. (Georg-el Newman Charles, clerk to Coalpit

Colthui"st Hewitt .A.ssoc.M.Inst.C.E.1 Heath Colliery Co NIBLEY.
general manager; Frank R. Eames, Newman Frank S. farmer, Henfield

certificated manager) Newman George, farmer, Ram hill .A.lsop J'Oseph, shopkeeper

Cdbb John, farmer Newman Jsph. shopkeeper, }'!ast office }<'arthing John, Bell P.H

Eames Frank R. certificated mana- Newman Thomas, farmr. Kendelshire Griffiths MaryElizh. (Mrs.),Swan P.H

ger to Coalpit Heath Colliery Co Prior Henry Thomas, New inn P.H. Sherborne William, farmer

Eley George, farmer, Kendelshire Mays hill Wadley J'oseph, shopkeeper

COATES is a parish and village, between the Stroud Crook Gibbs M.A. of Trinity College, Oxford. Trews-

and Tetbury roads, It miles north-west from Tetbury bury, the residence of Edwards Spencer esq. is a modern

Road goods station (which is in this parish) and 4 miles mansion, standing on the site of an ancient encampment,

north-west from Kemble Junction station on the Glou- and is about I mile south-east from the church. Coates

cester and South Wales branch of the Great W~stern Manor House is the residence of Francis Frederic Daniell

railway, 14 south-east from Gloucester and 3t west from esq. William Tombs Dewe esq. is lord of the manor.
Cirencester, in the Eastern division of the county, hun- Earl Bathurst, Michael Biddulph esq. M.P. of Ledbury,

dred of Crowthorne and Minety, Cirencester union, petty .A.lbemarle Cator esq. H. HowelI esq. and the rector are

,sessional division and county court district, and in the the principal landowners. The soil is various, principally

rural deanery and archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese stone brash; subsoil, rock. The chief crops are wheat.

of Gloucester. The Thames and Severn canal passes oats, barley and turnips. The area is 2,514 acres; rate-

through the parish. One of the sources of the Thames is able value, £4,°7°; the population in 1891 was 450.

at a. place in this pari.sh cap-ed "~hame~ ~ead." The T.A.RLTON is a hamlet, It miles south-west, partly in

~hurch of St.. ~atthew IS an mterestIng ~uildmg of stone, this and partly in Rodmarton parish; for residents see
I~ the TransltIOnal:N?rman, lEarly English and Perpen- the latter. The small chapel of ease is a building of
dlCular .styles. consIstmg of chancel, nave of three baya, stone in the Normlln style, and consisting of nave and
so.uth aIsle, s.outh porch an~ .an embattled western tower chancel: it has been restored at the expense of the late
WIth lofty pmna~les, contamIn~ 2 bells: No~an south Miss Gordon, of Kemble, and affords 70 sittings.
doorway has zIg-zag mouldmgs: there IS a fine Parish Clerk George Roberts.

trefoil-headed pis.cina in the aisle, and the rich tracery Post, M. O. &; 'T. 0., S. B. &; Annuity &; Insurance Office.
and b~aded carvmg ?f the rood screen have been pre-
1Served. the font conslsts of a ~orman bowl on a modern -Mrs. Mary Ann Robens, sub-postmistress. Letters
pedestal: the church was entlrely restored and reseated
in 1860, and several of the windows have since been filled arrive from Cirencester at 7. 10 a.m.· dispatched at
with stained glass: there are 270 sittings. The register 6m '
.~o p.
dates from the year 1566. The living is a rectory, net . .. .
yearly value £300, derived from 483 acres of glebe, with NatIOnal School (mIxed), built In 1~49, for 80 children;
average a~tendance, 6o; t~ere IS a house for the

master; Rlchard Taylor Robmson, master

residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late John King Railway Goods Station, Tetbury road, Samuel W. Een-

Farlow esq. and held since 1847 by the Rev. Thomas nett, agent

Daniell Francis Frederic,TheManor ho Blackwell William, farm bailiff to Mrs. Robert'S Samuel, carrier.

Gibbs Rev. Thos.Crook M.A. Rectory Kilminster Savory Hy. gardener to F.Daniels esq

Kilmister Mrs. Old Manor hous& Bond George Will.iam, carrier Smith Lewis, coal merchant &; far-

Leighton Bryan Baldwin, The Elms Elkins Daniel, head gardener to .A.. mer, Tlhames Head wharf

Mansergh Mrs. Glebe house Cator esq Smith William, farm bailiff to the

Parson Edgcombe, Southfields Lawrence Georgiana (Miss), beer re- Rev. T. C. Gibbs

Spencer Edwards, Trewsbury tailer &; shopkeeper Tye Richard, farm bailiff to E. Par-

COMMERCIA.L. Messenger Thomas William,blacksmth son esq. &; assistant overseer

Avery Mary Ann (Mrs.), Railway Roberts Elizabeth (Miss), laundry Williams Robt. gardener at The Lodge

hotel, Tetbury road Roberts John, rustic worker

COLD ASHTON is a parish and village, on the Bath 10 east from Bristol and 8 south from Chipping Sodbury,

and Gloucester road. near the London and Bristol road, in the Southern division of the county, Pucklechurch

and bounded on the south by Somersetshire, si miles hundred, Chipping Sodbury union, Bath county court

north from Bath, which is the nearest railwa.y station, district, Sodbury petty sessional division, rural deanery

126 COLD ASHTON.. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

of Bitton, and archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. The £7 yearly value, arising from a. charge on the Hamswell
estate, and are chiefly assigned to the maintenance of the
church of the Holy Trinity is an ancient building of stone school. Hamswell House, the seat of the Whittington
in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, cleres- family, but at present occupied by Mrs. Gardiner, is a
stone mansion of the time of Henry VIII. Battle l"ield is
toried nave of three bays, south porch and an embattled at present unoccupied. Earl Temple, who is lord of the
manor, and the Whittingtons, of Hamswell, are chief
western tower, with pinnacles, containing 2 bells: there land,owners. The soil is clayey and sandy; subsoil, rock.
is a mural brass in the chancel, with a Latin inscription The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and roots. The
area is 2,300 acres; rateable value, £3,664; the popu,
of six lines t<l Thomas Key, rector, and builder of the lation in 1891 was 344.
church, c. 1500: there is a hagioscope on the south side
of the chancel arch, and on the opposite side is the PENNSYLVANIA is a hamlet half a mile north.
entrance to the ancient rood loft, with a spiral staircase: Sexton, J ames Lewis.
the carved stone pulpit, in which it is said Bishop Latimer
preached, is richly moulded, and has a canopy with Letters through Chippenham, via Marshfield~ which is
crocketed finials: the church was partially repewed in also the nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive
at 7 a.m. &; 6.15 p.m. - Wall Letter Box at Manor
1852, and in 1894 was entirely reseated and refloored, at Farm, cleared at 6.45 p.m. &; on sundays at 7.45 a.m

an estimated cost of £1,100, raised by subscriptions: an Free School (mixed), built in 1860, with master's resi-
organ, the gift of Miss Ward, was also erected a.t a cost of dence, by the late rector's family in memory of his
brother, J. Sayres esq. for 80 children; average at-
about £400: there are sittings for 300 persons. The tendance, 56; it is endowed with £5 yearly, left by Mr.
register of baptisms and burials dates from the year Whit,tington,and forming the greater part of the chari·
ties mentioned above; Charles Coulthurst, master
1734; marriages, 1754. The living is a rectory, net
yearly value £417, including 93l acres of glebe, with
residence, in the gift of trustees, and held since 1888 by
the Rev. Edward Henry Carleton Sayres M.A. of Exeter
College, Oxford. Here is a small Congregational chapel.
In the parish is an ancient camp. The charities are of

(Marked thus * Should be addressed Cowley Charles, White Hart. P.H. & MiD.liner William, farmer
Bath.) farmer, The l"olly Pritchard Aal'On, frmr.Shaplands fnn

*'Gardiner Mrs. Hamswell house Crew Arthur, farmer, Manor farm *Pritchard Wm. frmr. Low. Hamswell

Matthews Misses, Folly *EeJ.s. Stephen, farmer, Hill Rawlings Philip, blacksmith

Sayres Rev. Edward Henry Carleton Jefferis Thomas, farmer, Noadsleaze *Sparrow Arnold,farmer,Upper Hams-

M.A. ReC'tory MerchantThos.Swan P.H.Connsylvinia well farm

COMMERCIAL. Orchard William, carpenter .& wheel- Strange Austin,wheelwrt.Pennsylvania

*Alvis George, farmer, Lilyput farm wright, The Folly Walker In. Bubb, shopkpr. & farmer

CO LE FORD is 8 market town and tithing in the civil dean of Sc}Uth Forest. There is a chapel of ease at

parish of Newland, and was formed. into an ecclesias- Scowles, seating 100 persons. The mission church of

tical parish from the parish of Newland, May 14, 1872; the Good Shepherd, at Lane Ends, affords 200 sittings.

it has two stations, one on the Severn and Wye and The Baptist chapel, in Newland street, is' a large build-
Severn Bridge railway, and the other on the Great West· ing of stone, designed by Mr. O. G. Searle, of London,
ern railway, 8 miles north-west from Lydney, 9 west erected in 1858, at a cost of [,3,000, and will spa.t 800
fr{)m Newnham, 5 ,south-east from MODIDonth and 124 persons. Here is aI,so a Congregational chapel, erected
from London: it is head of a petty sessional division, in in 1842, and has 440 sittings; also a Wesleyan chapel,

the Forest of Dean division of the county, Saint Briaveh erected in 1851, with 120 eittings. The Cemetery, 4
hundred, MODIDouth uni{)n and county court district, acres in extent and containing two mortuary chapels,
rural deanery of South Forest, and archdeaconry and is on elevated ground on the confines of the town; it
diocese of Gloucester. The town, formerly governed by was consecrated on the 18th January, 1868, and cost
a. Local Board from Sept. 19, 1871, under the "Local about £2,600, and is under the control of a burial board
Government Act of 1858," has, since Dec. 18940 been of nine members. The Town Hall, in the centre of the
under the control of an Urban District Council of 9 memo Market place, was built in 1662, enlarged and restored
bers, constituted under the Act passed in that year; to its present state in 1866, and re-opened February 12th,
the town derives its: support from the extensive mining 1867: the basement is used as a market. The market
districts of the Forest of Dean, by which it is sur- is held on Friday and a cattle market on the 3rd Tuesday
rounded; it is lighted with gas by a company formed in every month; and there are fairs for the sale of wool,
in 1840, and ,supplied with water by gravitation from cattle and cheese, on the 20th of June and the last Fri-

a reservoir at Gorsey Hill, a. -short distanee from the day in August: the charter for holding the market was
town. The former church of St. John was an octagonal granted on the 13th day of April, in the I:3th year of the

building, erected in 1821, in place of the still earlier reign of Charles IT. the king contributing £40 towards

chapel of ease, but only the tower, containing a clock the former building. Henry Hall's charity, consisting of

and one bell, now remains. The present church of St. land at Awre and COD!lOls producing £52 5s. 4d. yearly,

John, at Bowen's Hill, erected from designs by Mr. F. is distributed among the poor of the parish of Newland.

S. WaIler, architect, at a cost of £6,655, and consecrated There are also almshouses at Newland for 8 men and 8
May, 1880, is a. building of stone, in the Early English women, founded in 1615 by Mr. William Jones, citizen

style, consisting of apsidaI chancel, nave, north porch of London and haberdasher, who appointed the Haber-

and south transept: it is intended to add north transept, dashers' Company to be guardians of the charity. A

a south-west tower and vestries: there are 450 sittings. sum of about £10 is distributed to the poor in money.
The register of baptisms dates from the year 1819: all Ten ahnshouses on Berry Hill were erected in 1889, by

baptisms, marriages and burials, previous to this date, Isaiah Trotter esq. The Crown is lord of the manor.
are included in the registers of Newland. The living is The principal landowners are the Crown, Isaiah Trotter
a vicarage, net yearly value £176, including 47 acres of esq. of The C<>ombs, W. Roberts esq. and Sydney J.
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of the Thomas esq. J.P., of Wynols Hill. The area is 2,322
diocese, and held since 1891 by the Rev. .Alan Whitm{)re acres; the population in 1891 was 4,199.
Cornwall M.A. of University College, Oxford, and rural Sexton, John Rees.

OFFIOIAL ESTABLISHMENTS, LOCAL INSTITU TIONS &c.

Post, M. O. &; T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Baylis Philip esq. Park end, Lydney

Office, Newland street.-Miss Ads Jones, postmistress. Deakin Thomas Hedges esq. Park end, Lydney

Lette1'"s are delivered from all parts at 6,40 a.m. & Dighton Capt. John Hy. Oak house, Newland, Coleford

from the North at 12.45 p.m. & 7.50 p.m.; di&- Elsom Sidney John esq. Yorkley

patched. to all parts 8.45 a.m.; to London at 8 p.m.; Fletcher Henry Studd esq. Lydbrook, Ross

to the North at 5.45 p.m. &; to the South at 8 p.m. Palmer Charles Thomas esq. Newland honse, Coleford

with extra stamp at 8.5 p.m Taylor Thomas Terrett esq. Market place, Coleford

Post Office, Lane Ends.-Miss Jane Herbert, oSub-p08t. Thomas Sydney John esq. Wynols hill, Coleford

mistress. Letters arrive from Coleford at 7 a.m.; Trotter Isaiah esq. The Coombs, Coleford

dispatched at 7 p.m Clerk to the Magistrates, Robert Hoskins Fryer, New-
Wall Letter Boxes.-Police Station, cleared at 8.40 a.m., land street

5.10 & 7.35 p.m.; Victoria road, cleared at 8.30 a.m.,
5.30 p.m. et 7.25 p.m. et Coalway Lane End, cleared at Petty Sessions are held at the Police Court every alter...
nate tuesday at II a.m. The following places are in-
J p.m.; Palmer's Flat, cleared at 6.40 p.m
cluded in the petty sessional division :-English, Bick-
County Magistrates for Coleford Petty Sessional Division. nor, Newland, St. Briavels, West Dean, Staunton, &

Davies Lt.-Col. Jas. The Ga.rt.h, Monmouth (chairman) part of East Dean & Ruardean.

nmECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. COLEFORD. 121

URBAN DISTRICT COUNCIL. PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of Services.

Sydney J. Thomas esq. J.P. Chairman. St. John's Church, Rev. Alan Whitmore Cornwall M.A.
vicar; 1St & 3rd sundays, XI a.m. & 3 &; 6 p.m.;
Offices, Gloucester road. other sundays, IX a.m. & 6 p.m. &I every sunday 8
a.m.; daily (summer), 8 a.m. &; 7.30 p.m.; wed.
Members.
7.30 p.m
Retire in 18g8. Baptist; II p.m. &; 6 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m

Alfred Heath . Henry Benfield Con~egational, Rev. George Jarvis; XI a.m. &; 6' p.m. ;
Henry Allford Timothy Smith
John WiIliam Watts Edward James Highley wed. 7.30 p.m
Henry Adams Alfred Webb Wesleyan, IO.30 a.m. & 6 p.m.; tues. 7.30 p.m

Board day, first tuesday in every month at 7 p.m. SCHOOLS.

Clerk, Thomas H. Hullett Grammar, founded in 1626, by Mr~ Edward Bell, of

Treasurer, Rt. Leonard Tuckey, Capital & Counties Bank Writtle, Essex, for 12 free scholars of the parish of

Medical Officer of Health, Peter Buchanan M.B., a.M. Newland, or, failing these, for any boys over seven

:Bank house years of age who can read & write: new school build-

Collector, Francis G. Hart, Newland street ings were erected in 1875, in which the head master

Surveyor &; Sanitary Inspector, Wm. J. Blanch, Poolway receives boarders: the school is divided into two de...

PUIlLIO ESTAELISHMENTS. partments, classical & commercial; & there are
Cemetery, Robert Hoskins Fryer, Newland street, clerk
12 foundation ,scholarships, each of the value of £1
to the burial board; John Rees, sexton
Crown Office, Forest of Dean, E. StaffDrd Howsrd esq. IS. od., & tenable until 15 years of age: attached to

.gaveller; Thomas Forster Brown, deputy gaveller &; this foundation is an almshouseJ at Newland for 4
men & 4 'Women, each receiving about S'S. per week;
Crown receiver & registrar; Philip Baylis esq. deputy the general income of the foundation is now (1897)
surveyor; Oharle& Edward Machen, aSSIstant deputy £185 yearly, derived from u4 acres of land at Cole~ord•
Crown surveyor of Woods & FDrests Newland & St. Briavels; Rev. John Talbot Gardmer,
Police Station, Grantley Ford, superintendent; 1 ser- RA., of Trinity college, Dublin, head master

geant & 3 constables National, Ilowenshill (boys), built in 1884. for 120 boys;
Stamp Office, Post office, Matthew Jones, distributor average attendance, 91; Henry Holman. master
Town Hall &J Market Hall Co. Limited, Theophilus
Girls', Coalway lane, built in 1838, for 160 children;
Cooper, secretary average attendance, 101; Miss Mary Lewi9, mistress.
Infants'. Bowen'~ hill, for XI4 children; average at-
VOLUNTEERS. tendance, 69; Miss F10rence Oehl, mistress
2nd Volunteer Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment (G
National, Scowles (mixed & infants), erected in I8S8.
Co.), Lieut. P. :Buchanan, commandant; Richard for 72 mixed & 80 infants, average attendance, 73 mixed
Reeves, drill instructor & 52 infants, & supported by Miss Brickdale, of New-
land; Alfred Cope. master; Mrs. 'Fitzgerald, mistress
PUBLIC OFFIOERS.
Assistant Overseer for Coleford and Newland, Thomas Lane Ends (mixed & infants), built, with master's resi-
dence, in 1868 & enlarged in 1893, for 354 children;
Henry Hallett; office, I Ghmcester road average attendance, 178 mixed 1l, 82 infants; William
Assistant Overseer for West Dean, Frederick Brown; H. Hoad, master; Miss Olivilll Cull, mistress

office, I Gloucester road
Certifying Factory Surgeon, Medical Officer & Public

Vaccinator, Coleford District, Monmouth UniDn, Peter NEWSPAPERS.
. Buchanan M.B., a.M. Bank house
Dean F()rest Guardian, Newland street, Hough & Bright.

Deputy Coroner for the Forest District, WiIliam Robert8, publishers; published thurs. for fri

High street Dean Forest Illustrated Magazine, High street, Charles
Inland Revenue Officer, Henry' lHrkett Edwin Bird, publisher; published monthly
Registrar of Births & Deaths, Coleford Sub-district,
RAILWAY STATIONS.
John Hawkins, Coalway Lane End; deputy, Thomas Great Western, Edwin Dowderswell, .station master
Severn & Wye &I Severn Bridge, Mans'field Collins, sta-
Henry Hullett; office, I Gloucester road
Registrar of Marriages, Sidney J. Elsom, Yorkley tion master; William Morris, railway agent
Superintendent of Police, Grantley Ford, Police Station

PRIVATE :RESIDENTS. Hullet Mrs. Whitecliff villa Smith Amos, Coalway villa, Coal-

Adams John, High street Jarvis Rev. Geo. (Cong.), The Manse way lane end

Adams John Thomas, Sunnyside Jones Matthew, Newiand street Taylor Bertram Herbert, High street

Brown Frederick, Boxbush road Langham Goodrich, Highnash Taylor Thomas Terrett J.P. Market pI

BUc'hanan Peter M.:B. Bank house Lawton Rev. James, Baker's hill Thomas George, Morley villa

Cooper Theophilus, Rock house . LIewelIyn Thomas A. Caregh house Thomas Sydney J., J.P. WynOls hill

Cornwall Rev. Alan Whitmore M.A. Newcomen Thomas, Sunny bank 'fudhunter Misses, Poolway house

Vicarage Payne Rd. Townsend, Lambsquay Trohter Isaiah J.P. The Coombs

Currie John M.B. The Marshes Preece Benjamin, Whitecliff Trotter LeslieBattenM.D.The Marshes

Curwen Herbert, Venetian house Saunders Rev. Cecil E. :B. P., A.K.L. Trotter Martin Henry, The Prospect

Fryer Robert Hoskins, Hillside (curate) Trotter Newton John, Baker's hill

Harris Mrs. 6 High street Scoble Th()mas, .Albert cottage Tuckey Robert Leonard, Bank house

Highley Edward James, St. John st Skegg Goorge. Eastbourne h()use Ward Mrs. Poolway villa

Holman Henry, Bowen',s Hill road

COMMERCIAL. Brown Frederick, accountant, &; overseer for township of

Adams & Sons, plumbers, glaziers &; painters, High st West Dean &; clerk to parish council; office,Gloucester rd

Adams Henry, china & glass dealer, Gloucester road. Brown Henry, monumental mason, :Bank street

.A.dams John Thomas, corn merchant & brewers' agent, Brown John, Royal Forest inn, Lane ends

Coalway road Ilrown Thomas Forster, deputy gaveller of Dean Forest &.

Adams Othniel James, Waverley Temperanfle hotel Crown receiver & registrar, Crown offices

Ambrey Sally (Miss). maltster, High street Brown William, shopkeeper, Gloucester road

Ancient Order of Foresters (Charles Smith, sec.; Oaleb Buchanan Peter, surgeon M.B., a.M.Glas. med. officer &

Adams, treas) public vaccinator, Coleford district, Monmouth union,

Andrews Armand Edward, assistant overseer for Staunton, &; mediflal officer of health to urban district council &

Highfield house certifying factory surgeon, Bank house

Aston George Henry, boot maker, Coalway Lane end Bullock James, saddler, Market place

Banks Louisa (Mrs.), beer retailer, Coalway Lane end Burgwyn William, beer retailer, Gloucester road

Benfield Herbert, clothier, Gloucester road C8ipital &; Counties Bank Lim. (branch) (Robert Leonar<f

Bennett William, grocer &; draper, Market place Tuckey, cashier), Bank street; draw on head office, 3~

Bird Charles Edwin, ptinter &; publisher of the Dean Threadneedle street, London E-o

Forest lllustrated Magazine, High street Carver Thomas, blacksmith, Coalway Lane end ,

Birkett Henry, inland !revenue officer, Belle Vue house Cemetery (Robert Hoskins Fryer, clerk to the burial

Black William Henry, tea dealer, grocer & provision dealer, board; John Rees, sexton)

Market place Olare George William, Angel family &; commercial hotel &.

Blake Edward, King's Head P.R. Bank street posting house. Market place

Blanch Wm. J. surveyor &; sanitary inspector, Pootway Clark Edward Franci9, boot & shoe maker, Gloucester rd

BDlter Thomas, hairdresser, Market place Cole Caroline (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Staunton road

Boyce Harold, Speech House family hotel & posting houle Ooleford Gas Co. (I. Trotter, chairman; Benj. Phillpo't.

Bridge George William, Plough inn, Coalway Lane end manager), Newland street

128 COLEFORD. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Coleford Cricket Olub fF. Clarke &; T. Frowen, hon. secs) Martin William, shopkeeper, Berry hill

Coleford Grammar Sehool (Rev. John Talbot Gardiner Morgan David, assistant clerk to Crown receiver, &; regiso

B.A. head master) trar, Crown offices

Connop J ames Moyse, Forester coffee tavern & photo- Morgan George, blacksmith, Lane ends

grapher, St. John street Morgan Henry, blacksmith, Lane ends

Ooole Lucy (Mrs.), ironmonger & wheelwright, Boxbush rd Morgan Robert, brewers' traveller, Sparrow hi:!

Coop~r Theophilus, coal merchant &; accountant, Rock ho Morris William, ironmonger, St. John street

Crook Thomas, Nag's Head P.H. Whitecliff Morris William, ladies' &; gent's high-class 'boot maker,

Oullimore Lydia (Miss), wine & spirit vaults, St. John st Market place

Gurrie John M.B., L.R.O.P.Lond., M.R.C.S.Eng. sur· Nelmes &; Pool, auctioneers, valuers, & estate agents

geon, The Marshes Nelmes William Geo. builder & undertaker, Berry hill

Dean Forest Guardian (Hough & Bright, publishers; pub- Payne Richard Townsend, stone merchant, Lambs Quay ha

lished thurs. for fri.), Newland street Phelps Leonard J. Ye Old Hart hotel & posting house,

Dickenson William, farmer, Edenwall farm St. John street

. Dobbs Benjamin, fishmonger, Coalway road Philpott Benjamin, manager of gas works, Newland street

Dobbs Chas. sub-agent for the Great Western Railway Co Pont &; Adams, bakers &; grocers, St. John street

Ellesmore 'Charles, beer retailer, Sharrow hill Porter John Wm. photographer & druggist, Newland at

Ellis Edward, plasterer, Victoria road Powe~l Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Market place

Evans John Henry, grocer, Gloucester road Powell George, shopkeeper, Berry hill

Findlay John, insurance agent, BOXibush road Preece Benjamin, iron &; brass founder, Albert road

Fletcher W. & R. Limited, butchers, Market place Provis Brothers, grocers ,& drapers, Market plaee

Ford Grantley, superintendent of police, Police station Provis Richard Dyke, grocer &c. see Provis Brothers

Forest Hrematite 00. Limited (B. Bonsor, sell.), Firs iron Reece -Charles, coal merchant, Caalway road
mm• es
Reece Rosa (Mrs.), stationer &; fancy repository, seed &

Forest of Dean Stone Oompany, proprietors of blue & grey general dealer, &; agent for Lipton's teas,S Gloucester rd

forest stone Reece Thomas Henry, quarry proprietor (blue &; grey), 5

Fryer Robert Hoskins, solicitor &; clerk to the magistrates Gloucester road; quarry at Drybrook

for Coleford &; to the burial board, Newland street Richards Edward, lime burner &; farmer, Whitecliff

Fryer Wm. Henry, iron ore proprietor, Rose bank,Mill end Roberts Blanche (Miss), girls' school, Lawnstone house

Godwin Frederick, farmer, Pingry farm Roberts Charles, auctioneer &; coal merchant, High street

Godwin Thomas, butcher &; farmer. St. John street Roberts Thos. jo'bbing gardener, Ooalway Lane end

Green Oharles Wilson, superintendent- British Workman's Roberts William, solieitor, commissioner to administel'

<& General Assurance Co. Limited, Cinder hill oaths & for taking acknowledgments of married women,

Gwynn James, beer retailer, Lane ends &; deputy coroner for the Forest district, High street

Haile Thomas, farmer, Scowles Rosen Nathan, clothier, Market place

Hamilton Frederick, pianoforte tuner, 10 St. John street Ross John, shopkeeper, St. John street

Harper James, plumber, painter &; glazier, Market place Rowlins Martha (Mrs.), baker, Lane ends

Hart F. George, collector to the urban district council, Sage James, painter, Victoria. road

Newland street Salter Cha.rles &; Son, tailors, Market place

Hatton Elizabeth (Miss), fancy repository, High street Salter Maude (Miss), 'Dews agent'& stationer, Boxbush rd

Hawkins Henry, baker, Market place Salter William, tailor, Boxbush road

Hawkins John, registrar of births &; deaths &; relieving Siros Charles Par,tridge, farmer, Whiteeliff

officer for Coleford sub-district, Monmouth union, O:Ial- Slade Jonah, draper, Boxbush road

way Lane end Smith Brothers, colliery proprietors, Edenwall colliery

Heath Alfred, builder, Bank street Smith Amos, grocer, Broadwell

Herbert Jane (Miss), shopkeeper, Post office, Lane ends Smith Annie (Mrs.), dress maker, Victoria road

Herbert Mary Rowe (Miss), ladies~ school, Springfield Smith Edward Aston, grocer, Lane ends

house, Gloueester road Smith Frank, butcher, &; Feathers P.H. Market place

Highley Ernest, butcher, St. John street Smith Frank Ezra, china &; glass dealer, Market place

Highley Sydney, butcher. St. John street Smith John, shopkeeper, Palmer's flat

Hock Raimund, watchmaker, Market place Smith John, grocer, Coalway Lane ends

Horwood William Henry, confectioner, Market place Smith Joseph, shopkeeper, Lane ends

Hough <& Bright, printers, stationers &; publishers of the Smith Joseph, watch maker&; jeweller, Market plaee

"Dean Forest Guardian," Newland street Smith Norman Sellers, chemist &; druggist, 11; agent for

Howell WaIter, butcher, Caalway road W. &; A. Gilbey Lim. wine &; spirit mers. Market place

Rowells Rosetta (Miss), dress maker, Staunton road Smith Timothy, grocer &; ironmonger, St. John street

H1lghes & Brown, colliery proprietors, Well Level colliery Tapp Elizabeth (Miss), milliner, Gloucester road

Hughes Edward, farmer, Beach's farm Taylor Frank, furniture dealer, Market place

Hughes Wm. farmer & colliery proprietor, Berry Hill farm Taylor Thomas, saddler &; harness maker, Market place;

Hullett Thomas Henry, assistant overseer, &; clerk to the & at Lydney. See advertisement

urban district council 11; parish council, deputy registrar Taylor Thos. Terrett, ironmonger i&; builder, Market place

of births & deaths, &; insuran~e agent; office, I Teague Edward, farmer, Polway farm

Gloucester road; res. Bowen's Hill road Thomas mtyd, mining engineer, auctioneer &c

Hyett John, tailor, Market place Trotter Edward Austin, grocer & draper, Market place

James Richard, shopkeeper 11; stone mason, Lane ends Trotter Leslie Batten M.D., C.M.Edin. surgn.The Marshes

James William, fire brick maker, Staunton road Volunteer Battalion (2nd) Gloucestershire Regiment (G

Jones Ada (Miss), postmistress, Post office 0:1.) (Lieut. P. Buchanan, commanding; Richd. Reeves,

J ones Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer, Boxbush road drill instructor)

Jones Percy Alexander, grocer &; baker, Gloucester road Voyce Edward, farmer, Whitehall farm

Joseph Thomas, beer retailer, Coalway Lane end Wa'tkins Frederick, boot & shoe maker, Gloucester road

Joynes Stephen, grocer, Coalway Lane end Watkins James, shopkeeper, Gloucester road

Kear Moses i& Sons, builders &; steam sa.wing mills, Watkins Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Bank street

Lane ends Watts Fanny &; Ida (Misses), stationers, Newland street

Kear Moses, grocer &; provision dealer, Lane ends Watts John, marine store dealer

Kilby Thomas, beer retailer, Berry hill Watts John William, wholesale wine & spirit merchant,

Kilby William, farmer, Mill end St. John street &; Unicorn P.B. Market place

Langham Goodrich, civil &; mining engineer & coal &; Wa.tts Misses, ladies' school, Market place

iron mine owner, High nash Webb Alfred, beer retailer, -St. .John street

Lees James, stationer &; newsagent, Newland street Webb Jessie (Miss), dress maker, High street

Lees Jane (Mrs.), ladies' outfitter, Newland street White Arthur, Royal Oak P.B. Gloucester road

Liberal Benefit Society (Wm. Salter, sec.), Boxbush road Whitecliff Lime 00. lime burners (Aaron James, man-

Lydbrook Iron Mines 0:1. (The) (W. H. Fryer, man.)j ager), Whitecliff

office, Whitecliff Whittington John, Red Lion P.B. Cinder hill

Llewellyn Thomas A... assistant to deputy gaveller, Crown Wignell Richard, greengrocer, Newland street

offices Wilding Edward, builder, Newland street

Maehen Charles Edward, assistant to deputy Crown sur- Williams Herbert, solicitor, High street

veyor of woods &; forests, Orown offices Williams Thomas, farmer, Owens &; Crossways farms

McLaren John Thomas, outfitter, St. John street Wimberry'Colliery Co. Limited (Newton James Trotter,

Maisev John, saddle & harness maker, Newland street sec. ); offices, High street

Marlin Mary (Mrs.). beer retailer, Lane ends Worgan Thomas, farmer, Hawthorns farm

Martin Enoch, shopkeeper, Lane ends Worrall Hill Colliery Co. (The) (W. H. Fryer, manager)

Mayo !Charlotte Augusta (Miss), teacher of music, New- Wyatt Annie (Mrs.), fruiterer &; bin poster, Market place

land street

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. COLN ST. DE~NIS. 129

ICOLE SBORNE, or Cowlesborne, a village and parish, mansion in the Elizabethan style, is the seat of Henry

011 the high road from Cheltenham to Cirencester and on John Elwes esq. D.L., J.P., F.Z.S., F.L.S., F.E.S. lord
the river Thames, is 6 miles 'sonth-west from Andovers- ' of the manor and chief landowner, who fa,rms a large
ford station on the Great Western railway and 3 south- portion of the land, and the process of ensilage is <:arried
west from Withington station on the Midland and South on; the house <:ontains an extensive and valuable col-
'Western Junction railway, 7i north-west from Cirencester lection of Lepidoptera, chiefly oriental. The ffiil is stone
and 71 wuth-east from Cheltenham, in the Eastern divi- brash; snbsoil, freestone. The chief cropSI are wheat,
sion of the county, Rapsgate. hundred, Cirencester union, barley and oats. The area is 2,200 acres; rateable value,
county court district and petty sessional division, rural £r ,I02; the population in r89r was 242.
deanery of Cheltl'nham and archdeaconry and diocese of Parish Clerk, Edwin Miles.

Gloucester. Rapsgate, a farm in this parish, giv,:s its Post & T. a.-Miss Jane Walker, S'Ub-postmistress.
na~e to th~ hundre~.. The church .of St. James IS an
aI.tclent cruClform buildI~g of 'stone, ID the Early Perpen- Letters from Cheltenham, viA Andoversford R.S.a. ar-
dlcular style, and conSIsts of .c~ancel, nave, tr~nsep~s,
south porch .a~d an embattled wes~ern tower ~t? pm- rive at 8.4S a.m. & dispatched at 4. 20 p.m.; IT a.m.
nacles, contammg 5 bells: the pulpIt of stone IS ID the on sundays. Postal orders are issued here, but not
Perpendicular style: there are 200 sittings. The Tegister
paid. North Cerney is the nearest money order office
dates from the year 1632. The living is a discharged _ . .. . .
l'Iat'lOnal ScJ.1ool (mIXed), built In 1851 & enlarged ill 1879,
rectory, with that of Cubberley annexed, joint yearly ~or 60 children; average attend~ce, 50; & suppo~ed

ID part by Mr. & Mrs. Elwes; MISS Evelyn Cock, mIst

\alue £360, including 85 acres of glebe, !in the gift of H. Carrier to Cirencester.-George A. Hunt, mono & fri. &
J. Elwes esq. and held since I87r Iby the Rev. CharleSl to Cheltenham on thlLTS
Henry Wilson M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, who Carrieu between Cirencester & Cheltenham pass throngh
resides at Cubberley. Colesborne ·Park, <:ontaining 8 tues. thurs. & sat

Edwards James Chirney John George, farmer, Pen hill Runt Jesse, blacksmith

Elwes Henry John D.L., J.P., F.Z.S., Cummings Charlotte (Miss), shopkpr Lane James Henry, gardener to H. J.

F.L.S. Colesborne park Dance tWilliam, head gamekeeper to Elwes esq

MawsonRev. Joseph RA. (curate),The H. J. Elwes esq Simpson James, land agent t() H. J.

Rectory Dunn iThomas, mason Elwes esq. ,southbury

Bubb Annie (Mrs.), Colesbome inn Hunt George A. shopkeeper & carrier

COLN ROGERS is a parish and village, on the river since r897 by the Rev. George Joseph Woodward M.A.,
CoIn, about 2 miles south-east from Chedworth station
on t1w Cirencester and Cheltenham section of the Midland RC.L., R.D. of Durham University. Dr. John Ratcliffe
and South Western junction railway, 7 north-east from
Cirencester and 3! south-west from Northleach, in the left by will in 1755 the sum of £IOO, which n()w produces
£4 2S. 6d. annually, and is assigned for the benefit of the
Eastern division of the county, Bradley hundred, North- children of the poor. The Dean and Chapter of Gloucester
leach petty sessional division, union and county court Me lordil of the manor and chirtf landowners. The soil
district, rural deanery of Northleach, archdeaconry of is partly loam and partly stone brash; subsoil, rockstone.
The chief crops are wheat, barley, oatil and roots. The
Cilencester and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St.
Anurew is an ancient building- of stone, in the Norman and area is 1,574 acres; rateable value, £628; the population
in r891 was 93.

Later English styles, consisting of chancel, nave, eouth Parish Oerk Henry Baylis

tphoerchchaanndcealnweams b~aettslteodrewdesitnern18t4o9w, ear containing 3 bells: Letters ' Northlea~h . . " the nearest
t a cost of about through R.s.a whIch IS

£200: there are sittings for 100 persons. The Tegister money order office, arrIve at 9 a.m. Wall Letter Box

of baptisms and burials dates from the year 1761 ; mar. cleared at 4. p.m. week daysl only. The nearest tele-

riages', 1754. The living ill a rectory, net yearly value graph office IS at Northleach

£181, including 40 oores orglebe, with Tesidence, in the The -children of this place attend the 'School at CoIn St.
gift of the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester, and held Denys

Woodward Rev. George Joseph M.A., Cambray &; SOIl, thrashing machine Cambray Frederick William, farmer,

B.C.L., & RD. Rectory propTietors Pindrup Manor farm

Barton Victor, farmer Dyer Thomas, shopkeeper Stephens Edmund, farmer, Lower frm

COLN SAINT ALDWYNS is a villag& and parish, also held the vicarage of Blewbury, Berks, 1781-1824, and

3 miles north-west from Fairford terminal station on the died 24 Jan. 1835. There are charities of the yearly value
of £13. Williamstrip Park, occupied by James Jones
Ea.st Gloucestershire branch of the Great Western TlLil- esq. J.P. is the property of the Right Hon. Sir Michael
Edward Hicks-Beach bart. P.C., M.P., D.C.L. lord of
way, about 2 east from Chelworth station of the Ciren- the manor and principal landowner; the mansion wag
cester and Cheltenham section of the Midland and Sonth erected at the beginning of the r7th <:entury, but has
Western junction railway, and 7! south-by-east from since undergone many additions and improvements, and
Northleach, in the Eastern division of the county, hundred is a. handsome building, standing in a deer park of up-
()f Brightwells Barrow, Fairford petty sessional division, wards of 200 acres. The soil is stone brash; subsoil,

Ncrtlileach union and county court district, rural deanery rock and clay. The oilief crops' are wheat, oats and
of Fairford, archdea.xmry of Cir03neester and diocese uf
Gloucester. The churoh of St. John the Baptist is an barll'y. The. area is 2,665 acres; rateable value, £1,805 ;
ancient building of stone in the Norman, Early English the population in 1891 W31S 406.
and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave,

transept, south porch and a tower on the south side con- Parish Clerk Thomas, Kilby
taining a clock and 8 bells: there are several stained ' '.
windows: the <:hurch was repaired in r853, and has 250
Post, M. O. &~. .a., S. B. ~ Annmty & Insurance Office.
sittings. The register dates from the year 1650' '1'he
-qharleSl W~ Woovrng, sub-postmaster. Letters
living is a vicarage, groS9 yearly value £250 , including 85 arrIve fr,om Fairford s.a. at 6·55 & 10 a.m. & 3·1:5
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Dean and p.m.; dIspatched at 12·5 & 7.30 p.m.; sundays, 7·30

Chapter of Gloucester, and held since 1896 by the Rev. p.ro
William Patrick Lennard Hand RA. of Trinity College, National School (mixed), :built, with master's residence,

Dublin. The Rev. John Keble M.A. father of the author in 1856, for 100 children; a.verage attendance, 60; John
of "The Christian Year," wa.'i vicar here for 52 yearil; he George Quick, master; Miss Elizabeth Minchin, mist

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. to the Right Hon. Sir M. E. Hicks- Green Wm.gamekeeper to J. Jones esq
Beach bart. p.a., M.P
Forster Miss Kilby Thomas, parish clerk

Hand Rev. William Patrick Lennard Barton William, farmer, Manor farm Kitehener James, shoe maker

RA. Vicarage Beesley William, tailor Miles Hem!-, foreman to the Right

Jones James J.P. Williamstrip park Collett Raymond John, builder, timber Hon. Sir M. E. Hicks-Beach bart

Kent Alfred Urban, The Close merchant, wheelwright & under- Powell John, gardener to J. Jones esq

Kent Samuel Cheselden, Waterside taker (established 1840) Preater Frederick. corn dealer & meal-
Porter Benjamin
Weaving James CoIn Co-operative Stores (Obarles man, Upper mill

COMMERCIAL. Wm. Weaving, manage'l'), Post office Trinder John, plasterer & slater

CoIn St. Aldwyu Farming Co-operative Wilkins Ellen Mary (MrS'.), beer retailr

lJarton Clement,frmr.Williamstrip frID\ Society Limited(Robt. Jeffreys,mgr) Woolley Ernest, miller (water), Lower

IBartan Thomas Raglan, farm bailiff Cox Levi, blacksmith mill

COLN SAINT DENNIS is a parish on the river CoIn of the Midland and South Western junction railway, 3

and near the old Roman fosse-way, 2 miles from Ched.- sonth-sonth-west from Northleach, 8 north-east from

'Worth station on the Cirencester and Cheltenham section I Cirencester and 14 south·east from Cheltenham, in the

GLaD. 9

130 COLN ST. DEN~IS. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

IEastern division of the county, Deerhurst hundred, Korth- roots. The area is 1,789 acres; rateable value, £933;
leach petty sessional division, union and county court the population in 1891 was 200.

district, rural deanery of NOIrthleach, archdeaconry of CALCOT or Cal t ' a. h ml t half a il th
Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. ' eu , 1S a e, me sou .

Dennis is an ancient building of stone in the Early:Korman Pest. & M. O. 0., S: B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Foslt

style. consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an bndge (Sub-Office. Le~ter~ should have S.O. GlOIl-

embattled western tower containing a clock and 5 bells': c.estershlre added).-Lev1 Bndges,.sub-postmaster. De-

there are sittings for 100 persons. The register dates- livery of letters commences. at 7·55 a.m. I;[, 3 p.m.
from the year 1561. The living is a rectory, net yearly (callers only); cl~ared for dispatch, 7.40 8.m. & 4·35
value £234, including 66 acres of glebe, with 1esidenl'e,
p.m. Northleach 1S the nearest telegraph office

in the gift of Pembroke College, Oxford, and held since "all Letter Box cleared at 4.20 p.m

1894 by the Rev. Lewis Bythesea Bubb M.A. of that Kaiional School (mixed), for the united district of CoIn

college. Capt. E. F. Jeffreys RN. is lord of the manor Saint Dennis & CoIn Rogen, built in 1875, for 50 chil-

and principal landowner. The soil is a stone brash; sub- dren; average attendance, 45; Mrs. Margaret Manning,

soil, stone. The chief crops Qre wheat, barley, oats and mistress

Bubb Rev.Lewis Bythesea M.A. (rector) Habgood William, farmer Smith Rachel (Mrs.), shopkpr.Calent
Spencer Robert, farmer, Calcut
COMMERCIAL. Handy Aubrey, farmer Spencer Thos. boot & shoe ma. Calent

Bridges Levi, builder, Post offi~e Hathaway Julia (Miss), baker

Davis Job, farm~r, Saltway farm Mills 'Villiam, builder, Foss bridge

COMPTON A:BDALE is a parish and village, 3 miles Bristol, and held since Nov. 1896 by the Rev. Norman

south-east :rom .A.ndoversford station on the Banbury and .Augustus Holttum, of St. Mdan's. The Earl of Eldon,

Cheltenham ,branch of the Great Western railway, about who is' lord of the manor, and Lord Henry Francis Hope

2 _east from Withington station on the Cirencester and Pelham-Clinton-Hope, of Castleblaney, co. Monaghan, Ire-

Oheltenham section of the Midland and South Western land, are the princ~pal landowners. The soil is stone

Junction Tailway, 4 west-north-west from Northleach aUlI brash; subsoil, stone and clay. The chief crops are

16 east from Gloucester, in the Eastern division of the wheat, barley, oats and seeds. The area is! 2,188 acres;

county, Bradley hundTed, Northleach petty sessional divi- rateable value, £7II; the population in 1891 was 199.

sion, union and county court district, rural deanery of Upper Hampen farmhouse and cottages were transferred

Northleach, Il.rchdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of to Shipton by Local Government Board Order 14578,

Gloucester. The church of St. Oswald is an ancient March 25, 1883.

building of stone in ilie Perpendicular ,style, consisting Parish Clerk, William Beames. .

of <lhancel, nave of six bays, north Qisle, north porch Post Office.-William. Panter, sub-postmaster (Railway

and an embattled western rower with lofty pinnacles', con- Sub-Office. Letten should have RS.O. Gloucester-

taming 6 bells, re-cast in 1880: during 1881-3 the chan~el shire added).-Letters arrive at 6.25 a.m.; dispatched,

Was- restored by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners at a 5 ·30 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.

oost of £200, and the nave and aisles renovated and 1'e- Andoversford is the nearest money order i& telegraph

seated at a cost of £170: there are 120 sittings. The office

register dates from the year 1722. The living is 8j vicar- School (mixed), built in 1852, for 50 clcildxen; average

age, net yearly value £154, including 42 acres of glebe, attendance, 34; there is a house for the mistress; John

with residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Richard Sharman, master

Holttum Rev. Norman .A.ugustus, Pitman Mary .Ann (Mrs.), grocer Walker Wm.Stevens,frmr. Lower farm

lVicarage Tayler Thomas Sidney, farm bailiff to

Herbert Henry, blacksmith Earl of Eldon

COMPTON GREENFIELD is a villa~, and was by in the gift of Robert C. Cann-Lippincott esq. and held
a Local Government Order, dated March 25, 1885, civilly since 1892 by the Rev. Frank Brownson M.A. of St. John's
amalgamated with the parish of Henbury; it is near the College, Oambridge. H()llywood Tower, the seat of Lady
road from Bristol to the Old and New Passages, 2 miles Davis, is a noble mansion, in well timbered grounds.
south from Pilning and 4 south from Patchway stations Robert C. Cann-Lippincott esq. of Over Court, .Almonds-
on the Bristol and South Wales branch of the Great bury, is IOfd of the manor and principal landowner. The
Western railway and 7 north from Bristol, in the Southern soil is marl and alluvial clay; 'subsoil, clay. The chief
division of the county, Henbury hundred, Barton Regis crops are wheat, beans, roots and some land in pasturage.
union, Bristol county court district, petty sessional divi- The area is 650 acres; rateable value included with Hen-
sion of Lawfords Gate, rural deanery of Stapleton, and
archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. The church of All bury; the population of the ecclesiastical parish in 1891
Saints, rebuilt, with the exception of the tower, in 1852,
is an edifice of stone chiefly in the Early English style, was 40.
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, and a tower
containing one bell: there is a fine Norman doorway, Parish Clerk, Thomas Prewett.
dating from 1180, and the chancel arch is of the same
Letters through Bristol, via Pilning, at 7 a.m. The
period = there are sittings for IIO persons. The llegister nearest money order office is at Pilning & :telegraph
dates from the year 1583. The living is a rectory, yearly office is at Westbury-on-Trym. Wall Letter Box cleared
at 7. 20 p.m
value £160, including 54 acres of glebe, with residence,
The children of this place attend the schools at Henbury &;
East Compton

l'RIVATE :RESIDENTS. COMMERCIAL. Keen Samuel, farmer, Church farm

Brownson Rev. Frank M.A. Rectory Alvis John, farmer Lansdowne John, farmer
Davis Lady, Hollywood tower .
Stock Gregory, Compton house. Colbourne John, farmer Pullin William, farmer
Thring Robert
Edmonds John, farmer, Dyer's comron Williams Frank, farmer

Foster Frederick, farmer Williams Thomas, farmer, Holly hill

LITTLE COMPTON, a parish formerly in Glouces-12 and 3 William IV. and 7 and 8 Victoria cap. 61; it will

tershire, was transferred to Warwickshire under the Acts be found in Kelly's Directory of Warwickshire.

OONDICOTE is a parish and village near the road illegible, but from 1663 the entries run consecutively,
from Stow to Tewkesbury, 4 miles north-west from Stow- although there are irregularities between that date and

on-the-Wold station on the Banbury and Cheltenham 1704. The living is a rectory, yearly value £II3, includ-

section of the Great Western railway, and 25 north-east ing 210 acres of glebe anll a small modus fixed upon the
from Gloucester, in the Eastern division of the county, Hinchwick estate, in the gift of the Rev. J. H. Davies M.A.

Kiftsgate and Upper Slaughter hundreds, Stow-on-the- of Mount Bures, Essex, and held since 1887 by the Rev.
Wold petty sessional division, union and county court George Augustus Todd, of St. Bees, who is also :rector of

district, rural deanery of Stow, archdeaconry of Ciren- Upper Swell, where he resides. There are remains of

cester and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. two camps east of the village, one supposed to be Roman,

Nicholas is a very small but ancient building of stone, the other British; one is named Eweborough. In the
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, and a small centre of the village is an ancient cross, restored by the
western belfry containing one bell: the south doorway Rev. W. B. Van Notten Pole, late rector, in 1862; it con-
and the chancel arch are Late Norman, and elaborately sists of a monolithic ,shaft about 7 feet in height, set in a

worked: the chalice, which is of silver, bears date 1571 : square pedestal, the whole being mounted on four steps.
the church was restored in 1889, at 8. cost of about £,600, The trustees of the late John Clifford esq. are lords of the
mainly collected or subscribed by T. E. Godman esq.: manor. Corpus Christi College, Oxford, the trustees of

there are sittings for 100 persons. The register book is T. E. Godman, and Messrs. Yearp Brothers are the chief

in a very dilapidat-ed condition; the earlier entries are landowners. The soil is a stone brash; subsoil, rock.

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. COW HONEYBOURNE. 131

The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is borough by Local Government Board Order 14,636, March

890 acres; rateable value, £732; the population in x8g1 25, 1883.
was 113. Letters through Stow-on-the-Wold, which is the nearest

HINCHWICK is a small hamlet about 11 miles north, money order & telegraph office, arrive at 10 a.m. Wall
in Kiftsgate hundred. J. Dugdale esq. of Sezincot, is
chief landowner. Letter Box cleared at 5 p.m
National School (mixed), built, with residence for mis-

tress, in 1872, for 47 children; average attendance, 31;

WEST HORSENDOWN was transferred to Long- Miss Sarah McIlroy, mistress

OONDIOOTE. Humphries James, farmer Wood Wm.Hubert, farmer,College frm
Hopkins Richard, farmer
J efferies John, farmer • HrNCHWICK.

Lodge Edmund, farm bailiff to Messrs.

Hudson Charles, shopkeeper Yearp Brothers Griffen J ames, farmer

CORSE is a parish, consisting principally of .scattered I is a stiff loam on a clay or marl subsoil. The chief crops

dwellings, on the road leading from Gloucester to Led- are wheat, mangold wurzel, beans and fruit for making

bury, Malvern and Worcester, and on the Worcestershire cider and perry. The area is 2,600 acres; rateable value,

border, and is 5 miles east-north-east from Newent station £2,443; the population in 1891 was 419.

on the Gloucester, Ledbury and Worcester branch of the A portion of Corse Lawn, formerly a common within

Great Weswrn railway, 6 north-north-west from Glouces- this parish, of about 1,352 acres, was enclosed by Act of

ter, and Il west-by-north from Cheltenham, Forest of Parliament about 1796, by which the greater part of it

Dean division of the county, lower division of Westminster was subjected to tillage: fruit trees are here planted in

huncl,red, Newent union, petty sessional division and the open fields and thrive with great luxuriance: the

county court district, rural deanery of Winchcomb, and common was formerly covered with chestnut trees, and it

archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The church of is said that the New Inn and other ancient buildings in

St. Margaret, situated at the southern extremity of the Gloucester were built with the timber grown on this spot.

parish, is an edifice of stone in the Perpendicular style of Corse Hill, on the east side of this parish and dividing it

the 14th century, and consists of chancel, nave, north from that of Hasfield, affords a commanding prospect,

porch and a western tower, with octagonal spire, contain- including the Malvern hills, as well as the Gloucestershire

ing 4 bells: in the church are two monuments to the vale of the Severn.

Gregg family, one of which was removed here from THE SNIG'S END estate, partly in this parish and

Gloucester at the time of the demolition of St. Bartholo- partly in the adjoining parishes of Staunton and Red-
mew's Hospital: there are 150 sittings. The register marley, contains 84 small cottages, built about 1840 by
dates from t,he year 1661. The living is a vicarage, with the Chartist Association, formed in 1838 by Feargus
142 acres of glebe, let at £120, net yearly value £225, O'Connor, and about 30 of these are in this parish: to
with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and each cottage is attached from 2 to 4 acres of freehold land,
held since 1869 by the Rev. Arthur Harvey Wyatt, of St. subject to' a ground rent of about 20S. per acre.

John's College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan chapel, Parish Clerk, John Barnett; Sexton, Henry Twynning. •

built in 1838. The charities include lands and tenements, Post & T. 0., Snig's End, Staunton. Mrs. Mary Brad-
yielding about £32 annually, which sum is distributed in bury, sub-postmistress. Letters through Gloucester
coal on St. Thomas' day yearly. Bayley's charity of 12S. at 8 a.m.; dlispatched at 5· x5 p.m. The nearest money
is for bread. The Rev. Edward Richard Dowdeswell M.A.

vicar of BushIey, near Tewkesbury, and of Pull Court, order office is at Corse Lawn

Tewkesbury, who is lord of the manor, Mrs. Hulls, Wall Box, Cross Hand farm, cleared at 5.2 5 p.m. week

Thomas Henry Hulls esq. the trustees of the late John days only

Ford Sevier, of Cheltenham, James Dicks esq. of Che1ten- National School (mixed), built, with residence for the

ham, William Meath Baker esq. of Hasfield Court, the mistress, in 1872, for 100 children; average attendance,

truswes of the late Donald Rollo MacGachan esq. the 53; Mrs. Julia Barnett, mistress

trustees of the late Philip Pearce esq. William Alfred Garriers.-Clent, from Corse to Gloucester, mono & sat. &

Butler esq. and Sir Frederick D. Dixon-Hartland bart. to Tewkesbury on wed.; & Bolton, to Gloucester, mono

M.P. of Ashley Manor, are the chief landowners. The soil wed. & sat

*Marked thus letters received from Carter Louis Edward, farmer, Sey- officer Red.marley district & public
Tewkesbury. mour farm vaccinatorRedm.arley district,Newent

Hulls Mrs Corse house Child William, blacksmith union & for the Eldel"Sfield district,
Clark John, sh?e maker &; r~g!stered Upton-on-Severn union, Gorse grnge
Hulls Thdmas Henry, Corse house common.lodgm~ house, Smg s end ~Lidiard AIbt. Edwd. shopkpr.Lime st
Long John, Straight lane

NasonCharles St.Stephen Richd. M.A., Clent Edwm, carrIer . Morgan William, farmer, Hawthorns
Dobb~s J~h~, farmer, StraIght lane Parker David, farmer & earpenter
,M.D. Gorse grange

Sive~ William Straight lane Dobbms William, carpenter Roberts Thomas (Mrs.), farmer, Old-
Spiel'S Mrs ' *Ed~ar~s .Wm. f.rmr. Lit: Hawthorns fields top

Wyatt Rev. Arthur Harvey, Vicarage Enros WIlliam, tailor, .Stl'8J.ght lane. Salisbury Leonard,carpenw,Snig's end
Gloucester Co-operatIve ,& IndustrIal Shopland Hy. beer retailer, Snig's end

• COMMERCIAL. Society (branch) (Mrs. Sarah Ann Smith Henry, haulier, Snig's end

Andrews James, farmer, Buck farm Hobbs, manager), Snig's end *Thomas James, farmer, Cm'se hill

Barnes Christr. Job, farmer,Snig's end Hobbs William, blacksmith Vallender George, farmer, Corse farm

Barnfield James, farmer, Walk farm Hulls Thomas Henry, farmer, Gorse ho Vaughan Thos. carpntr.& wheelwright

Bayliss Mary Ann (Mrs.), hay & coal Jennings Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper *Weaver Albert (Mirs.), farmer, Moor

dealer, Straight lane Nason Charles St. Stephen Richard End lane

Butler Wm..Alfd.farmer, Stone End ho M.D., M.Ch.Dub!. surgeon & medical Whitmore John, farmer, Corner house

COW HONEYBOURNE is a village and parish OD trustees of the Rev. Thomas Smyth RA. and held since
1893 by the Rev. George Bertram Philpott Coopland M.A.
the Worcestershire border, with a station at the junction of St. 'Catherine's College, Cambridge, who is also vicar
of the Stratford-an-Avon branch with the Oxford and of and resides at Church Honeybourne. Here is a Wes-
Worcester section of the Great Western railway, 4 miles leyan chapel. Sidney Graves Hamilton esq. M.A., J.P.
north-west from 'Chipping Campden, 5 east from Eves- of Mickleton Manor, is lord of the manor; William Side-
ham, 28 north-east from Gloncester and 92 from London, bottom and the trustees of the late Richard Fletcher esq.
in the Eastern division of the county, upper division of are the chief landowners. The soil is clay and loam;
Kiftllgate hundred, Evesham union and county court subsoil, stiff blne clay. The chief crops are wheat and
district, Campden petty sessional division, rural deanery beans, with a good portion of pasture land. The area is
of Evesham and archdeaconry and diocese of Worcester. 1,360 acres; rateable value, £2,616; and the population
in 1891 was 428.
The church (not named) was rebuilt, with the exception
Parish Clerk Edwin White
of the tower, in 1861-2, but has not yet been conse- '.

crated; it is a building of stone, in the Decorated and Post Office. Horace Bishop, sub-postmaster. Letters
Perpendicular styles, and consists of chancel, nave, south through Broadway R.S.O. (Worcs.), arrive at 8,45
porch and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, a.m.; dispatched at 4.25 p.m. Postal orders are issuej.
here, but Dot paid. The nearest money order office lI'
containing a clock and I bell: there are 180 sittings. at Pebworth. The telegraph office for receipt pf tele-
The register is included in that of Church Honeybourne, grams is at the railway station, but for sle1ivery at
an adjoining parish in Worcestershire, which dates from Bretforton
GLOU. g~
1673. The living is a vicarage of merely nominal value,
annexed by Order in Council, dated 3 July, 1885, to
that of Church Honeybonrne, and is in the gift of the

132 COWLEY. GLO UCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Wall Letter Box, at Station, cleared at 4 p.m. week days residence for master, at a. cost of £2,000, for 120 chil.

only dren &; 90 infants; average attendance, 70 boys &;

A School Board of 5 members was formed March, 1894, girls &; 40 infants; William A. Martin, master; Mrs.

for the united district of Honeybonrne; Thomas Tom- W. A~ Martin, mistress

linson, clerk ; John Rouse, attendance officer Railway Station, Francis John Willis, station master

Board School (mixed &; infants), erected in 18g6, with I

Ashwin Sarah Elizabeth (Mrs.), farme'!' Grey Reuben, linen weaver &; brewer Sheaf George, farmer
Shorey Mary (Mrs.), beer retailer
Bailey Charles, wheelwright Halford Goorge, coal dealer Smith Russell Robert, relieving officer

Banning Thomas, farmer Keen Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer,Honey- &; registrar of births &; deaths &;

Bishop Horace, baker &; grocer, Post off bourne grounds inquiry officer for Evesham union
Wilkes Henry, farmer
Bro"WI1ing &; Wesley, refreshment con- Perkins Waiter, shopkeeper

tractors, Station Rouse Joseph, blacksmith

Coldicott John, farmer

COWLEY is a parish and village, seated on a declivity A charity of £5 15s. 8d. and the interest on £200,
in the Cotswold district, a short distance west of the
road from Cheltenham to Cirencester, and watered by arising from a benefaction left by James Hutchinson esq.
the river Churn; it is 3! miles south from Charlton Kings are distributed to the poor yearly. oCowley Manor, the
station on the Cheltenham and Bonrton section of the seat of James Horlick esq. lord of the manor and owner
Great 'Western railway, and about the same distance of nearly the whole of the parish, is delightfully situated
west from Withington station on the Cirencester and on the slope of a hill; the mansion, which is of stone,
Cheltenham section of the Midland and South Western is handsome and spacious, and the pleasure grounds are
Junction railway and 5! south from Cheltenham, in the beautifully laid out; a trout stream runs through the
Northern division of the county, Rapsgate hundred, park and grounds, which also contain a series of lakes.
Cheltenham union, petty sessional division and county The soil is part clayey and part brash; subsoil, princi.
court district, rural deanery of Cheltenham and arch- pally oolite. The chief crops are wheat and oats and
deaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. some land in pasture. The area is 1,834 acres; rateable
value, £1,795; the population in 1891 was 270.
Mary is an edifice of stone, in the Early English style,
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled STOCKWELL and part of BIRDLIP are hamlets in
western tower containing 6 ~bells: in the chancel, within this parish, 1 and 2 miles respectively in a westerly
an arch in the north wall, is a tomb with the recumbent direction.
effigy of a male figure with a lion couchant at his feet;
the inscription is entirely lost: on the north side of the Parish Clerk, John Leach.
chancel arch are spiral stairs, formerly leading to the
rood loft; the interior wall!! of the chancel exhibit paint- Post Office.-George Plumb, sub-postmaster. Letters re-
ings, executed when the church was restored in 1872 : ceived through Cheltenham, via Charlton Kings, arrive
there are 100 sittings. The register dates from the year at 8 a.m. Box cleared at 5. 15 p.m. Charlton Kings is
the nearest money order office & Birdlip the nearest
1676. The living is a rectory, gross yearly value £287,
including 78! acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift telegraph office
of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 1893 by the Rev. Parochial School, built, with teacher's house, in 1875, by
John Hardinge Leigh Giffard, of King's College, London.
Col. Robert Richa.rdson-Gardner D.L., F.S.A. of Ens-
bury Manor, Kinson, Dorset, for 40 children; average
attendance, 32; Miss Mary Harrison, mistress

Giffard Rev. John Hardinge Leigh, Hitch William H. steward to James Plumb George, sub-postmaster
Rectory Horlick esq. Manor farm Sadlar Robert, farmer, Stockwell
TufHy Thomas,Air Balloon P.H.& frmr
Horlick James, Cowley manor Leach James, stone mason
Maddocks Joseph, head gardener to
COMMERCIAL.
James Horlick esq
Collett Henry, baker

CRANHAM is a parish, on a. small mill stream, 6 College, Cambridge. Here is a Church Mission room.
miles east-by-north from Haresfield station, on the Bristol Charcoal burning and the manufacture of flower pots and
and Birmingham branch of the Midland railway, 6 south coarse ware are carried on here. Witcombe Park is the
from Gloucester and 6 north-east from Stroud, in the residence of William Frederick Hicks-Beach esq. J.P.
Mid division of the county, Rapsgate hundred, Stroud W. F. Hicks-Beach esq. J.P. of Witeombe Park, is lord
union, petty sessional division and county court district, of the manor of Cranham, and John Doorman Birchall
rural deanery of Bisley and archdeaconry and diocese of esq. of Bowden Hall, Upton St. Leonards, is lord of
Gloucester. The church of St. James the Great, re· Buckholt manor; and the trustees of the late Mrs.
stored in 1866, was entirely rebuilt in 1894-5, with the Fletcher Welch, G. Fletcher esq. and William S. Hall
exception of the tower and south aisle, which, together are the chief landowners. The soil is chiefly loamy;
with the chancel, was lengthened 3 feet, and a north subsoil, rock or clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley,

aisle and vestry added; a fine new oak roof was erected turnips and pasture. The area is 1,859 acres; rateable
over the nave, the church reseated throughout with oak value, £1,862; the population in 1891 was 324.

benches and the ancient oak screen repaired: the church Parish Clerk Thomas Middlecott
is now in mixed styles, and consists of chancel, nave of '..' •
three bays, aisles, porch, vestry and an embattled western Post .Office.-Thomas Rlchmgs, sub-p?stmaster. Letters
tower containing 6 bells. The cost of the work was . arrIve from Strou~ at 7. 25 a.m.; dlspat~hed at.5 p.~.
-chiefly borne by T. Dyer Edwardes esq. of Prinknash
Park: the stained east window was presented by W. S. ~ostal orders are Issued here, but n?t ~al~. PamsWlck
IS the nearest money order office. Blrdlip IS the nearest
Hall esq. in commemoration of the Diamond Jubilee of telegraph o~ce
H.M. the Queen: there are 120 sittings. The register Wall Box, Wltcombe Park, cleared at 4.30 p.m. week

dates from the year 1660.. The living is a rectory, gross days only

yearly value £148• with residence, in the gift of T. Dyer National School (mixed), built in 1845 &; enlarged in 1894-
Edwardes esq. of Prinknash Park, and held since I Bog 1 , for 70 children; average attendance, 47; there is a
by the Rev. Henry Rastrick Hanson B.A. of St. John's I house for the mistress; Miss E. J. Taber, mistress

Hanson Rev. Hy. Rastrick B.A.Rectory Bowl Edward, farmer, Overtown HUTn Charles, Foston's Ash inn

Hicks-Beach William Frederick J.P. Bradshaw George, farmer Richings Thomas, steam flour pot &i

Witcombe park Gardner William, potter terra cotta manufactory &; grocer,

Knowles Arthur, Buckholt Wood Gastrell Jame·s, timber merchant Post office

Grahbam Robert, miller (water) Webb In.Edward,farmr.Mann's court

COMMERCIAL. Hall William Sadler, Royal William Woodfield Thomas, farmer &; assistant

Atkins Samuel, Black Horse inn P.H. & maltster &; brewer overseer, Simmond's &; Batch farms

A.twater William, farmer, Frame's frm Hayward Frederick, farmer,'Haregrove

CRO::MHALL is a parish, on the road from Bristol to Andrew is an ancient building in the Deeorated and Per·
Wotton-under-Edge, 2 miles south-west from Charfield pendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave of four bays,
Itation, on the Bristol and Birmingham section of the south aisle, south porch, and low massive embattled tower

Midland railway, 5 east from Thornbury, 4 from Wotton- on the north side containing 2 bells: the stained east
under-Edge, and IQ south-west from Dursley, in the Mid window was inserted in 1852, when the church was re-
stored: there are 200 sittings. The register dates from
division of the county, upper division of Berkeley hundred,
the year 1653. The living is a. l'ectory, net yearly value
Thornbury union, Dursley county court district, petty
£410, including 77 acres of glebe with residence, in the
sessional division of Wotton-under-Edge, l'ural deanery of g-ift of Oriel College, Oxford, and held since 1874 by the
Hawkesbury, archdeaconry of Bristol, and diocese of Glou~ Rev. William Michael ·Collett M.A.. formerly fellow and
ce-tpr. The parish is divided into two tithings-Crom- tutor of that college. There is a church fund of £15

hall Lygon and Cromhall Abbotts. The church of St.

DmECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. DAGLINGWORTB. 133,

yearly value, arising from land left to be applied for use Parish Olerk, William Hale.

of the church. Here is a Congregational chapel. The Post &; M. O. 0.. S. B. &; Annuitv &; Insurance Office.

charities amount to £10 yearly, derived from lands left by -Wm. Hale, sub-postmaster. Letters received through
different persons, now vested in .the Provost and Fellows
Falfield Railway Sub-Office, which is the nearest tele-
of Oriel College and distributed in money. The greater
part of the Earl of Ducie's park of Tortworth -Court lies in graph office; dispatched at 4.50 p.m.; there i£ 8 de-

this parish, and contains the remains of a Roman villa; livery daily through the village at 8.10 a.m. &; on tues.
the mansion is in Tortworth parish. Heath End House
is at present unoccupied. The Earl of Ducie P.C., F.R. S. thurs. &; sat. for outlying farms at 8.15 a.m
is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is
Wall L t B b N . I ed k .:I
e ter ox, y ew mn, c ear 5·5 p.m. wee - .aYI

only; Common, cleared 4·35 p.m. week days only

various, ,being on the northern break of the Bristol coal Carrier.-William White, to Bristol, tues. thurs. &; sat. to
basin; the subsoil is for the most part rock, with veins ' White Horse,' Barr street

of clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots; a National School (mixed), built in 1834, for 110 children;

large proportion is pasture land. The area is 2,579 acres; average attendance, 86; there is a house for the mis-

rateable value, £6,236; the population in 1891 was 606. tress; Miss Sarah Thwaites, mistress

C<>l1ett Rev. Wm. Michael M.A.Rectory Bowen John, shopkeepe.r Pinegar George, grocer

GrangeI' Richard Peyton, Wentwood Cullimore John, pig dealer Pitcher George Edward, dairy farmer

Bade John J., F.S.I., M.R.A.C. Whit- Drew Edwd. Hobbs,frmr. Abbotts side Roach William. shoe maker

field house (postal address, Falfield Eacott John, farmer ,& pig dealer Rugman Hy. farmer. Ashworthy farm

R.S.O) Fisher He.rbert, farmer Rumbold;; Oliver, farmer

Phillimore Mlrs Ford Richard, grocer &; draper Selby Thomas, blacksmith

Stansbury Alexander Jas. Bibstone ho Hale William, blacksmith Stillchcombe George, farmer

Harle John J.,F.S.I.,M.R.A.C.agent to Sutton William, farmer, Hunters hall

COWlERCUL. the Earl of Ducie, Whitfield (postal Tayler James, beer retailer

Baker Charles, farmer, Woodend farm address, Falfield R.S.O) Vigar William T. farm bailiff to Earl

Barton Edwin, dairy farmer Hobbs George, haulier &; New inn of Ducie, Example farm, Whitfield

Barton Henry, teazle dealer Hobbs Lucy (Mrs.), Red Lion P.R (postal address, Falfie-Id R.S.O)

Bennett Leonard,farmr.Cromhall court Hobbs WilliamBarber, farmer,Church- Watts Lucy (Mrs.), farmer

Bennett William, rag merchant wood farm White Alfred, farmer

Bushrod William, head woodman to King Wm.Jn. farmr.Talbot's End frm Wicks Robert, farmer, Talbot's end

Earl of Ducie, Park End house Musty In. miller (water), Sodom milJ. Young Daniel Richd. Royal Oak P.H

CUBBERLEY, or Goberley, is a parish and village 1539. The living is a rectory, with that of Calesborne

a short distance west of the road from Cheltenham to annexed, 'oint yearly value £360, including 17 acres of

Cirencester, 21 miles south from Charlton Kings station on glebe, with residence, in the gift of Henry John Elwes esq.

the Cheltenham and Bourton section of the Great Western and held since 1866 by the Rev. Charles Henry Wilson

railway, about 3 west from Withington station on the M.A. of Trinity Co:lege, Cambridge. Here is a Baptist

eirencester and 'Cheltenham section of the Midland and chapel, ,built in 1823. Ullenwood House is the property

South Western Junction railway, and 4! south-by-east and seat of Henry Bubb esq. J.P. Seven Springs is the

from Cheltenham, in the Northern division of the county, property and seat ()f Hamilton Fane Gladwin esq. J.P. At

partly in Bradley hundred and partly in that of Rapsgate, "Seven Springs" rises one of the sources of the river

Cheltenham union, petty sessional division and county Thames. There is one flour mill worked by water. Henry

court district, rural deanery of Cheltenham, and arch- John Elwes esq. of Colesborne Park, who is lord of the

deaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. manor, Henry Bubb esq. Samuel Peters esq. and Hamil-

Giles is an ancient building of stone in the Gothic style, ton Fane Gladwin esq. are the principal landowners. The

consisting of chancel, nave, south chapel, south porch, soil is stone brash; subsoil, stony. The chief crops are

and an embattled western tower containing 3 bells: a wheat, barley and oats. The area is 3,421 acres; rate-

handsome screen of wood separates the tower from the able value, £2,487; the population in 1891 was 346.

nave: the south chapel retains a .low si~e window: at Post Office. James Hall, sub-postmaster. Letters re.
the east end o~ the chancel, on eIther SIde, ar~ several
. recumbent effigle~ of the 14th century, two of whlCh prob- ceived from Cheltenham at 8.30 a.m. r& dispatched at
ably rel?resent Slr Thomas. Ber.keley (wh~ enlarged t~e 5.40 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
chureh m 1330), and Joan hIS wIfe: there IS also a demJ.- Charlton Kings is the nearest mone order &; telel1raph
office y"

effigy of a knight holding a heart, supposed to represent ,
ISir Giles de Berkeley, whose heart was interred in this Wall Letter Box, near Salterley grange, Cleared at 9·45

church in 1295, and his body at Little Ma:vern: under a.m. &; 6·5 p.m
Ian arch on the south side is a female figure not identified: National School (mixed), built, with teacher's house, in

the chancel was rebuilt in 1869, and the nave in 1872: r859, '£01' 80 children; average attendance, 54; Miss
there are 120 sittings. The register dates from the year Emily Hill, mistress

Bubh Hemy J.P. Ullenwood house Edmunds Edward. gardener to- 'Henry Jackson John, farmer,UpperCubherley

Gladwin Hamilton Fane J.P. (Herts &; Bubh esq Smith James, grocer

Glos.), Seven Springs Fawkes Charles, land steward &; farm Smith WiIliam, carpenter

Williams Theodore Ellis J.P. Salterley bailiff to Henry Bubb esq. Ullenwood Smith William, stone mason

grange farm Stallard Frederick, gamekeeper to Hy.

Wilson Rev. Chas. Henry M.A. Rectory Fowler Philip Clayton, frmr. The Close Bubb esq

COMMERCIAL. Hall James, grocer, Post office Wilson 'Ym. miller (water) &; baker,

Dmham Edwin, head gardener to Organ William Henry James, farmer, Coberley mill, &; fprmer,Church frm

Hamilton Fane Gladwin esq Coberley court

DAGLINGWOBTH is a parish and village, 3 miles with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor and
north-by-west from Cirencester, and near the old road held since r892 by the Rev. Charles John Martyn M.A.
of Christ Church, Oxford, chaplain in ordinary to the
between that town and Gloucester, in the Eastern division Queen and chaplain to the order of St. John of Jerusalem.
of the county, hundred of Crowthorne and Minety, Ciren-
cester union, petty sessional division and county court There is a charity of £4 10S. yearly value for the education

district, and in the rural deanery and archdeaconry of of children of the parish, and one of 21S. which is dis-

Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The ehurch of tributed in money. The principal landowners are Earl
Bathurst, who is lord of the manor, and John Charles
the Holy Rood is a building- of stone, principally in the Holder esq. of Pitmast'1n, Moor Green, Birmingham. The

Decorated style, but with traces of very early Norman soil is stone brash (oolitel: subsoil, limestone rock. The
chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and turnips. The area
work, and consists of chancel, nave of three bays, north
aisle, south porch, vestry and an embattled western tower is 1,923 acres; ratea,b:e value, £1'4SI; the popu:ation in
1891 was 30r.
containing 4 bells: the walls of the older part cf the
building are (}f rubble masonry: the chancel retains an Parish Clerk, William Smith.
ancient altar and curious slabs, with figures in bas-relief:
the east window is a memorial to Edward Haines, 1863, Post Office.-Miss Hannah Gibbons, sub-postmistress.
Letters received from Cirencester at 6.40 a.m.; dis·
and above it, on the exterior wall. is a crucifix: there
are also two memorial brasses to the Rev. Henry Charles patched at 6.45 p.m. November to March &; 7.15 p.m.

Raymond Barker M.A. rector here 1841-89, hon. canon of March to November. Postal orders are issued here, but
not paid. The nearest money order office is at Stratton
Bristol. and a great benefactor to the parish, and to &; tel~raph office at Cirencester
his wife: the church affords 200 sittings: the broken
shaft of a cross stands on a pedestal in the churchyard. Parish School (mixed), built, with teacher's residence, in
The register dates from the year 1561. The livin~ is a
rectory, net yearly value £r80, including 60 acres of glebe 1868, &; enlarged in 18oI, for 85 children; average at-
tendance, 65; Herbert Ho:t, master

134 DAGLINGWORTH. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Bayley Mss Olark James, carpenter Hill Mary .Ann (Mrs.), laundress

Bubb Rev. Hy. M.A. Daglingworth ho Coffee & Reading Rooms (C. Cozier, Howley Thomas, shopkeeper

Gibbons }<'rederick manager) • Lane Henry, farm bailiff to J. C.

Martyn Rev. Charles John M.A. chap- Curtis Ellen (Miss), dress maker Holder esq. Oysterwell farm

lain in ordinary to the Queen, Curtis George, coal merchant Legg John, hurdle maker

Rectory; & Oxford '& Cambridge & Curtis John, carrier Mace John, blacksmith

Marlborough clubs, London Gibbons Hannah (Mis'S), Post office Smith MJary .Ann (Miss), shopkeeper

StajIard Arthur, The Cottage Gillman Henry, blacksmith Smith Owen, farmer

Barrett Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer Hayward George, builder Smith William, farmm", Bridge farm

Berry James, farmer Hayward Thomas, stone mason Smith William, farmer, Overley house

EAST DEAN, part of Dean Forest, on the high road RJUSPIDGE, 4 miles weit, and ISOUDLEY, 3! miles
from Micheldean to Coleford and Newnham, is 8 to'Wll- west-by-south from Newnham, are given with Cinderford.
ship divided into three ecclesiastical parishes, Holy Trinity.
St. John the Evangelist and St. Stephen's 'Woodside, and Post, M. O. &; T. 0., S. B. &; .Annuity &:; Insurance Office,
has stations on the Severn and Wye joint Great Western Drybrook.-Cornelius MarfeIl Oowmeadow, sub-post-
and Midland railway at Oinderford and Drybrook road: master. Letters through Micheldean R.S.O. delivered
the township comprises Cinderford, Drybrook, Ruardean at 6.50 I&; 12 noon; dispatched st 5.10 I&; 6.55 p.m
Woodside, Ruardean Hill, Harry Hill, Bilson, Bilson Wood~
side, part of Lydbrook, Ruspidge, Soudley and Hinders Wall Letter Box, Plump hill, cleared. at 7 p.m. week days;
Lane and Dockham, and extends from north to south about Little Dean hill, cleared at 7,15 p.m. week days &; Nail·
10 miles: it is in the Forest of Dean division of the county, bridge, cleared a·t 6.15 p.m. week days
Saint Briavels hundred, union of Westbury-on-Severn,
Newnham county court district and petty sessional divi. Gloucestershire County Constabulary, Drybrook, Frank
sion, rural deanery of South Forest, and archdeaconry Honeybone, constable
and diocese of Gloucester. The ecelesiastical parishes of
St. John the Evangelist and St. Stephen's Woodside are PLAOES OF WORSHIP, with times of services.
given under Oinderford. Holy Trinity is an ecclesiastical
parish formed in 1842 under the.Act 5 & 6 Vl.ct. c. 65, and Holy Trinity Church, Harry Hill, Rev. James Lawton;
comprises Drybrook, Ruardean Woodside, Ruardean Hill,
Harry Hill, Plump Hill, Popes Hill, and Lea Bailey. The Rev. Arthur George Gregor M.A. curate; 10.30 a.m. &;
church of Holy Trinity, Harry Hill, which is 4 miles south
from Micheldean Ro!"d station and 6 north-west from 3 1& 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7 p.m. summer only
N ewnham, is a T' "sin building of stone, erected in 1,816,
in the Norman sryle, consisting of chancel, nave, south Holy Trinity Schools Church, DrY'brook; wed. 7 p.m. from
porch and an embattled western tower eontaining a clock
and 2 bells: there are 700 sittings. The register dates September to Easter
from the year 18IJ. The living is a vicarage, net yearly
Bible Christian, Drybrook; Rev. William Hill, 2.30 &;
value £290, with residence and 2! acres of glebe, in the
6 p.m.; thurs. 7 p.m
gift of the Crown, and held since 1897 by the Rev. James
Lawton, of St. Bees. The area is 5,859 acres; the popu- Oongregational, Drybrook; !Rev. Ignatius Jones; 10.45
lation in 1891 was 5,401. Here are 'Congregational, Bap-
tist, Wesleyan, Primitive Methodist and Bible Christian a.m. & 6 p.m.; wed. 7 p.m .
chapels. The manor, as well as the greater part of the
Baptist, Ruardean Hill, Rev. Geo. Neighbour; 10.45 a.m.
land, belongs to the Crown. Coal and iron mines are
& 6 p.m.; thurs. 7 p.m
worked and very superior stone quarried. The soil is Bible 'Christian, Ruardean Woodside ; II.45'& 6 p.m
dry and sandy; subsoil, rock. Timber is the only agri- Congregational, Brierley Hill; 2.45 p.m
cultural produce. The area of the township is 12,047
acres; rateable value, £34,462; the population of the Congregational, Popes Hill; 2.45 p.m. & 6 p.m. in winter,
township in 1871 was 10,9°1, in 1881, 12,629 and in 1891,
on alternate sundays
14,622. Primitive Methodist, Little Dean Hill; 10.30 a.m. &; 6

Parish Gerk, Holy Trinity, George Oindery. p.m.; thurs. 7 p.ro
Primitive Methodist, Nailbridge; 10.30 a.m. &; 6 p.m.;
OINDEIWORD, a portion of this township, will be found
under a separate heading. tues. 7 p.m
Wesleyan, Ruardean Woodside; II.45 a.m. &; 6 p.ro
DRYEROOK is 6 miles north-west from Newnham on
the road from Cinderford to Ross, ,Oinderford on the SOHOOLS.
Severn and Wye and Severn Bridge railway ·being the
nearest station. Here are Congregational and Bible A School Board of 13 members was formed March 22,
Christian chapels. 1'~75, for the Forest of Dean United District School
Board, which comprises East &; West Dean, & to which
RUARDEAN WOODSIDE is 6! miles north-west, and Newnham is contributory, sending two members: John
Samuel Bradstock, Cinderford, clerk to the board;
It north-west from Cinderford station; HARRY HILL is J oseph George Oooper, Cinderford, &; Charles Smith,
Goleford, attendance officers
6 miles, and BlliSON 4 miles, with a station for goods
only, on the Forest of Dean Mineral railway. Board, Ruardean Woodslde (mixed), built, with master's
residence, in 1878, .& enlarged in 1893, for 274 children;
St. White's, Causeway, Little Dean Hill and MOllsel average attendance, 17:9 boys I&, girls, 58 infants;
Lane were, March 25, 1,883, taken from Flaxley parish Philmer Poynter, master; Mrs. Jessie MarfeIl, infants'
and ama.Igamated with East Dean. Hinders Lane and mistress
Dockham were added by Local Government Board Order
14,580, March 24, 1'884. Board, Plump Hill (mixed), built in I187'8, for 151 children,
&; enlarged in 1890, for 82 children; average attendance,
90 boys &; girls, & 49 infants; Albert Alfred Ferley,
master

Holy Trinity National, Drybrook (mixed), built, with
master's residence, in 186::2, ,& enlarged in 1891, for 286
children; average attendance 164 boys I&, girls &; 100

infants; George Bryant, master: Miss Emily Jones, in·

fants' mistress

Railway Station, Drybrook road, William Osbourne,

station master '

E.AJS T DEAN. *Cinderford Waterworks (William Jordan Sarah (Mrs.),shpkpr.Nailbrdg

. Whitehouse, manager) Lea Jane (Mrs.), shopkpr. & butcher,
Marked thus * the postal address IS Cindery Geo. shopkeeper, Nailbridge Little Dean hill

Oinderford, Newnham. Cowmeadow Joseph, boiler maker, Marshall Margaret (Mrs.), shopkeeper,

Neighbour Rev. George (Baptist), butcher &; baker, Nailbridge Ruardean Woodside

Ruardean hill Davis Henrietta (MisSl), Royal Oak P.B Marshall Wm. shopkeeper, The Pluds

COMMERCIAL. Dunkley .Albert, Railway inn, Nailbrdg Meek J onah, shopkeeper, Ruardean hI

Baker Wm. beer retailer, Pope's hill *Electric Blasting Apparatus Co. elec- Meek Joseph,quarry owner,Nailbridge

*Baldwin Emma. (Mrs.), bake·r & shop- tric fuse manufacturers (Francis *Meredith Mary .Ann (Mrs.), beer

keeper, Little Dean hill William Thomas Brain, manager) retailer &; shopkeeper, Lit. Dean hill

Baldwin Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Guest William, farmer Minchin WiIliam, baker, beer retailer

Nailbridge Haddock Tom, shopkeeper,Gun's mills &; shopkeeper, Nailbridge

Bennett Wm.quarry ownr. Nailbridge Hale George, haulier, Greenbottom New Bowson Coal Co. Lim. (John Bur-

Bradley Enoch. beer retailer, Ruar- Hale Isaac, beer retailer, Hawsley flat den, manager)

dean Woodside Hale John, blacksmith, Nailbridge Newman William, farmer, Button's frm

Brain Ellen (Mrs.), shopkpr.Plump hI Hale William, farmer, Moor woods Powell Samuel, shopkeeper, Nailbridge

Brain Thomas Bennett, brick maker, Harris Samuel, Point inn, Plump hill Pritchard John, farmer

Nailbridge *Jones Arthur, Royal Forester P.B. Ryder Fred.erick, haulier, Pope's hill

*Brown Owen, Swan inn, Brierley Little Dean hill Ryder John, farmer, Gun's mills

*Christie William David,forest keeper, Jones Hubert John, quarry owner, *Sier JOB, mason, Little Dean hill
*Sier Richard, mason, Little Dean hil!
Herbert lodge Ruardean hill

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. WEST DEAN. 135

Simmonds Aaron,quarry owner &; lime COMMERCIAL. • Guest .Amelia (Mrs.), shopkeeper
burner, Plump hill
Baddock Tom Watts, beer retailer et

Simmonds Daniel, beer retlr. Plump hI Baldwin Thos. beer retailer, The Morse shopkeeper
*Trafalgar Colliery Co. Limited (Fras. Batt George Henry, grocer &:. butcher, Barris George, haulier, The Morse

William Thomas Brain, sec. &:. mgr) The Morse Bufton Jeremiah, watch maker
Walkley Aaron, haulier, Lit. Dean hill Batt Henry, butcher Hughes John E. beer retailer &:. wheel-

Wilce Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retail&!" &; Bennett James, butcher &:. farmer wright, The Morse

shopkeeper, Ruardean Woodside Beorrow Charles, mason Lewis EstheT(Mrs.),shpkpr.The Morse
LEA. BAILEY.
Birt Waiter William, beer retailer Marfell James, haulier

Boseley Wm. shopkeeper, The Morse MarfeJl Tryphena (Mlrs.), plumber -&

Smith Mhry .Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper Brain Fraucis William. Thomas, civil painter

engineer, Trafalgar house Meek Susan (Mrs.), grocer

DRYBROOK. Brain Jame9, grocer &:. draper Moore George, boot &:. shoe maker

Brain Francis William 'l'homas C.E. Buckley George, shopkeeper Moore George, New inn

Trafalgar house Cinderford Co-operative 'Society Lim. Moore Thomas, stone &; lime works

Brain Thos. Bennett J.P. Euroclydon (branch) (William Ghas. Ivins, sec) Morman Thomas, coffee tavern

Gregor Rev. Arthur Geo. M.P. (cura.te Clifford William, farmer, The Morse Prooce Razen, be~r 'l'etailer

of Holy Trinity) Cowmeadow Gornelius Marfell, statnr. Reed Arthur J. A. Royal Oak P.H

Hill Rev. William (Bible Christian) Post office Shapcott Thomas, tailor

Jones Rev. Ignatius (Congregational) Dawe Joseph, grocer &:. draper, &:. agent Smith Emanuel,grocer,draper &; baker

Lawton Rev. James (vicar of Holy for W. &; A. Gilbey Limited, wine &; Speedwell Newbridge Colliery Co.

Trinity), Barry Hill spirit merchants! colliery proprietors

Searle Edgar Haydon Downton Hy. wheelwright &; iblacksmth Teague George, farmer

LITTLE DEAN is a parish and large village, on the ment, and several Roman roads still remain. Dean Hall

borders of the Forest of Dean, and on the road fwm is now (1897) vacant. Maynard Willoughby Colchester-
Wemyss esq. oil Westbury Court, Westbury-on-Severn,
Newnham to Ross, 2 miles north-west from Newnham
who is lord of the manor, Francis Wintle esq. Sir Thomas
station on the South Wales sectioru of the Great Western Hyde Crawley-Boevey bart. of Flaxley Abbey, Edmund
railway, and 2 miles east from Cinderford station on the
Boughton esq. and Mrs. Goold are the chief landowners.
Severn and Wye and Severn Bridge railway, and: 12 south- The soil is chiefly loam; the subsoil is sand and dun-
west from Gloucester, in the Forest of Dean division stone. Coal and iron ore are procured in the neighbour-
of the county, Saint Briavels hundred, Newnham petty hood. The chief crops are wheat and roots and some
sessional division and county court district, Westbury-
{ID-Severn union, rural deanery of South Forest and arch- land in pasture. The a.rea is 700 acres; rateable value.

deaoonry and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. £1,933; the population in- 1891 was 843. Portions from

Ethelbert is an ancient building of stone, chiefly in the Flaxley, Newland and Westbury-on-Severn were added
Perpendicular style, consisting o~ chancel, nave of four
bays, north aisle, south porch and an embattled western to this parish by Local Government Board Orders 14,584
tower with spire containin~ a clock and 6 bells: the
and 14,629, March 25, 1883.
chancel arch is Norman: there are tablets to the Pyrke
Sexton, William Nash. .
family: the church has sittings for 360 persons. The
Post &:. M. O. 0., S. B. &:. Insurance & Annuity Office.
register dates from the year 1684. The living is a rec-
tory, net yearly value £146, with ~lebe (£5) with resi- -Mrs. Maria Bag-hurst, sub-postmistress. Letters re-
dence, in the gift O'f the trustees of the Church Patron-
ceived through Newnham at 7 a.m. &:. 3.20 p.m.; dis-

patched at 9.30 a.m. &:. 6.5 & B a.m. The nearest tele-

graph office is at Cinderford

age Society, and held since 1B90 by the Rev. George Here is Newnham Petty Sessional court &:. house of re-

Alexander Papendick Arbuthnot. Here is a Congrega- mand for prisoners; Jesse Clark, sergeant, &:. I constable
tional chapel. A cemetery of one-third of an acre was National School (mixed), built in 1B48, for 220 children;

formed in IB81, at a cost of £106 15s. 6d. and is under average attendance, 131 boys &:. girls &:. 60 infants;
the control of the Parish Council of 8 members. The 1Villiam R. T. Cullis, master; Miss Dorcas Burgam,
charities are of about £25 yearly value, derived from infants' mistress

land and houses, and distributed to the poor in bread CARRIERS TO GLOUCESTER.
and cloth. Fairs are held on Whit Monday and the 26th

November yearly, fDr cattle, sheep and pigs. On a hill Joseph Phelps, sat.; Joseph Brown, from Cinderford.

near the church, called Camp Hill, is a circular encamp- mono wed. &:. sat

Arbuthnot Rev. George Alexander Grindon James H. farmer, Camp farm Phelps Joseph, carrier &:. haulier

Papendick, Rectory Gwilliam Hy. nail ma. & naturalist Pritchard John, farmer, Th~ Temple

Goold Mrs Haines Harriott (Mrs.), lodging house Reid John, farmer. Pope's hill

Nowell·Barton Rev. John Henry M.A. (registered) Robins Sarah &:. Edith (Misses), frmrs

(curate of 'St. John's, Ginderford), Haines James, blacksmith Rudge Thomas, farmer & haulier.

Hill house Hart Sidney, farmer, Grove farm Locquers

Reskelly Rev. Charles Jolly (Cong) Helt Henry, shoe maker Smith Hester (Mrs.), poulterer

Waylen William A; Herbert Frank, George P.H Smith Sarah Ann (Mrs.), farmer,

Wilson Miss, Frogmore cottage HDrwood Hy. farmer, Greenway farm. Court farm

COMMERCIAL. Bunt Martha (Mrs.), dress maker Smith Thomas Frederick, district road

Bathe Frank, grocer Hunt William, boot &:. shoe. maker surveyor to Gloucestershire -county

Eoughton Edmund, farmer &:. landownr Knight Aaron, bailiff to Newnham council

Eoughton Frank, farmer county court Smith William, carpenter

Brain Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Lapington Thomas, King's Read P.EJ Stubbs Richard, farmer

Brain Esau, carpenter Lewis Robert James, Bell P.R Stubbs Wi1liam, farmer, Dean cottag~

Eryant John, shoe maJrer Morgan Sidney James, wheelwright &; Trigg John, baker &:. draper

Cemetery (Alfred Westbrook, clerk to carpenter We~brook Alfred, farmer &:. collector

the parish council) Nelmes James, shopkeeper of rates

Drew William, farmer Parry Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper Wilkes Mary (Mhos.), beer retailer

Emblingo Mlary (Mrs.), farmer Pa ...ry John, market gardene-r Wyon John, chimney sweep

George William, nail maker PeterSl EIlen (Mrs.), shopkeeper ,

WEST DEAN is an extensive township, formed under ore obtained thereiTom, combined with the remarkable
the Act sand 6 Vie. cap. 48, relating- to Crown lands in condition upon which the right of working them,is based,
the F{)l'est of Dean, and is in the Forest of Dean divi- have all served to render this :locality as interesting- to
sion oil the county, hundred of St. Briavels, Monrnouth the present generation as it was profitable to the primi-
union and county court district, Coleford petty sessional tive operatives of the Middle Ages; its annals occupy a
division, rural deanery of South Forest and archdeaconry prominent place both in the domestic and commercial
and diocese of Gloucester. The soil is for the most part history of the kingdom and afford details of the working
()f a stiff clayey nature, and is peculiarly adapted to the of mines here in remoter times, when the iron ore was
growth of oak, of which there are large plantations or sought by the miners near the surface of the ground, a
inclosures made and planted under the authority of the method of exploration which accounts for the strange
Crown, as Qwner of the Forest of Dean, comprising IB,709 and weird-like caverns found in many! places in this dis-
acres, of which 15,171 are covered with timber and trict: the abundance and superior quality of the Forest
plantatioiis: the subsoil is underlaid with valuable mines ore was such, as not only to fix upon the miners the
of coal and iron ore, together with extensive beds of exaction of tithes by the church and customs by the
stone, clay oxides and ochre: the very great antiquity king, but to draw to the enterprise the nobles of the
of the l"Ql'est mine~r and the peculiar quality of the iron land, wb,o.as well as lluccessive m~l'chs, llvailed them..

136 WEST DEAN. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

selves freely of so valuable a means of adding to their Lydbrook, under the heading of Lydbrook; and Christ

resources. With but few intermissions during the cen- Church, comprising part of Berry Hill, Joyford and H:i1-

turies which have elapsed since medireval times, mining lersland, Edge End and Five Acre.

operations in the Forest have been actively continued, The following! places in the township of West Dean
are not included in the above ecclesiastical parishes:_
and the modern development of the trade has been so ELLWOOD, 2 miles south-east from Coleford; h~re is
a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1875: CLEAR.
great as to have called into existence numerous districts WELL MESNE, 2 miles south-east: BREAM'S EA.VES,
5 south-east, and part of MILKWALL, I mile south-east,
filled with a large industrial population. The coal ob- with a station on the Severn and Wye and Severn Bridge
railway.
tained from the several collieries not only supplies the
Post Office, Milkwall.-Henry James Little, sub-post-
requirements of the localities around, but is largely trans- .

mitted to other parts of the kingdom, but the iron ore master. Letters through Coleford, whIch is the
nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive at 7
(brown hrematite), formerly sent in large quantities into a.m.; dispatched at 6.20 p.m. Postal orders are issu~
WahlelreL,ethtuert Bnooxt, pEalilwd ood, cleared at 6.20 p.m
the county of Stafford and to South Wales, is now (1897),
in consequence of the depression in trade and the vast
quantities imported from Spain, but little worked. The

clay of the Forest is specially adapted for the making

of fire bricks. There are also many extensive quarries
Y.leIdm. g exceIIence
. the Forest sandstone of t he highest

lD
for building purposes; this stone is also used to a con-

siderable extent for monumental purposes as well as for THE ROYAL FOREST OF DEAN; office, Coleford.
troughs and grindstones. Within the Forest of Dean
there are also tin works and chemical distilleries, but it The Gaveller, E. Stafford Howard esq
still retains within its vast extent some of the most Deputy Gaveller, Thomas Forster :Brown esq
Deputy Snrveyor & Crown Receiver, Philip Baylis esq
lovely woodland scenery in the kingdom. The CroOwn is Registrar & Receiver, Thomas Forster Brown esq
H.M. Inspector of Mines, Joseph S. Martin esq. Durdham
lord of the manor and the principal landowner. The

surface of the Forest and the Crown lands known as

the "High Meadow estate," are under the management park, Clifton

of the Deputy-Surveyor; the mines are under the A. School Board of 10 members was formed March 22,
management of the Deputy-Gaveller. The township ex- 1875, for the Forest of Dean, which comprises East &;
tends over an area of 10,035 acres, 2,060 of which are West Dean, to which Newland is contributory, sending
cultivated; the rateable value is £13,497, and comprises 2 members; John Samuel Bradstock, Oinderford, clerk
the greater portion of the Forest of Dean, with a popula- to the board; J oseph George Cooper, Cinderford, &;
tion in 1891 of 9,130, divided into four ecclesiastical Charles Smith, Coleford, attendance officer
parishes, viz.: St. Paul's, which comprises the hamlets Board Schools, ElIwood .(mixed & infants), built, ",itb
of Park End, Whitecroft and Futterill, which will be master's residence, in 1877 & enlarged in 1894, for 318
found under the heading of Park End; .All Saints, cam· children; average attendance, 168 mixed & 92 infants;
prising YOl'kley and Viney Hill, under the heading of Joseph Pope, master; Mrs. EleaIlJor Eliza Meek, girls'
Viney Hill; Holy Jesus, comprising the greater part of & infants' mistress

BREAM'S EAVES. Nash William, farmer & haulier MILKWALL.

(For names of Bream's Eaves, see PoweU James, shopkeeper Cole James, shopkeeper

:Bream.) Preoce John, &hopkeeper Dowle Frances (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Reece Thomas Hy. quarry proprietor Drake Charles, supt. for Wesleyan &;

CLEARWELL MESNE. (blue &;, grey), Drybrook; res. 5 General. Assurance Co

Davis John, beer retailer Gloucester road, Coleford Edwards Richard, beer retailer

. ELLWOOD. Williams Agatha (Mrs.), shopkeeper J ames John, shopkeeper

Williams Joseph, farmer Morgan rrom 0& Co. mechanical engi-

Nash James, beer retailer IlOO'1"S '& machinists

DEERHURST is a parish on the eastern bank of the sum is applied to church purposes and the poor of the

navigable river Severn, on the Worcestershire border, 4 parish.
miles south-west (by road) from Tewkesbury, 7 north- The remarkable Saxon chapel discovered here in
west from Cheltenham and la north-north-east from' August, 1885, stands about 80 yards from the southern

Gloucester, in the Northern division of the county, partly extremity of the churchyard, and had been built into and
in Deerhurst hundred and partly in the lower division of made to form part of It. fine half-timbered house, known
Westminster hundred, union and county court district, as" Abbot's Court"; this occurred in the 16th or 17th
petty sessional division of Tewkesbury, rural deanery of century, the chapel being plastered over, its doors and

Winchcomb, and al'chdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. windows built up, the interior divided into floors, and
This place furnishes the title of Viscount to the Coventry other windows made to light these: the chapel appears
family, Earls 'Of Coventry, having been first bestowed to have been a private chapel attached to the Manor

upon Thomas, 5th baron Coventry, in 1697. The church House, and with the manOr belonged till recently (e-

of St. Mary, formerly belonging to the priory, is an 188o), to tae Dean and Chapter {)f Westminster; the
edifice of great antiquity and singular character, dating manor having been given to the abbey 'Of Westminster by

probably from the 8th century, originally consisting of a Edward the Confessor in the last year of his reign, A.D.
choir (20 by 21 feet) with presbytery and aisles, clere- 1065; this grant was Tenewed by the Conqueror, and

storied nave of four bays (38 by 21 feet) and a western Deerhurst appears in Domesday as the possession of the
tower, the entire length being 105 feet: the presbytery, abbey. In 1675 an inscribed stone, now in the Ash·
with the exception of the foundations and one of the side molean Museum, Oxford, was discovered near the site of
walls, has disappeared, as well as one half of each choir this chapel by John Powell esq. (then town clerk of the
aisle, but otherwise the church preserves substantially its city of Gloucester and subsequently :Baron of the Ex-
ancient features: the tower, the upper stage of which is chequ.er and Justice of the Queen's Bench), the inscrip-

of later date than the general fabric, is 70 feet in height, tion on which recites that in 1056 Odda, Duke or Earl of
and contains a clock and 6 bells": in its eastern wall is a Mercia, built here an~ dedicated an "aula regia" in
double window with triangular headings looking into the honour of the Holy Trinity; the building thus designated

nave, and the lower stage forms a porch, with chambers is believed to be the lately discovered chapel, the term

above it: the south aisle of the nave was added in the 12th "aula regia" having, it is supposed, been employed ill-
century and the north aisle later: most of the windows stead of the more usual term" basilica." The chapel con-

are Decorated, but some are of Perpendicular date: the sists of a na.ve 25 feet 6 inches by IS feet 10 inches, and a

font, carved with ornamental work not later, it is be- chancel 14 feet by II feet 2 inches: the walls, constructed
lieved, than the 9th century, is very curious and interest- of thin stones of blue lias, with very 'Wide mortar joinb,

ing: the existing arrangements of the chancel are peculiar are 2 feet 3 inches thick: the nave has north Bnd south
and probably of Puritan origin: in the church is a brass doorways and two small round-headed windows, high up
with effigy to John Cassy, appointed chief baron of the in the wall: the chancel arch remained, though somewhat

Exchequer 12 May, 1389, ob. 14°0; his family held the mntilated, and has characteristic moulded imposts: tlie
manor of Wightfield in. this parish fr{)m the reign of south wall of the chancel was gone; the east end abuts on

Edw. m. to the end of that of Queen Elizabeth; on the the house, and in the north-east angle is an Early F.nglisb

brass occur the royal arms of England, indicative of his corbel.:By permission of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners

holding office under the Crown. The register dates from the chapel was restored in 1886, at a cost of 3bout £120,
the year 1558. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value all the walls being made good, the ancient doors and
£250, with glebe (£24 lOS.) and residence, in the gift of windows re-opened, and the chancel arch repaired: during
the :Bishop of Gloucester, and held since 1893 by the Rev. the progress of the work a fragment of another inscribed
Daniel George Lysons M.A. of Exeter College, Oxford.] stone was found built into a chimney-stack, but originally
There is' a Wesleyan chapel at Apperley. The charities set up near an altar to indicate its dedication; the legend
arising from the rent of land amount to £20 yearly, which being incomplete, renders it doubtful whethel' the dedica-

DIREarORY. ] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. DIDMARTON. 137

tion in this case was to the Holy Trinity or possibly to St. was 712. Apperley Court, the property and seat of .A.1ger-
Peter; the stone is now on one of the interior walls. A non A. de L. Strickland esq. RA., J.P. stands on an
monastery is said to have been founded here by Doddo, elevated spot, commanding an extensive prospect over the
Duke of Mercia, in honour of the Virgin iMary: this adjacent country. The .goil is a. deep red loam, but vary-
settlement, it appear&, was destroyed by the Danes, but ing on the higher gxounds, the greatest pari of which is
the monastery was rebuilt and colonised anew as a house used as pasture.

of the Benedictine order, c. 980, and was subsequently DEERHURST WALTON is a hamlet, 2 miles south-
bestowed by Edwam the Confessor on the Abbey of St. east on the high road from Tewkesbury to Gloucester and
Denis, near Paris, thus becoming an alien priory. After Cheltenham, from which there are many picture-sque and
beautiful views of the surrounding country.
the suppression of alien priories by Statute 2 Hen. V.
(1414-15), the monastery was granted by Hen. VI. to Sexton, William Henry Margxett.
Eton College, founded by him in 1440: Edw. IV. however,
revoked this gift and gave it to the college of Fotheringay, Post Office, Deerhurst.-Mrs. Harriet Haine-s, SUb-post-
but it was afterwards restored to Eton and finally granted mistress. Letters arrive through Tewkesbury at 7
to Tewkesbury Abbey; and at the Dissolution, 34 Hen. a.m.; dispatched 4.15 p.m. Postal orders are issued
here, but not paid. Tewkesbury is t'he nearest money
VID. (1542-3), it was granted to William Throckmorton. order & telegxaph office

St. .Alphege, Archbishop {)f Canterbury (1005-12), mur- Post Office, Apperley.-William Colwel1, sub-postmaster.
dered by the Danes 19 April, 1012, was sometime a monk Letters arrive at 8 a.m.; dispatched ab 4 p.m. thl'ough
of this house. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners, who Tewkesbury, which is also the JJParest money order
hold the manorial rights, .Algernon Augustine de Lille office; postal orders are issued here, but not paid;
Strickland esq. B.A., J.P. and the Earl of Coventry are nearest telegraph office, Combe Hill

chief landowners.

APPERLEY is a. large hamlet, I! miles south, in the SCHOOLS.

lower division Qf the hundred of Westminster: it lies on National, Apperley (mixed), built in 1858, with residence
the east bank of the river Severn, and some parts of it for mistress, for 44 children; average attendance, 40;
are subject to inuncLations. The chapel of ease here, & is supported by A. Strickland esq.; ::Mrs. Milsom~
erected in 1856, is a. structure of brick in the Byzantine mistress
style: in 1896 extensive alterations and additions were
made, at a cost of about £1,500, under the direction of F. National (mixed), Deerhurst, built in 1856, for 80
C. Penrose esq. architect, of London, and there are now children, with residence for master; average attend-
ance, 68; Sidney JQhn Gillett, master
about 150 sittings. The soil is loamy marl; subsoil. clay.
Carrier.-Ralph Crook, to Tewkesbury, wed. returning
There is a large proportion of pasture land; thE.' chief same day; to Gloucester, sat. returning same day j to
crops are wheat, beans and seeds. The area is 2,859 Cheltenham on thurs. returning same day
acres; rateable value, £5,576; the population in 1891

DEERHlURST. Ciifford Henry, White Lion P.H.~ coal Wells Elizabeth (Miss), farmer

Lysons Rev. Daniel George M.A. dealer & blacksmith Rymer John G. farmer, Grey hill

Vicarage Crook Henry, but.cher DEERHURST WALTON.
Whithorn Mrs Crook Ralph, earner

Philips William, farmer, Priory farm Clut'terbuc~ !Vm.frmr. Whitefield ert Boughton WaIt. Thos.Salters Hill vii

Whithorn Wm.frmr.AbbO'tts Court fm Colwell Wllliam, farmer, baker & Gordon John H. Hoo villa
beer retailer, Post office Leach Alfred, Walton house

APPERLEY. Cull C. A. & F. M. (Misses). farmers, Clift Wm. R. frmr. Walton Hill farm

Dipper John, Apperley green New house Counsell John, farmer. Curzey farm

Legh Mislt Cornwall, Apperley house Dipper JQhn, farmer Godwin Louis, blacksmith

Strickland Algernon Augustine de Dipper Wiliiam, farmer Pope H. J. farm bailiff to George

Lille RA., J.P. Apperley court Hanby Ellen (Mrs.), farmer Hone esq. Red House farm
Hanby James, farmer Pope Josiah, shQpkeeper

COMMERCIAL. Moore Henry, shopkeeper Robins ·William, jun. farmer

Andrews Charles, basket maker Powell J'ohn, farmer Smith George, frmr. Walton Hill farm

.Andrews George, basket maker Roberts Thomas, basket maker Hanby Charles, farmer

Baylis Joseph, tailor Robinson .Alfred, carpenter Wesl:ion Wm. Charles, farmer, Notcliff

Clifford Henry,jun.frmr.Box Tree frm Robinson William, carpenter

IDIDBROOX is a. village and parish, 3 miles north- held since 1871 by the Rev. William Darke Stanton M.A.
north-east from Winchcomb, and 6! south-east from I of Exeter College, Oxford, who is also vicar of and resides

Beckford station on the Evesham and Ashchurch branch I at Toddington. Here is a Wesleyan chapel, built in 1838.

of the Midland railway, in the Northern division of the I The Earl Qf Wemyss and March is lord of the manor. and

county. lower division of the hundred of Kiftsgate, Winch- I owns all the land with the exception of Wormington
comb petty sessional division, union an~ county court Grange estate and a portion of the Toddington estate.

district, rural deanery of ,Campden, archdeaconry of The soil consists of stiff clay; subsoil. clay and gravel.

Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. The chief crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area of

George, built by William of Whitchurch, last abbot of ! the township is 1,528; rateable value, £560; the popu-

Hailes, 1475, is a building of stone in the Perpendicular: lation in 1891 was 141.

style, consisting of chancel, nave, west porch and an em- I By a Local Government Or@r dated March 25, 1883.

battled, western tower with pinnacles and containing 4' Wormington Grange, a detached part of this parish, was

Ibells: the I. another detached to

ful cross,
founder's tomb, a stone coffin, with very beauti- amalgamated with Stanton and part
chalice and missal carved thereon, is ~n the Stanway.

north wall of the church: the stone font wai made and Parish Clerk .Alfred Wallis.

given by the late Mr. William Edwards, cglhassu':r:ocllehct~dwI Waalrl. den,' cleared lI;t 5 p.m. .
in 1858: the east window is filled with old Letter Box, Letters receIved from
by the Rev. H. B. Pruen: there are ISO sittings. The I WIDchco~b R.S.O. which lS the ne.arest money o1"der
register, including Pinnock and Halles, dates from the office, arrIve at 7·45 a.m. Stanway IS the nearest tele-

year 1556. The living is a vicarage. with the rectory of I graph office

Pinnock-cum-Hyde and the chapelry ()f Hailes annexed, I School (mixed), built i~ 1870, with residence for Inistress,

united joint net yea1"ly value £173, including 37 acres of for 96 child,:ren; average attendance, 40; supported in

glebe, in the gift of the Earl of Wemyss and March, and part by Lord Sudeley; Mrs. .Alcock, mistress

Weston A. E. D. St. Aubyn, The Cot HotJ.lic~ Frank, blacksmith Launchbury In. Wilkins, shopkeeper

COMMERCIAL. Horlick Julia Ann (Mrs.), wheelwright Scarlett Joseph, farmer

Higgins John, farmer, Fields farm Horlick WaUer (Mrs.), baker Staite Charles, carrier

DIDMARTON is a parish and village, on the Bath diocese of Gloucester. The river Avon takes its rise in
and Oirencester road and on the Wiltshire border. 6 this parish. By a. Local Government Order which came
miles south-west from Tetbury station, on the branch
of the Great Western railway from Kemble junction and into operation 25th Maroh, Ifr83, the entire parish of Old-
7 north-west from Wickwar station on the Birmingham bury-on-the-Hill was amalgamated with Didmarton. The
and Bristol section of the Midland railway, 8 west from church of St. Michael and .All Angels, erected in 1871, at
Malmesbury and 22 south from Gloucester and 102 from
London, in the Eastern division of the county, upper a cost of about £2,500, is an edifice in the Gothic style,
division of Grumbalds Ash hundred, Tetbury union and consisting of chancel, nave, north transept, north porch
petty sessional division, Malmesbury county court district, and a turret containing one bell: there are sittings for
rural deanery of Hawkesbury, archdeaconry of Bristol and
2150 persons. The church of St. Lawrence is an ancient
building of stone, in the Early English style, consisting
of nave, north aisle. north porch and a central wooden

138 DTDMARTON. GLOUcESTRRSHIRE. [KELLY'S

turret, containing a clock and one bell: the church will 306, are occasional;y found in this parish, at a small depth

seat 70 persons, but is now only used for burials. Several from the surface. The Marquess of Woreester is lord ot

members of the Codrington family are interred here. The the manor and chief landowner. The soil is principally a.

old church of St. Arild, Virgin and Martyr, formerly the light loam; subsoil, ooEte and marl. The chief crops

parish church of Oldbury-on-the-Hill, is a building of are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 2,022 acres irate-

stone, in the Early English style, consisting of chaneel able value, £2,513 j the popu:ation in 1891 was 401.

and nave and a tower containing one bell: it will seat Parish Clerk, Robert H. Gould.

5° perso.nts, r buf tDi"sd nowt alsdo tdisufsed etxhce pt for b6urialsd. Po '" Paree!1, M" 0 & T.0. ,S. .B, AnnUl'ty, I nsurance &;
Th e regIs e 1 mar on a es rom e year IS 7 an SI.,
0 Ex press Delivery Office.-Frank John Brown, lub-post-
that of Oldbury-on-the-Hill from 1675. The united livings
master. Letters through Ohippenham arrive at 7.30
form a rectory, net yearly value £230, inclpding IS acres di' spatched
. the gi'ft f +h D k ° f Beaufort K.G. and a.m. "0'".- 5. 20 p.m.; at 8·35 a.m. ,0.- p.m.;
af g Ieb e, 0 '. e u e
ill IoJ6·40
sundays arrive at 7.30 a.m. j dispatched 8.5 0 a.m
held since 1870 by the Rev. George Frederick Le Mesurier
M.A. of Exeter College, Oxford. Here is a Oongreg-ational Ohurch of England School (mixed), for 80 children; aver.
age attendance, 50; Miss Kate Louisa Jephson, mistress
chapel, built in 1843, and seating IS0 persons. There ill

a charity of £7 lOS. yearly value, left by Nicholas Iddol. Oarrier to Bristol. John Lake, mono returning tues. from
Talbot inn, Bath street, 10 a.m
Roman coins, principally of the reign of Constantine A.D.

Darling Danl. Addison, Woodway ho Baylis John White, carpenter, wheel- Lake John, shopkeeper & carrier

Jeynes Rev. William (Congregational) wright & smith Osborne William, ,shopkeeper

Le Mesurier Rev. George Frederick Biggs J emima (Mrs.), dress maker Painter John, !Shopkeeper

M.A. Rectory Brown Frank John, grocer, draper & Phillips Arthur, saddler

Lucas Mrs patent medicine vendor, Bost office Rice WiHiam, tiler & plasterer

Newsham Miss, The Nest Ohilton Thomas, stud groom to Robinson Francis, farmer, Oldbury

Sessions James A. M. Wilson esq Stevens Thomas, veterinary surgeon

Tanner Charles, West End house Gould Roher,t Holbin, farmer Sumners William, King's Arms P.H.

White George HathereU John Oorbett, farmer & grocer & baker

Wilson Arthur Maitland, Kingmead Haynes William, smith Thompson Alfred, farmer

Baker Waiter Walton, saddler & in- Hendy Wm. & Arthur, shoe makers WaningtonJames,carpenter & wh~elwrt

come tax collector Huff Henry, shoe maker White George M.R.O.S. ,surgeon

"DODINGTON is a parish and village, 4 miles east. ton, d. 2nd December, 1884: there are ISO sittings. The
south-east from Yate station on the Bristol and Birming- register dates from the year 1575. The living is a rec-
ham section of the Midland railway, 13! north-east from tory, gross yearly value {240' including /24 acres of glebe,
Bristol, 2! south-east from Chipping Sodbury, in the with residence, in the gIft of Sir G. W. H. Codrington
Southern division of the county, Grumbalds Ash hundred, bart. and held since 1892 by the Rev. Jobn Alfred James
Chipping Sodbllry union and county court district, Sod- B.A. of Trinity College, Dublin. Dodington House, the
bury petty sessional division, rural deanery of Bitton, and seat of Sir Gerald William Henry Codrington bart. D.L.,
archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. The river Frome J.P. lord of the manor and chief landowner, is a mansion
takes its rise near the south-eastern boundary oJf Doding- in the -Classic style, in a park extending over 327 acres-
ton [Park, through which it runs. The church of St. The soil is dark mould, five or six inches deep; subsoil,
Mary, wholly rebuilt and consecrated in 18°5, at the ex- stiff -clay. The chief crops al'e wheat and beans, but
pense of the late Sir Christopher Bethen Codrington bart. about two-thirds of the land is pasture. The area. is
who died 4th February, 1843, is an edifice in the Classic 1,49° acres; rateable value, £1,765; the population in
style, in the form of a Greek cross, the eastern limb form- 1891 was 131.
ing the chancel, and in the centre rises a stone vaulted
dome supported on four monolithie stone pillars: the Sexton, William Greenaway.
nave is paved with marble of different colours, and there
are three stained windows; a stone font was erected in Letters through Chipping Sodbury arrive at 8 a.m. &;
1878, and there are two marble monuments to the Cod- 5 p.m. Wall Box c:eared at 5.10 & 6.20 p.m.; sunday
rington family: a new reredos with a representation, in at 8 a.m. Old Sodbury is the nearest money order
white marble, of the" Crucifixion," was erected in 1894, offiee & Chipping Sodburv the nearest telegraph office
to the memory of the late Lady Georgina C. A. Codring-
The children of this place attend the school at Chipping
Sodbury & Old Sodbury

PRIVA.TE RESIDE'NTS.. COMMERCIAL. & G. J. G. C. Codrington, lieuts.;
Sergeant-Major Holderness, drill

Codrington Sir Gerald William Henry Gibbs Josep'b, farmer, Home -farm instructor)

bart. D.L., J.P. Dodington house Royal Gloucestershire Hussars Yeo- King George, farmer, Ray's field

Codrington George John Granville manry Oavalry (Dodington troop) Wilcox Wm. Ohas. frmr. oLv•Sdier ' s farm
Ohristopher, Sands court (Major Wyndham Quin M.P. com- Woodman H nry, bailiff t Gerald
e

James Rev. John Alfd. B.A. Rectory manding; Capt. T'homas Cardwell William Henry Codrington bart

DORSINGTON is a village and parish, on the charities producing about 20S. annually, partly left by
Warwickshire border, 2 miles north-west from Long Mars- John Ward D.D. sometime rector of this parish, who

ton station on the Honeybourne and Stratford branch of died in 1681; the amount is distributed in money. Sidney

the Great Western railway. 26 north-east from Gloucester, Graves Hamilton esq. of Mickleton Manor, is lord of the
B north from Campden and 97 from London, in the Eastern manor. The principal landowners are the rector, the Rev.

division of the county, upper division of the hundred of Cecil Mills M..A. of Barford reetory, Warwick, and Bryan
Kiftsgate, petty sessional division of Campden, union and Knight esq. of Bearley, Warwickshire. The soil is a heavy

county court district of Stratford-on-Avon, rural deanery 'loam; subsoil, stiff clay. The chief crops are wheat, beani
of Oampden, archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of and barley. The area is 934 acres; ratea.ble value, £6g2;
Gloucl'ster. The Dorsington brook flows through the the population in 1891 was 114.

parish. The chmch of St. Peter, rebuilt in 1754 (the old Sexton, William .A1cock.

church having been destroyed by fire), is a sman edifice Wall Letter Box cleared at 4.45 p.m. week days only.
of brick. consisting of chancel, nave and an embattled Letters are received through Stratford-on-Avon, arrive
western tower with pinnacles, containing I bell bearing at 9 a.m. The nearest money order office is at Peb-

~~~ ~ft~~~ts~ionT~e~~~i::e~ed:~:S ~~'thle6~~:/ 1:~:~e .;~: worth. The nearest telegraph office is at We]ford

living is a rectory, net yearly value from This place is included in the Welford United School Board

,2135 acres of glebe £200, with residence, in District

the gift of and held since r895 by the Rev. Edward Board ,school (mixed), built about 1875, for 60 children;
Atkinson M.A. of Trinity Hall, Cambridge. There are average attendance, 23

Atkinson Rev. Edward M.A. Rectory BiC'lmell George, landowner &; farmer, Smith Henry, farm bailiff to B.

COMMERCIAL. Moat House farm Knight esq

Alcock Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Hodges Thomas, farmer, Glebe farm Wood Hy. farmer, Manor House farm

Austin Edward, farmer, Bragginton Taylor John, blacksmith

DOWDESWELL is a parish and village, on the road .Andoversford and 4! each-south-ellst from Cheltenham, in
from Cheltenham to Northleach, I! miles west from the Eastern division of the county, hundred of Bradley,
Andoversford station on the ICheltenham and Bourton union and petty sessional division of Northleach, county
branch of the Great Western railway, I! miles west from court district of Cheltenham, rural deanery of Cheltenham
the Midland and South Western Junction station at and archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The chqrch

DIRECTOR Y. ] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. noWNEND. 139

of St. Michael, built in 157.7, is a cruciform. edifice of Midland and South Western Junction railway; a cattle

stone, in the Late Perpendicular style, consisting of market is held here on the first and third iridays in every

chancel, nave, transepts, aisles, south porch and a tower month.

with spire, containing 3 bells: there is a brass, with effigy Rossley Manor was transferred t() this parish from

of a priest in cope, c. 1520, and evangelistio symbols: there Withington by Local Government Board Order 14,578,

are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1575. March 25th, 1883.

The living is a rectory, net yearly value £3'45, including Parish Clerk, James Caudle.

22 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees Post, M. O. 0& T. 0., S. R i& Annuity &; Insurance Office,

of the late R. R. Ooxwell-Rogers esq. and held since 1894 Andoversford (Railway Sub Offiee. Letters should have

by the Rev. Richard Coxwell-Rogers RA. of St. John's R.S.O. Gloucester added). John Reed Turk, sub-post-

College, Cambridge. 'l'bere is a Wesleyan chapel at master. Letters are received through Cheltenham &;

Andoversford. The trustees (If the late Richard Rogers the Midland T. P. O. north; delivered at 6 a.m.; box

Coxwell-Rogers esq. F.S.A. are lords of the manor and cleared at 6.30 p.m.; sundays, 5.30 p.m

principal landowners. Dowdeswell Court (now-1897-un- National Sehool, Dowdeswell (mixed), built, with teacher's

o-ccupied) is a mansion in the Classic style, standing on house, in 10843, for 60 children; average attendance, 45 ;

Ian eminence surrounded by trees and woods; in the valley Mrs. Kate Belcher, mistress

below the mansion is an ornamental piece of water, formed Police Station, Thomas Cooper, sergeant, &; one constable
I~y wideniIl;g a tributary: of the river Ohe~t, which rises I
RAILWAY STATIONS.

ID :the parIsh; the famIly of Rogers (whIch came from Great Western, Andoversford, Wm. Harvey, station master
BrIan~ton, co. J?orset, now the seat of Lord PortmaIl;) hav:e Midland &; South Western Junction, Andoversford, Charles
been ill posseSSIOn of Dowdeswel1 and other estates ill this Pugh station master .

county since the reign of Henry VIII. Sandywell Park is '

the seat of Christian WiIliam Lawrence esq. J.P. The CARRIERS.

soil is clay and gravel; subsoil, clay and gravel. Th~ James Stroud, from Northleach to Cheltenham, tues.

chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is thurs. &; sat

2,247 acres; rateable value, £2,965; the population in W.illiam Swallow, from Guiting to Cheltenham, tues.

1891 was 28g. thurs. &; sat

Pulham, from Naunton to Cheltenham, thurs. & sat

ANDOVERSFORD is a. hamlet, I! miles east, partly in George Hayward, 'bus from Northleach to Cheltenham,

this parish and partly in that of Withington, with a sta- tues. thurs. &; sat

tion on the Great Western railway, and another on the All call at Andoversford hotel

DOWDESWELL. I C01lUIERCIAL. .ANDOVERSFORD.

ArkeIl James, farmer, Upper Dowdes- Berry Richard, blacksmith
well manor
PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
Ballinger Wm. carpntr.Up.Dowdeswell Finch H. & Son,coal mers.&; hay dlrs

ArkeIl Mis·s; Lower DowdesweIl farm Hawker Andrew, frmr.Woodlands frm Porter Thos. R corn & manure dealr
Ooxwell-Rogers !Rev. Richard RA. Newman Fred, steward to Charles Shenton Edwd. Il. Andoversford hO'l:el

(rector), The Rectory Macintosh Rodger esq. Peggles- South Wales & Cannock Ohase Coal

CoxwelI-Rogers Rev. WilIiam Rogers worth farm & Coke Co. Limited
Turk JlQhn Read, farm~r, &; post
M.A. Rectory Ruby William Henry, blacksmith

Kersey Mrs. Lower Dowdeswell farm Townsend WiHiam gardener to the office, Manor farm
trustees of R R.eo.xwell-Roger>s esq IWilliaIll$ John &; Co. coal merchants
Moss Arthur E. The Villa
Lawrence Christian William J.P. ITrueman J n. shpkpr. Up. Dowdeswelll Workman Henry, coal merchant

SandywelI park Webb WilIiam, farmer, The HayIings (For other names, see WithiugWn.)

DOWN AMPNEY, see Ampney.

DOWN HATHERLEY, see Hatherley.

DOWNEND, including StaplehiII and Upper Sound- is surrounded by a well-wooded park, from which can

well, is an ecclesiastical parish, fIormed May IS, 1874, be seen the churches of Frenchay, Winterbourne, Staple-
out of the parish of Mangotsfield, Gloucestershire; it ton, Fishponds and Mang.otsfield. The soil is sandy
is on the road from Bristol to MaImesbury, It miles brash; subsoil, Pennant stone. The chief crops are

north-west from Mangotsfield station, and half-a-mile oats and barley. The population in I8g1 was 5,21g; the
from Staplehill station, both on the Midland railway, and acreage and rateable value are included in Mangotsfield.

4 miles north-east from Bristol, in the Southern division Parish Clerk, Thomas JefIeries.
of the county, civil parish and township of Mangots- Sexton, AIbert ;Monks.
field, Ilart(}n Regis hundred, Keynsham union, Law-
ford's Gate petty sessional division, Bristol county court Post, M. 0., S. Il. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Down-

district, rural deanery of Stapleton and archdeaconry and end.-Mrs. Mary Spencer Biggs, sub-postmistress.

diocese of Bristol. Christ Church, erected in the year Letters arrive from Bristol at 6.15 a.m. &; 2·5 & 6·30
1831, and formerly a chapel of ease to St. James', Man- p.m.; dispatched at 9.30 a.m. &; 4·45 & 8 p.m.; sun-
gotsfield, is a plain building of stone, consisting oil chan- days, arrive at 6.15 a.m.; dispatched at 4.48 p.m.
eel, nave of four bays, aisles, west porch, and a western
t'.lrret containing I bell: there are 1,100 sittings. The Staplehill is the n-earest telegraph office
register dates from the year 1831. The living is a vicar- Post, M. O. & T. 0., S. R &; Annuity &; InsuralWe
age, net yearly value [300, including 13 acres of glebe,
with residence, in the gift of the Pe ache trustees, and Office, StaplehilI.~Charles Jones, sub-postmaster. Let-
ters through Bristol received at 6·45 a.m. & 2 & 6 p.m. ;
dispatched at 9.50 a.m. i& 4.30 &; 8 p.m.; sundays, no

held since 1878 by the Rev. John WaIter Dann M.A. of dispatch
Trinity College, Dublin. There are Wesleyan, Primitive Wall Letter Box, Downend road, cleared at 9·35 a.m. &;

Methodist and Free Methodist chapels. The Christ 3 &; 6·45 p.m

Church Institute here has a young men's association SCHOOLS.
in connection. A cemetery, containing 3 acres, with a
mortuary chapel, was consecrated in February, 1879, National School (boys, girls &; infants), built in 1840,
for 740 children; average attendalWe, 227 boys, 2t2
for the use of Mangotsfield and Downend parishes; it is girls & 193 infants; James Quainton, master; Mrs. EIiza
Mayo, mistress; Miss Mice Hill, infants' mistress
under the control of a Burial Board of 9 members. Here
is a public weigh-bridge. Built into the school wall is National Sch{){)l, Soundwell (mixed & infants), built in
a drinking fountain, erected in 1887 by public subscrip- 1895, for 320 children; average attendance, 285 mixed
tions. Frederick Edward Whittuck esq. of Keynsham,

is l{)rd of the manor, and Sir Charles Daniel Cave bart. &; 130 infants; Edward Owen, master; Mrs. Gertrude

of Stoneleigh House, CIifton Park, is the chief land- Cole, infants' mistress .

owner. Cleva Hill, the seat of Lady Cave, is a building Carriers to BristoI.-Robert Low, 9 a.m. &; 3· IS p.m.;
of stone in the Italian style, with a turr.e.t and clock, and Mrs. Selina Turvey, 10 a.m. &; 3.30 p.m

DOWNEND. Coles Mrs. Cleve wood Grace Miss, Grove villa

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Cooksley Miss, Lansdown place Graham Gore, Laurel Bank

AIford Rev. George Percy M.A. Cunningham John, The Chestnuts Graham Mrs. Clevedale

(curate of Mangotsfield), Rose villa Dann Rev. In. Wait. M.A. Vicarage Greenway Capel, Fernbank

Bishop Daniel, Stanley villa Ellery Mrs. Elm view Greenway JOhll, Lansdown place

Burgess Henry, Rose villa Gibbs Mrs. The Retreat Harris J()Siah

Cave Lady, Cleve hill Giles Mrs. Park house Hill St. Maur, The Cedars

140 DOWNEND. GLOUCESTERSHIRE.

Holder Mrs Lane Charles Henry, Laurel bank Men's Institute (iRev.J.W.Dann M.A.

Hole Charles La Trobe James Henry secretary)

Holmes Mrs. Euckingham place Leonard Samuel Robert Millard James, shopkeeper

J10nes Rev. Emlyn A. (curate) Lewis William Fisher, Pinder lodge Morgan Erotlhers, tailors

Jones William Pride, Oleve lodge Markley Horace William, Cliff view Murray William M.B., C.M.Edin.sur-
Le Maitre WaIter, Park house
Murray William M.B., a.M. Edin. goon, Marathon house

Leonard Charles, Overn Hill cottage Marathon house Nelson J ames &; Sons Lim. butchers

Leonard Mrs Parry Edgar, The Laur~s Norris Frederick King, saddler

Morgan Thomas Henry, Staple park Pearse Edward, Moira cottage Nurse George, shopkeeper

Newell Rev. Wm. (Baptist), Cleve vii Smart Joseph, The Elms Palmer Emily (Mrs.), baker

Owen Mrs. The Firs Webb Rev. William (Baptist) Palmer Robert, grocer

Rees Alfred James, Pendennis house Webb Oharles Henry, Northcote villa Pearce John, decorator

Sellick Robert, 2 Elm view Webb George Alexander, Ivy bank Perry Evan, Portcullis inn

Slhelper Thomas, Sunny bank COMMERCIAL. Phipps John & Co. outfitters

Skelton Henry M.D. 'Overn hill Amery Walter Robert, baker Pininger William, boot maker

Worrail -, Ovendale house Baker John, shoe maker Pocock Frederick, grocer

COMMERCIAL. Bateman Richmond, butcher Pratten Theophilus, boot maker

Alvis James, farmer, Park farm Beese Esther (Mrs.), greengrocer Preddy George Absolom, hardware dlr

Baber John, plasterer Bell Edwin, butcher Punter John William, musical instru-

Eaoon lsaae Henry, decorator Bennett George &; Son, bakers ment dealer

Beaman Thomas, shopkeeper Bennett Sidney, dairyman Rathbone Francis Augustus, plumbeJ'

Bennett Henry M. surveyor to Keyns- Bennett S.ophia (Mrs.), butcher Rawbones Thomas, pin manufacturer

ham Sanitary Authority,Victoria st Bracey John, baker Raynolds Samuel, shopkeeper

Biggs Edwin Charles, carpenter Bracey William, hair dresser Rice Ernest, draper

Eiggs Mary Spencer (Mrs.), grocer & Brain Emily (Mrs. ),plumber, gasfitter Rogers J. farmer

pOsitmistress & sani,tary engineer Rogers Samuel, grocer

Erain Wm. shopkeeper, Hopewell hill Erain lsaae, wheelwright RJosevear Frank, watch maker

Eridgeman Henry, farmer, Cleve hill Bressington J onas, greengrocer Shepherd Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Eryant Ann (Mrs.), butcher Brimble George, shopkeeper Sheppard Henry, grocer

Eryant Robert, carpenter Burchill Oliver & William, cab proprs Simmonds Alfd.Hy.boiler fluid manfr

Bryant William, shopkeeper Burfoot .samuel, hair dresser Simmonds Henry, hair dresser

Eussell J ames, The Green Dragon P. H Burgess Henrietta (Miss), dairy kpr Smith Charles Henry, boot &; shoe ma

Christ Church Institute & Young Butterfield Ellen (Mrs.), shopkeeper Sperring Samuel, shoe maker

Men's Assoe.(Benj. Turvey, caretkr) Christie John, furniture dealer Sprackman Thomas, hay dealer

Coleman Samuel, shopkeeper Ohubb W. & Sons, boot &; shoe mfrs Thorne Albert, news agent

Cooksley Elizh. (Ml'S.), beer retailer Clark Joseph, wheelwright, Victoria st Timbury Frank, dining rooms

Cox Biobert, gardener Clark WaIter, butcher Timmis Harry, butcher

Crocombe Thomas, market gardener Cooper Thomas, shopkeeper Turner Henry, ironmonger
Greenway Oapell., painter
County of Bristol Weights & Measures Turvey Selina (Mrs.), carrier
Greenway John, relieving officer, No. Office (James Woolford, inspector) Tyndall Erothers, grocers
3 district, Keynsham union
Cross John, shopkeeper Watkins Frederick Wm. beer retailer
Barris William, grocer
Curtis George Sanford, ironmonger Watt:s Thomas, furniture dealer
Hendy Arthur, coal dea:er
Davis James Albert, engineer Webb Charles Henry, house &; estate
Hibbs Robert, plasterer
Dawson Thomas, baker agent, Northcote villa
Hole John, coal agent
Dean Albert, cabinet maker & house Webster Enoch, hair dresser
J efferies Annie, Carrie, & Ethel furnisher, High street
(Misses), dress makers White Catherine (Miss), fancy repos

Demery Joseph Lucas, boot maker Whitworth Frederick, watch maker
J efferies Thoma's, collector of assessed Doddrell Albert, grocer
taxes, Park cottage Williamson John, saddler

King Charles, smith Drury WaIter, wheelwright Winstone John, hair dresser
. Dunster John Edward, draper
Low Robed, omnibus propr. & carrier Edward,s Dan, shopkeeper Worth Charles, stationer

Mangotsfield Cemetery (Lewis Eall, Ford Robert, fancy repository Wren Frank, painter & paperhanger

clerk to the burial board) Wren Lily (Miss), tea dealer
MangotsfieC.d Pennant Stone Co.
Lim. FrancisFannyElizabeth (Mrs.),beer ret SOUNDWELL.
Francombe George, grocer
(WaIter Payne, manager)
Garaway &; Co. nurserymen, seeds- Nichols William, Holmleigh
Marten Henry, engineer of the West men &; florists
Gloucester water works COMMERCIAL.

Gerrish Edward, watch maker Baglin William, shopkeeper
Miller Edward, Beaufort Hunt P.H Gibbs JO'hn Francis, tailor
Nicholls Samuel, quarry owner Bennett Edward Stephen, ironmonger

Purdy Henry, beer retailer Glastonbury George, shopkeeper Brain Thomas, shopkeeper

Read Henry, grocer Griffiths Josiah E. beer retailer &; Brimb:e George, shopkeeper; & at

agent for W. &; .A.. GiIbey Lim.wine Staplehill

Reed Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper & ,spirit merchants Britton Frederick Waiter, butcher

Reed William, The Horseshoe P.H. & Hamilton James, phot<lgrapher Britton Martha Ann (Mrs.), grocer &;

proprietor of the weighbridge Harrison Matilda (MJ'ls.), butcher beer retailer

Bobbins Albert Hugh, cabinet maker Hendy Goorge, refreshment, rooms Bryant Mary Ann (Mrs.), grocer

Russell Elagdon. carpenter Hill Albert, carpenter & builder Erurchill Samuel, butcher

Skelton Henry M.D. surgeon &; medi- Hodge &; Sons, leather merchants Cambridge George, beer retailer

call. ()fficer, 5 district, Keynsham Howe Wiliam, greengrocer Child Alfred John, beer retailer
union, Overn hill
H uggins EIiza (Mrs.), beer reta.iler Co[e Samuel, boot maker
Stevens Mary (Miss), private school, Jones Albert, news agent
Lome villa Garland Albert, shopkeeper

Jones Ohas.,statnr. & sub-postmaster Haines William, shopkeeper
Thomas John, beer ret. Hopewell hill J ones Henry, ironmonger &; greengrcr Hendy Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Thompson Oharles Henry, baker
Thomps~m Daniel, baker Jones William Withers, pharmaceu- Hendy William, shopkeeper
Till William, farmer
tieal chemist Hulbert Selina (Miss), shopkeeper

Keeling Thomas, linen &; woollen dra- Hutchins & May, wholesale boot &
Whiting Albert Edward, shopkeeper per, hatter,'hosier,milliner &; outfittr shoe manufacturers
Wilts'hire Wm. boot ma. Hopewill hill Kendall & Sons, grocers
Hyatt &; Grandfield, grocers &; drapers

STAPLEHILL. Kendall Charles, fishmonger .lobbins Edwin, shopkeeper
King James, shopkeeper Jones Edward Archibald, butcher

Arnold Henry, Staplehill lodge Lawrence &; Williams, solicitors Morgan T. (Mrs.), draper

Eatman William, Hill view Leach Alexander &; Cll. grocers Nash J ames, shopkeeper

Eennett Alfred, Sunningdale Le Maitre WaIter, civil engineer, Nash Thomas, confectioner

Bennett Philip, Bellevue Bank chambers Phillips George, baker

Oroucher Rev. Charles (United Metho- Leonard Robert, cattlle dealer Phipps Aaron, shopkeeper

dist), The Knowll Lloyds Bank Limited (branch) (daily Pike Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer

Edwards Phi1ip, Park view 10 to 3. sat. 10 to x); draw on head Redwood William, baker

Fisher George, Park view office, London E 0 Savery Robert & Co. boot manufactrs

Ford Mrs. Pendenny Long HeI'bert William, grocer Webley Elizabeth (Mrs.), coal dealer

Hoskins Waiter, Holmleigh Long John William, baker Wilshire Edward lsaac, beer retailer

James Thomas, Rose villa Lovett Gilbert, greengrocer Wilshire William, shopkeeper

Johnson Charles, Fairleigh Masoq Susannah Launder (Mrs.),drpr Wiltshire William, boot maker

DmECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. DUMBLETON. 141

DOYNTON is a parish and village, on the river Boyd, benefit of seven clergymen's widows, arising from rent

near the high road from Bath to Bristol, 4 miles east of farms. There are some remains here of a Roman road.

from Mangotsfield stati.on on the Bristol and Birmingham Tracy Park is the seat of William Davy esq. J.P.; the

section of the Midland railway, 6 north from Bath,s west mansion, now (1897) unoccupied, was originally a small

from Marshfield, 9 east from Bristol and 5 south from gabled building of the Elizabethan style, but has been

Chipping Sodbury, in the Southern division of the county, added to and enlarged by the different possessors; the

Swineshead and Langley hundred, Chipping Sodbury south front is principally in the Italian style: the park,

union, Bath county court district, Lawford's Gate petty which is bounded by a double bank or raised earth-

sessional division, rural deanery of Bitton and arch- work, with a hedge on each side and trees in the middle,

deaconry and diocese of Bristol. The church of the Holy contains about 180 acres. Earl Temple, who is lord of

Trinity is a building of stone, chiefly Perpendicular in the manor, and William Davy esq. are landowners. The

style, and consistmg of chancel, nave, north transeptal soil is loamy; the 'Subsoil is chiefly white and blue lias

chapel (attached to the manor of Bury, but now used as and limestone. The chief crops are wheat, barley and

n vestry and organ chamber), north aisle, south porch roots. The area is 1,722 acres; rateable value, £3,II5;

and an embattled tower on the south sine, with one the population in 1891 was 391.

pinnacle only remaining, and containing 5 bells: the nave Post Office. Job Lear, sub-postmaster. Letters through
was rebuilt and enlarg-ed in 1864, at a cost of about
£2,000, unner the direction of the late J. E. Gill, Bristol delivered at 8.25 a.m. & 5 p.m.; box cleared at
architect, oil Bath, when a considerable portion of herring-
bone masonry was discovered in the wall of the nave on la a.m. & 5.5 p.m. No sunday post. Postal orders
the south side: there are sittings for 400 persons. The
register dates from the year 1566. The living is a rec- are issued here, but not paid. Wick is the nearest
tory, net yearly value £300, including 86 acres of glebe, money order & telegraph office

National School (mixed), erected in 1874 on a site given

about 1860 by the late W. H. P. Gore-Langton esq.

with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and M.P. for 70 children; average attendance, SI; & en-
held since 1891 by the Rev. Richard Lloyd Crawley- dowed by the Rev. W. Langton in 1668; the income
Boevey M.A. of University College, Oxford. Here is a amounts to about £20 yearly & is partly applied in
Congregational chapel. A charity of the value of £ 140 apprenticing; Miss Mary Elizabeth Davies, mistress

yearly, derived from the rent Qf farms and dividends, CARRIERS TO
was left by Beloved Wilkes in 1722, in order to main-

tain, educate and send to the university a candidate for Bath-Gabriel Amos, every wed. &; sat. returning same day

holy orders; there is also a sum oil £90 yearly for the Bristol-Aaron Anstee, thurs. returning same day

Burgess Frederick Thomas, Bury ho Bishtop John, farmer, West End farm Kidner Richard Simon,frmr.Tracy cot

Grawley-Boevey Rev. Richard Lloyd Bond Gilbert, beer retailer Lear Francis, farmer, Rookery farm

M.A. Rectory Britton Frederick', mason Lear J'Ob, farmer, grocer & post office

Falcon Mrs. Doynton house Camery Joshua, beer rete &; blacksmth Nelms Guy, farmer, Bottoms farm

COMMERCIAL. Cryer '.VlYbias & Sons, lime burners Nichols William, farmer, Toghill

Alvis George, farmer, Nicholls farm Cryer John, farmer Parson Albert, farmer, Rectory farm

Alvis Samuel, farmer, Wilk's farm Dare Edgar Arthur, miller (water), Perry Emma (Mrs.), farmer

Amos Gabrie1, carrier & potato· dealr Doynton mill Pullen Frederick, farmer, Tog hill

Amos William George,builder &; wheel- England Samuel, farmer, Homestead Ratcliffe Charles, farmer, Beech cot

wright & co~lector of taxes Fox Edmund, farmer Russ George, boot maker

Anstee Aaron, carrier Hendy Catherine (Mrs.) & Sons,brwrs Tanner William, farmer, Woodlands

Anstee AlbertAlfred,farmer,Court frm Hinton John, farmer & road contractr Walker John, farmer, Tog Hin Ho.frm

Anstee Jesse, farmer, Bowd farm Hinton Stephen, carpenter Webb Jesse, mason

Anstey John, shoe maker Ho1[oway Benjamin, 8ISsistant over:seer Williams Eno<s Wm. farmer, Bath rd

DRIFFIELD is a. village and parish, bounded 011 the esq. of Weybridge, is lord of the manor and principal
landowner. The soil is loamy and stone brash; subsoil,
south by the county of Wilts, 4 miles east-by-south from various. The chieil crops are wheat, oats, barley and
Cirencester stations, 5 miles north-by-east from Criclr- turnips. The area is 1,223 acres; rateable value, £1,095 ;
lade, in the Eastern division of the county, hundred 01 the population in 1'891 was Iq.
Cr,owthorne and Minety, Cirencester union, petty ses-
sionaI division and county court district, and in the rural Parish OIerk, Matthew Millin.
deanery and archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Post Office.-Mrs. Ann Tilling, sub-postmistress. Let·
Gloucester. The church of St. Mary is a building of
stone in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, ters through Cirencester arrive at 7.35 a.m.; dis-
nave, and a western tower containing 3 bells. The regis- patched at 5.40 p.m. Postal orders are issued here,
ter dates from 1560. The living is a vicarage, annexed but not paid. Poulton is the nearest money order &
to the rectory of Harnbill, July 7, 1882, joint net yearly telegraph office
value £220, including 210 acres of glebe, with residence, National (formerly Free) School (mixed), built in 1868, &
in the gift of John Charles Bengough esq. of Wotton- supported by an endowment of £9, being the interest
under-Edge, and held since 1887 by the Rev. Richard of money in the Funds, left by Mrs. Cumberland; it
Mainwaring Williams M.A. of St. Peter's College, Cam- was established as a National School in 1895, for 42
children; average attendance, 26; Mrs. Janet Townsend,
bridge, who resides at HarnhilI. Charles W. Eo Ward mistress

Cuss Nevil, The Old Vicarage Heaven Daniel Dowdesell, farmer, Johnson Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Bryant Henry, farm bailiff to· Charles Manor house Millin Matthew, shopkeeper

W. R. Ward esq. Foss farm

DUMBLETON is a village and parish, 21 miles east persons. The register dates from the year 1738. The
living is a rectory, gross yearly value £305, including 77
from the Beckford station on the Ashchurch and Evesham acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees
branch of the Midland trailway, 9 miles north-east from of the late S. Eyres esq. and held since 1894 by the Bev.
Tewkesbury and 6 south from Evesham, in the Northern Charles Henry Fairfax M.A. of St. John's College, Oxford.
division of the county, lower division -of the hundred of Miss Dorothy Cocks, in the year 17II, left £2 a year for
Kiftsgate, Winchcomb union, county court district and the school; John Cocks esq. also left a farm at Taynton,
petty sessional division, xural deanery of Campden, arch- near Gloucester, for the benefit of poor people not in
deaconry of Cirencester and d,iocese of Gloucester. The receipt of parish relief; this farm has boon sold, and the
{:hurch of St. Peter is an ancient building of stone in money invested by the Charity Commissioners, and it now
mixed styles, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of produces £59 per annum. Dumbleton Hall, a handsome
two bays, north aisle and an embattled western tower modern stone mansion, standing on an eminence in the
containing a clock and 6 bells, re-hung at the cost of Mrs. park west of the village, is occupied by MM. Eyres. The
'Eyres, of Dumbleton Hall: on the north wall there are trustees of the late S. Eyres esq. are lords of the manor
monuments to Sir Richard Cocks barh. d. 1684, and and chief landowners. The area is 2,165 acres; rateable
Judith, his wife, d. 1689, Sir Richard Cocks bart. d. Oct.
value, £3,171; the population in 1891 was 412. The hiD.
1726, and Frances (Nevil) his first wife, d. 1723, and to soil is fossiliferous; subsoil, strong blue lias clay, im-
Sir Rober~ Cocks, 4th and last bart. d. 4th April, 1765 : on
the chancel wall is a curious old monument with figures of pregnated with saline. The chief crops are wheat and
two persons kneeling, and of a child asleep on a cushion, beans, with a large proportion of pasture land.
erected to Sir Charles Percy knt. 4th son of Henry, 8th
Earl of Northumberland, ob. 1628, hiS' wife Dorothy, ob. Parish Clerk, Thomas Teale.

1646, and child: about 1894 the east wind<lw was filled Post &; M. O. 0., S. B. & Insurance &; Annuity Office.-
with stained glass by Mrs. Eyres, in memory of her hus-
Miss EIlen Walker, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive
band, H. W. Eyres esq.: the church has been restored from Evesham at 9.5 a.m.; dispatched at 5 ~.m. The
nearest telegraph office is at Ashton-under.Hill
since 1873, at a cost of £500, and affords sittings for 220


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