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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

192 GLOUCESTER. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Harvey John, shopkeeper, 52 Oxford road HDlford George, fishmonger, 36 Barton street

Harvey Mathew Henry, saddler, 31 Westgate street Holland Mancklin, corn merchant, see Turner & Holland

Harvey WaIter, florist, Lower Barton street Holloway, Son &; Co. leather merchants, King street

Haslam John Rivett, milk seller, 5 Hare lane HoIloway WiIliam. Richard, stationer & printer, 103a,

Hastings Thomas, dairyman, 128 Melbourne street Lower Barton street

Hattan ehas. Henry, greengrocer, see Leighton &; Hatton Homes & Tidmarsh, stationers, 74 Northgate street

Hatton John, commission agt. 3 Fern dale, St.Michael's sq Holmes Sarah Jane (Mrs.), grocer &; agent for W. &; A..

Havi:and J. R. &; Co. ship &; insurance brokers, Com- Gilbey Limited, wine &; spirit mers. 65 Worcester st

mercial buildings Holtham George M.R.C.V.S. veterinary surgeon, 18

Haviland David, Lamb inn, St. Mary's square Berkeley street; surgery &; forge, Bear Land

Haviland Thomas, builder &; shopkeeper, 27 Wellington st Holtham Richard, corn merchant, 23 Commercial road

Hawker John, tobacconist, 59 Southgate street Home &; Colonial Stores Lirn. tea dealers, rI Northgate st

Hawkes John Alfred, hay dealer, Chequers lane 26 Stratton road

Hawkins James, beer retailer, Baker street Home of Hope (Miss E. Sessions, hon. superintendent;

Haydon William, boot maker, 46 Bristol road Miss A. Watkins, matron), Great Western road

Hayes Hubert, City Arms P.H. 9 Bell lane Home for Lost Dogs (WaIt. Unitt, in charge),99 Oxford rd

Hayes Joseph, lock &l general smith, 5 Farm st. Park End rd Honey WiIliam Stride, Old Bear inn, Westgate street

Hayling Frank, chimney sweep, 43 Alvin street Hook Robert, ~ridge inn, Lower Westgate street

Hayman Brothers, f1ruiterers &; greengrocers, 5 Hope- Hooks George Charles, shopkeeper, 2 Church st. Docks

well buildings, Lower BaTtan street Hooper EmiIy Hannah (Mrs.), pianoforte teacher, 2 Elm

Ha)'-nes George, shopkeeper, 24 Linden road, Bristol road villas, Lower Barton street

Hayward S. H. &; C(). sauce manufctrs. Commercial road Hooper Louisa (Mrs.), grocer, Kingsholm road

Hayward In. Wm. picture frame maker, 31 Victoria st Hooper Mary (Miss), apartments, 49 St. Mark street

Hazeldine J ames, painter &; house decorator, 7 Falkner st Hooper Robert William, Red Lion P.R. 41 Northgate st

Healey &; Son, coach builders &; manufacturers of all Hooper Sidney, insurance agent, 1 Pembroke road

kinds of road vehicles, ~wer Westgate street; show Hooper Thomas, commercial traveller, 12 Honyatt road

rooms, 124 Westgate street &; at Over Hooper William, mineral water manufctr. 47 Falkner st

Heath Edward, boot maker, 34 Alvin street Hooper WilIiam, watch maker, 17 Westgate street

Heath J esse, insurance agent, 68 Falkner street Hope Louisa (Miss), refreshment rooms, 134 Millbrook st

Heath John, Columbia inn, Columbia street Hope WilIiam More D.P.H. surgeon, medical officer to

Heathvllle Nurseries (Henry Whitehead, florist, Gloucester dispensary i& physician to Children's Hos-

manager), nurserymen &; florists, Heathville road &; pital, The Limes, Barton street

Eastgate market Hopes Albert, boot &; shoe maker, II New street

Helps Arthur Spry (firm, Bryan &; Helps), solicitor &; Hopkins Charles, beer retailer, St. Catherine street

commissioner for (laths, I Barton street H()pkins Frederick Francis, shopkeeper, 65 Catherine st

Hemmings WilIiam, commercial traveller, 6 Pembroke at Hopkins James Thomas, carpenter, 103 Oxford road
Hemmings Wm. In. fruit &; potato mer. Cross Key lane Hopton & Son, bird dealers, 6 Worcest~r street
Hepworth J. &; Son Limited, clothiers, Southgate house Hopton Henry, blacksmith, Sweetbriar street
Her Majesty's Prison, Barrack square (James Keech, Horner &; Co. Limited, clothiers, 21 Barton street
chief-warder-in-cha.rge; Rev. J. Hughes Owen, Horsfall Rushworth, boot &; shoe maker, 12 Havelock
chaplain; Oscar William Olark M.A., M.B. surgoon; terrace, Park road

Miss Kate T. Curtin, matr()n) Houlding Henry, china &; glass dealer, Eastgate market

Herbert W. &; Sons, drapers, ladies' outfitters &; furnish- Howes Harriett (Mrs.). sick nurse, 3 Worcester parade
Howley Albert, blacksmith, Barbican road
ing warehousemen, 96 &; 97 Northgate street
Herbert Charles Henry, beer retailer, 14 Albion street Hudson &; Co. sack cntrctrs. (Wm. Stephens, agt.), Docks

Herbert George, fruiterer &; greengrocer, 39 Southgate st Hudson Henry, shoe maker, 35 St. Catherine street

Herbert Lionel, baker, 61 Norgate street Hudson Samuel Arthur, Marmers Arms, Ladybellegate st

Hewlett F. &; .co. boot &; shoe makers, rIg Westgate st Hudson William. Thomas, hair dresser, 46 Eastgate st

Hewlett Daniel, corn merchant, see Weston, Hewlett &; Co Huggins Edwin, plumber ;\ parish clerk of All Saints',

Hey Bros. &; Allen, leather &; parchment manfctrs. Quay 26 Stratton road

Hey Geo. &; Co. fellmongers &; soap mas. Low.Westgate at Hughes Evan Grismond, chemist, 86 Northgate street

Heyden Charles, insurance agent, Docks HuIbert &; Son, tailors &; woollen drapers, II9 Southgate st

Hiam George, shopkeeper, 36 Victory road Hume WaIter Purvis, nurseryman, Worcester street; &;

Hickman Joseph, shopkeeper, I Adelaide street High street, Cheltenham

Hickman Robert, Fleece hotel, Westgate street Hunt Henry, goods agent, Midland Railway Co.; rllii-

Higgins John, brass founder, Docks dence, 24 Regent street

Higgs William &; Son, sack merchants, Russell street Hunt Isaac, builder, 14 Vauxhall road &; swimming bath

Higgs Andrew Badgery, chemist, 99a, Lower Bartan street proprietor, Millbrook street

Higgs Samuel, commercial traveller, 35 Park End road Hunt Marian Helena (Miss), ladies' school. 13 College grn

High Court of Justice (district registry, Edwin Sidney Huntley Maria (Mrs.), baker &; grocer, 7 Vauxhall road

Hartland, district registrar), King street; (probate Hurcombe John, supt. of telegraph office, Commercial rd

division, Rose Fuller, registrar; Francis Edward Hutchinson Robert T. examining officer H.M. Customs,

Wallis, chief! clerk), Pitt street Custom house, Commercial road; res. z Falkner street

Higham E. baby linen warehous'f 3 Eastgate street Hyett James &; Sons, painters, 46 Westgate street

Hiles John Edward, tobacconist, 27 Northgate street Iddles Elizabeth (Mrs.), servants' registry office, II

Hill Edward &; Son, seedsmen &; florists, Park! nursery Stroud l'oad

&; Eastgate market Ind, Coope & Co. Limited, importers & bonders of wines

Hill Edgm> Chas. milliner &; fancy draper, 41 Southgate at & spirits, Burton-on-Trent; offices &; stores, Glouces-

Hill Ellen (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 144 High street, Tredworth ter agency, Northgate street

Hill James, apartments, 14 Derby road Ingram Harriotte (Miss), milliner, 6 College street

Hill Robert, boot maker, 29 Westgate street Ingram Mary Ann (Mrs.), Albion hotel, Southgate street

Hillier's Bacon Curing Co. Limited, stores, 14 Eastgate at Ingram William, general engraver, 2a, Bell lane

Hillyard Richard, tailor, 3 Albion street Inland Revenue Office (Arthur Binns, surveyor of taxes;

Hl1ton Stephen, boot factor, 142 Westgate street Jam{ls J. Lambton, supervisor), Custom house, Com-

Hine WilIiam, grocer &; provision dealer, 37 Falkner st mercial road

Hinton Fred, professor of music, Oxford street International Dairy 00. (Eustace Smith Baker), 52

Hinton Samuel, dairyman, 122 Lower BaTton street Bristol road

Hipwood Fredk. ehas. boat builder, Pool meadow, Slipway Ireland & Co. brush manufacturers, New Inn lane

Hipwood Samuel, coal merchant, Westgate bridge; resi- Ireland Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkpr. 165 Lower Barton st

dence, 23 Midland road Isaacs Charles, hatter, 17 North-gate street

Hipwood Thomas, ooal merchant &;c. 16 Quay street Isworth Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 62 Widden street

Hobbs William &; Son, blacksmiths, Black-nog yard Jackson George, butter factor, 7 Westgate street

Bodges Fredk. architect &; surveyor, I Park End road Jackson John, grocer &; provision dealer, 24 Barton street

Bodges Samuel, tobacco pipe manufacturer, Bell lane Jackson Philip, shopkeeper, 135 Seyrnour road

Hodges WilIiam L.R.O.P.Lond., D.P.H.Cam. surgeon, Jacques William, architect, 52 Worcester street

38 Park road James & Co. antique furniture dealers, Pitt street

Hogg James, Goat inn & coal merch~nt, 7 Llanthony road James Donald, corn merchant, see Fox, James & Co

Holbrook Ellen & Woodward Elizabeth (Misses), fancy James Gilbert, commercial traveller, 44 Worcester street

drapers, 37 Lower Barton street James James John, solicitor &; commissioner for oaths, 31

Holder Agnes Eliza (Miss), teacher of music, 8:l. Conduit st Brunswick square &; 21 George street
;Tames Martha (MrS.), preparatory schoo~ II7 Oxford rd
Hoiford Frederick, tobacconist, lOS, Barton street

DIRECTO RY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. GLOUCESTER. 193

James Richard, cabinet maker. 14 Nortbgate street Jordan William Edward, carpenter, 10 St. Mary street

James Richard, grocer, 3 Lower Westgate street Jordan Joseph Tiel. second maste:lSchool of Art. 7 Sand-

James Thomas ·Ward. commercial traveller, lI8 Oxford rd burst road••Kingsholm
Jaynes Sf, Scholey. timber merchants &; saw mills,Bristol rd Joyn€r Timothy Sf, S<m, tailors. 63 Barton street

IJeens Fredk. Hy. grocer Sf, provision dealer. I Upton st . Judd James. carpenter. 12 Queen street Sf, Bell lane

Jeens George Fred. registrar of births &; deaths for South Judd WiIliam, printer. St. John's lane
Hamlet division, 23 Brunswick square Judge's Lodgings (Thomas Tilston, custodian), Spa rd
Jeens John William. coal merchant, 134 Southgate street; I Karn Joseph Sf, Son (James R Karu), wine Sf, spirit mer-

L1anthony wharf Sf, Midland railway station chants; offices, Berkeley street; bonded stores, St.

Jeffs Alfred, picture frame maker, 57 Victoria street John's lane
Jelf WaIter. greengrocer. Longsmith street Karn James Brewer, french consul. Berkeley street

Jenkin Wm. Henry. insurance agent, 27 Worcester st Keates Benjamin, shopkeeper. 27 Lower Westgate street

Jenkins Ann (Miss). shopkeeper. 40 Southgate street Keegan James, insurance agent, 108 Oxford road

Jenkins 'Edwin, sculpwrs' tool maker &c. 2 Bath place. Keeley William, refreshment rooms, 66 Northgate street

Stroud road Keeling George, Fortune of War P.H. 2 Kingsholm road

Jenkins Frederick William, boot Sf, shoe maker, 2 Mervin Keeling George William, divisional engineer, Great

villas. Bristol road Western railway

Jenner Society (The) (Francis Thomas Bond RA. :M.D) Keene Fred. blacksmith &; cycle agency. St. Mary street

Jennings Charles, greengrocer, 3 Bristol road Keeking Alfred Henry. commercial traveller.46 Weston rd

Jennings Charles. painter. 4 Victoria street Kell & Co. (late S. A. &; H. Kell). engineers. ironfounders

Jennings Edward, fancy reposit,ory, IQI Northgate street & agricultural implement makers, Barton foundry
Jenllings Fdk.ship chandler, ironmngr.&c.60 Southgate st Kelway Mary (Mrs.), dress maker, Painswick road

Jennings George. Edwin, ship chandler Sf,c.61 Southgate st Kendall Herbert Sf, Co. ship brokers, 15 Ladybellegate st

Jennings John. butcher, 4 Lower Westgate street Kent Charles William, apartments, 33 Wellingt<m street

Jennings John, commercial & general printer, bookbinder Kent George James. conservative registration -agent for

Sf, stationer; specialities, high-class col()r work, illus- the city, I Southville, Park road

trated machinery catalogues &c.; write for estimates; Keyse Thomas John, pork butcher. 58 Southgate street

City steam printing works. Brunswick road Kiddle 'Fhomas & Alfred, tailors, 10 Worcester street

Jennings John William. butcher, 45 Stroud road Kiddle Frank. confectioner. 62 Northgate street

Jennings William. umbrella repairer &c. 83 Victoria st Kilminster Ernest Henry, builder; workshop.C1egram rd

Jennings William Henry, insurance agent, 82 Regent st Kilminster John Hy. The Nelson P.H. 88 Southgate st

Jepson Charles. stationer & tuy dealer, 47 Brist<JI road Kilminster Percy, builder, 2 Craythorn villas. Bristol rd

Jew Henry' Thomas, commercial traveller. 34 Park road Kimberly J. P. & C(). corn merchants, 27 Commercial rd

Johns &; Sons, ship chandlers. 21 Commercial road King Alfred &; Sons. building contractors, Russell street
Johns Alexander, ship repairer, Dock!> King Charles & Co. tailors, 14 Stratton road

Johnson Arthur In. electrician, 2 Berkeley vils.Bristol rd King Maud &I Mary (Misses), shopkeepers, 17 Ryecroft st

Johnson Edward, hairdresser. 13 London road King Sf, Co. manufacturing confectnrs.Llanthony rd.Docb

Johnson Sarah (Mrs.). midwife. Victoria pI. Southgate st King Alfred. builder, surveyor &; valuer, Russell street

Johnson Sarah Ellen (Mrs.), aparts. 20 W{)rcester par King Elizabeth (Miss), apartments. 4 Nettleton road

Johnston Alfred Arthur, Llanthony Bridge inn King Francis. hairdresser, 126 Westgate .street

Jones Allan Sf, Co. manufacturers of patent steps &c. King Henry, butcher & tripe dresser. 7 India road
King James Samuel,wine & spirit mer.30 Sf, 31 Eastgate st
Hatherley works

Jones & Blakeway. solicitors & commiSSIOners for oath!, King John, pianoforte tuner, 8 Bedford street

Eldon chambers, Berkeley street & Guildhall King WaIter Harris, butcher, 18 Westgate street

Jones Conway & Co. decorators & builders, Northgate King William, shopkeeper. 80 Victoria street

Jones Daniel Cripps & Co. builders, Cromwell street King's School(Rev.Bernard Knollys Foster M.A.head mstr

Jones D. O. & Co. wine. spirit. ale & porter merchants, 17 Kingscott George. farm bailiff to Gloucester Co-operative-

Southgate street & Longsmith street Society. Saint-bridge farm

Jones Albert Richard. furniture broker. 50 Westgate st Kingscott John. earthenware dealer. 20 Phillip street

Jones Betsy (Mrs.), beer retailer. Upper Quay street Kingsford H.Bruce,quantity surveyor,see Vale Sf, Kingsfrd

Jones Charley Wm. confectioner & stationer. 17 Barton st Kingston Leonard Willie, haircutter, 17 Victoria street

Jones Daniel, haulier. South End villa, Stroud road Kinsey Edward, inspector of weights Sf, measures for the

Jones David, wholesale &, retail clothier, &I clothiers' city of Gloucester. 12 Brunswick road

valuer. Golden Anchor Oothing warehouse, IS & 16 Kirby Lucy (Miss). dressmakers. see Hamblin Sf, Kirby

Southgate street (Misses)

Jones Elias Lane, waterproof composition for leather Knight J. & Co. timber. slate. cement &; coal merchants

makers, 23 Worcerler street & general builders' merchants,Victoria wharf. See advt

Jones Emmeline (Mis-s), dress maker, I St. Michael's sq Knight Adah. Emily Gompertz (Miss). artist. I Belgrave.

Jones Fanny Jane Scott (Mrs.),tobacconist,6sNorthgate 8t terrace. Belgrave road. &; Glevum studio. Bell lane

Jones Francis William, solicitor, commissioner Sf, per- Knight George Hugh, greengrocer. 97 Westgate street.

petual commissioner, clerk of the peace for the city Knight Henry, grocer. 24 Lower Barton street

of Gloucester, clerk of indictments, Oxf{)rd circuit, Sf, Knight James, shopkeeper, 76 Ryecroft street

clerk for arraigns for county, Eldon chmbrs.Berkeley st Knight Maria (Mrs.). wardrobe dealer, 12 W<Jrcester sf:.

Jones Frank. gas collector, 13 Falkner street Knowles Frederick Harry. boot maker. 20 Benheim road

Jones George, beer retailer. 40 Westgate street Knowles Henry, estate agent, see Bruton, Knowles &; Co

Jones George, greengrocer, 58 High street Ladies' Association for the Care of Friendless Girls (Miss-
Jones George, Hauliers Arms P.H. Southgate street Moore, lady supt.), Charlton house. Barton street

Jones George Beniah, -school board attendance officer, Lake Emma (Mr!'.), tobacconist, 52 'Northgate street

Elm villa, Stroud road Lamb Alex. Hill Kennedy, engine i& boiler inspector, 39'

Jones Henry, apartments, 17 Worcester street Regent street

Jones Henry. registrar of marriages for the union, 17 Lambton James J. supervisor of inland revenue, Custom

King street; res. 24 Brunswick road house, Commercial road
Jones John, greengrocer, 127 Lower Barton street
Land Alfred. shopkeeper, IS Russell street

Jones J()hn Henry (firm, Jones Sf, Blakeway), solicitor, Lane Brothers, general house repairers, Albion street
commissioner for oaths, notary public & deputy clerk Lane David Sf, Son, boot Sf, shoe makers, 162 Westgate st

of the peace for the city~ Eldon chambers, Berkeley st Lane (F. D.). Son Sf, Co. hay Sf, corn dealers, llristol road'
Jones Maria Louise (Mrs.). dress maker. 23 St. John's la Lane (S. W.) Round Sf, Co. grain warehousemen, Docks.

Jones Reuben, builder. 3 Hartington villas, Bristol road Lane Elizabeth (Mrs.). Plough inn. 9 UptOD street

Jones Sarah (Mrs.). dress maker. 77 Lower Barton st Lane George, chimney sweeper, I Mercy pI. Southgate 8t

Jones Thomas, black!;;mith, Stat,ion road Lane J oseph, fruiterer &, greengrocer. 161 Westgate st

Jones Thomas, chimney sweeper. :New Inn lane Lane Margaret (Mrs.). -apartments. 8 Oxford street

Jones Thomas James. beer retailer & shopkeeper. 65 Lane Thomas Clifford. Wheat!'heaf inn, 94 Southgate sf;

Tredwonh road ! Langley-Smith WiIliam, solicitor, commissioner for oaths,.

Jones William, builder, see Freeman & Jones &; under sheriff for the city, Westgate chambers,

Janes William, building contractor,Bridge ho.Worcester st Berkeley street

Jones Williall\, commercial trav. Fern villas. Tu:ffl.ey aven Langston James & Son, coal merchants. 96 Falkner street,.

Jones William. plumber, Station road & coal wharf, Midland Railway station

1Jones William David M.n., M.R.C.S.Eng., surgeon, 4 Lansley David T. timber, slate. cement Sf, coal merchant.
-Spa road _ BakeI"'lI- wharf... UantOOlIY---I'oad

Jordan Henry. eating house, 8 Bell lane Lapington Maud (Miss), pork butcher, 138 Soutbgate at

GLOV. 13

194 !J-LOUCESTER. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. •

[ KELLY'S

Law Emma (Mrs.), registry office, 9 Market parade Lovell Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker, 2 Hempstead villas,

J,.aw Mary (Miss), coMectioner, 46 Eastgate street Southgate street

Law Mary (Mrs.), wood turner, 16 Hare lane' Loveridge Richard Alfred, plumber &c. I I Upton street

Lawrence Alfred, a.partments, 29 St. Mary street Lovesey Fred Whitehorn, tobacconist, 1 Southgate street

Lawrence George, tea retailer, 25 Southgate street &, at Lowe Frederick, h:tir dresser, 67, Westgate street

Cheltenham Lucas Fanny (Mrs.), stocking knitter, 50 Victoria street

ua -" Co. wholesale &; retail cabinet makers, earpet Lucy Brothers &; 00. corn merchants, Docks

factors & house furnishers, 30 Northgate street; &; one Luker Henry Herbert, grocer. II Alvin street

llide of St. Aldate street Luker James, miller (steam) &; corn & meal merchant,

Lea William Thomas, tailor, 52 ~orthgate street Victoria steam mil:s, Quay street

Leach George, baker, 82 Alvin street Luker William. accountant, 68 Worcester street

Leach Henry, wood turner, 108 Lower Barton street Lyes Edith (Mrs.), baker, 64 Westgate street

Leat John Charles, builder, Bristol road Lying-in Charity (Mrs. Sheppard, hon. sec.), Spa schOOl

Leech Charles, beer retailer, 36 81. Aldate street rooms

Leech Charles Richard, chemist, 56 High street McCormick William, commercial traveller, Stratford

Leighton & Hatton, greengrocers, 93 Worcester street house, Linden road, Stroud road .

Lemon &; Parker (Geo. &, Arthur Hardess), wine &, McC()v James, locksmith &:c. Pound court, Barlon street
spirit mers. 40 Eastgate street &; bonded stores,Doch McCre• a Fred, income tax col~ector, 81 Park End road

Lewis G. H. &, Son, boot & shoe makers, 42 Southgate st Macdonald & Golledge, e:ectrical engineer, 30 St. .A:.date st
Lewis & Lewis, grocers & prov. dealers, 17 Eastgate st ~lacdonald George Bruce, bookseller, 6 St. Aldate street
Macdonald Thomas, teacher of the flute, .~ Pembroke street
Lewis & Son, blacksmiths, 22 St. Catherine street M0Donald William, travell:n~ draper, 17 Cromwell stree~

Lewis Thomas &, 00. fruiterers, 18 Eastgate street

Lewis Alfred, builder, 19 O:>nduit street Mace Alfred, carpenter, 82 Falkner street

Lewis Arthur Hy. builder & collector of markpt tolls, Maddocks James, butcher, 81 Southgate street .

Prospect house, Conduit street Madge 'Wa~ter, sec. Gloucester Working Men's Conserva-

Lewis Charles, carpenter, 64 Vauxhall road tive .Association &, Benefit 80c:etv, Bea chmbrs. Bell lane
Lewis David, draper, 145 Westgate street Madge 'WaIter, timber merchant, •D<lcks

Lewis EJen (Miss), feather cleaner, 51 'Worcester street Magdalen .Asylum (Miss Susan Johnson, lady superinten-

Lewis Frederick William M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. house sur- dent), Blackfriars

gecm, General Infirmary, Southgate street Maitland William, commercial trave[er, 52 Weston raa.d.

Lewi;; George (Mrs.), Dolphin inn, 21 Northgate street Malpass Robert Henry, shopl{eeper, 20 Bristol road

Lewis Geo. Henry, collector of income tax, 42 Southgate st Mann Wllllam Charles. chronometer, clock &; watch

Lewis James, beer retailer, 44 Sweet Briar street manufacturer, goldsmith. jeweller, silversmith, optician

Lewis Joseph Nugent. builder, 132 Lower Ba·rton street .&;c. chronometer maker to the Admiralty, The Cross

Lewis Mary Elizabeth (Mrs.). muffin baker, 134 Lower Manners John, manager National Provincial Bank of Eng-

Barton street land, Eastgate street

Lewis Maurice. agent to the Royal Liver Friendly Society, Manning Mary Ann (Mrs.) & Sons, cork cutters, 91 West·

Bell view, Conduit street gate street

Lewis Thomas Mathew, general dealer, 37 Henry road Manning John Spary, curios, antique china, oil paintings,

,Lewis William, commercial trave]er, 6 Honyatt road old prints & antique furniture dealer &c. Bank buildings,

Lewis William Henry, shopkeeper, 30 Worcester street The Cross, Westgate street

Liberld Association (City) (W. J. Arnold, sec.),Liberal club Mansfield Ernest Edward Joshua, grocer, &; agent for W.

, Liberal Association (Tewkesbury division) (W. J. Arnold, & A. Gilbey Limited, wine &; spirit mers. 72 Bristol road

sec.), Liberal c~ub Margrett Henry Arthur. confectioner, 31 Bristol road

. Liberal (City) Registration Office (W. J. Arnold, registra. Marsh Edward, boot maker, 19 Ducie street

tion agent), Suffolk house Marsh Edward, house agent, 16 Cromwell street

Liberal Club (J. B. Karn esq. president; Samuel Moss, Marsh J oseph, boot maker, 39 High street

hon. sec.), Suffolk house, Greyfriars Marsh Thomas WaIter, paperhanger, 37 High street

Liggins William, poultry farm, Llanthony house Marshal1 Thomas, travelling draper, 10 Oxford street

Light Brothers &; Co. cycle manufacturers, Bristol road Martin & Crump, grocers, 59 Alvin street &; 25 Union si

Light Thomas, boot maker, 36 Bristol road Martin Edward, provision dealer, 62 High street

Limbrick John, fried fish dealer, 40 Bristol road Martin Robt. Sydnev, undertaker, ~ Pilot tel'. Southgatest

Lipton's Market, provision dealer, 103 Northgate street Martin Susanna (Mrs.), apartments, 31 Wellington street

Lister R. A. &; Co. Limited, agricultural &; dairy engineers Masonic Lodges Royal Gloucestershire (R<>yal Lebanon &

&, machinists; Alexandra cream separators, Lister-Bab- Zetland), held at the Bell hotel, Southgate street

cock milk testers, vertical stone grinding mi~ls, Beau- Matthams Richard, draughtsman, 62 Conduit street

fort-Hunt corn crusher, horse gears & chaff cutters, Matthews & Co. general house furnishers, china, glass,

Station road; works, Dursley ironmongery &c. removal contractors, undertakers &c.

Literary &; Scientific Society (Roland Mott &; J. H. Collett, 114 &; 115 Southgate &; Parliament street

hon. secs.), 33 Southgate street Matthews &; Co. wholesale cabinet manufrs. Llanthony rd

Little J ames, boot maker, 106 Sonthgate street Matthews Sarah Elizh. (Mrs.), greengrocer, 19 Barton st

Little Thomas, travelling draper, 73 Worcester Btreet Matthews William, shopkeeper, 10 Lower Westgate street

Liverpool &; London &; Globe Insurance Co. ; office &, engine Matthe1N8 Wllllam Charles. cabinet maker, up-

station (J. W. Jeens, agent; Henry Kitchen, resident holsterer, carpet factor &; complete house furnisher (near

engineer), 88 Southgate street new Midland station), Barton street

Liverpool Victoria Legal Friendly Society (Thomas Wm. Matthias Mary (Mrs.), apa·rtments, 31 Parliament street

Grieveson, manager), 14 King street Matty Samuel, beer retailer & shopkeeper, 39 New street

Livings Lewis, tailor &; clothier, 8 Southgate street Maule Cyrus, fishmonger, 88 l'Iorthgate street

Voyds' .Agent, Francis Barnard, Commercial road Maxfield John, supt. of public baths, Barton street

. Lloyds Bank Limited (County of Gloucester Bank) May Frederick George, confectioner, 22 Barton street

(branch) (Rd. Penson, manager), 143 Westgate st.; May George, shopkeeper, 6 Princes street

draw on head office, 72 Lombard street, London E C Mayer Jane (Miss). dress maker, 61 Victoria street

'.Lloyds Bank Limited (branch) (James A. Smithin, Mayer John, baker, 79 High street

manager), open IQ to 3 daily; thursdays. 10 to I; sat. Mayer Lovegrove Griffin Hubert,barrister-at-Iaw,I7King st

'10 to 5; Eastgate street; draw on Lloyds Bank Limited, Mayer Lovegrove Griffin Hubert, c~erk to the guardians

wmbard street, London E C & superintendent registrar & clerk to the rural distric~

'Lloyd Albert, dairyman, 141 High street, Ti"edworth council &, to the a·ssessment & school attendance co~­

Lloyd Harry, milk dealer, Chequers lane mittees, Poor Law offices, Great Western road

Lloyd Thomas Charles, shopkeeper, 75 Vauxhall road Mayo Brothers. ironmongers, 23 North~te street

Lock Alfred John, teacher of music, 28 Conduit street Mayo Ernest, confectioner, 94 Northgate street

Locke John, cook &; confectioner, 48 Barton street Mayo Fanny (Mrs. ),ladies'preparatory scho()l,30 Midland I'd

Lodge James, plumber, 76 Victoria street Mayo John William, commercial traveller, 134 Oxford I'd

umdon Fine Art Co. photographers &c. Barton street Maysey James, umbrella ma. &; toy dlr, 83 Northgate 8t

London David Benjamin, temperance hotel, Olarence st Maysey J'!UIles, upholsterer, 50 Alvin street

Long David, beer retailer, 95 Falkner street Meadows Charles, shell fish dealer, 21 Longsmith street

Long Goorge, -shopkeeper, Kingsholm road Meadows Frederick, greengrocer, 56 Westgate !ttreet

'Long George, shopkeeper, I St. Mark street Meadows Reuben, f·ruit & fish dealer, 40 Westgate street

Long George Oharles, grocer, 31 India road &; Eastgate market

Long John (firm, Ohampney &; Long), solicitor, A:bion Meadows Thomas, hay dealer, 55 Longsmith street

house, King street Meadows William Charles, butcher. 46 Morton street

Long K'cIte (Miss), dress maker, 24 Park road Medland & Son, architects &; surveyors, 15 Clarence street

Long Samuel, fishmonger, 107 Northgate street Medland Matthew Henry, county flrchitect, 15 C!.arence st

wng Thoi!. fishmonger, 19 Westgate st. &; 90 Southgate sf, MeIling J oho. Robin Hood inn, 47 Bristol road

DIRECTORY. ] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. GLOVCES·fER.

Merchant Alfred, coal dealer &; haulier, 30 Ne:son street ~rorri-s Thomas, haulier &c. Farm street, Park End I'd

Merchant Henry, coal merchant, Midland wharf Morris Tom, beer !l"etailer, 82 Victoria. street

}ieredith William Lewis F.G.S.· civil engineer &; contrac- Morse Charles, pork butcher, 51 Barton street

tor, 7 Midland road Moss S. &; Co. saw mills, Bristol road

Merrett J o-hn, english timber dealer, Vanthony Moss Alice (Mrs.), apartments, 33 Parliament ~treet.

Merrett John Edward, Victory hotel P.H. High street, Moss> Esther (Mrs-.), lanndres.., 70 Falkner street

Tredworth Mott &; 00. wine &; spi'rit mers. 44 &; 45 NorthS!!lte st

Merrett Thomas, cycle repairer, I Napier street Mould Harriet &; Son, tailors, 9 Lower Barton sMeet

Merritt Robert, beer retailer, 65 Lower Barton street Mould John Trevor, tailor, 13 Widden street

Merrylees George & Co. leather belting machine &I mill Mould 'William, tai!-or, 156 High street, Tredwortb
band manufacturers, oil &; grease importers, en~ineers' Moulder Fras. 'Vm. beer retk. (outdoor)'79 Tredworth I'd

store factors &; contractors, mill furnishers, oil &;' 00101' Moulder George, Ship inn, Quay

merchants, leather factors, engine packing manufae. Mousell Bros. furniture removal contractors &; de·

turers, asbestos goods importers, St. Nicholas works. pository; perfect safety guaranteed, Commercial road i

See advertisement &; at Cheltenham &c

Merryman Hannah & Caroline (Misses), milliners, 4 Mousell (H.), ChadbQlrll (J.) &; Co. lightermen, Doch

Worcester parade Moyle Maria (Mr~.), aparts. I Pilot ter. Southgate st

Messenger Eliz3 (Mrs.),Horse & Groom P.H. 12 London rd Murrell Richard, shopkeeper, 17 Longsmith street

Messenger Waiter, haulier &c. Seymour road Murrey- Edward Oliver, com. traveller, 3 Oxford street

Metford Francis Killigrew Seymour, City steam flour Murtagh John, shopkeeper & beer retailer, 16 Widden st

. mills, see Priday, Metford &; 0> Murtagh John, tobacconist, King street "

Middleton John, ~reengrocer, Eastgate market Museum (~Ioses William Butler, custodian; open mono

Midgley Charles Henry. surgeon dentist, 4 Clarence street & wed. 11 a.m. to I p.m. & 2 p.m. to 4- p.m.; sat.

Midland Railway Co. (Henry Hunt, goods agent; George 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.), Brunswick Toad

Frederick Warden, locomotive supt.). Station road National Provincial Bank of England (branch), John

Midland Railway Engineers' Office (William Taylor, supt.), Manners, manager; open 10 to 3 daily; thursday 10

Lower Barton street till I; sat. 10 to 5), Eas.tgate .street; draw on head

"Miles Alfred, tailor, 3 Lower Barton street office, London E C

Miles Eliza (Mrs.), apartments, 110 London road National'Telephone Co. Limited (J. G. A. Ewing, local

Miles John W. York House inn P.H. 76 Londanroad manager), 9 Berkeley street

Millard Alfred, tinplate worker, III Westgate street Nayland'Thomas. shopkeeper, 8 Lower Westgate street

Millard George, school attendance officer, 4 Commercial rd Neal T'homas Checkers, confectioner, 14 Queen street

Millard Julia (Mrs.), dress maker, .<;7 Salisbury road & Eastgate market

Millard William, coal merchant, 5 Priory road Neate Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 5~ Park End road •

Miller Frank, beer retailer, I Dean's walk Neiniger B. Cuthbert, watch &;, clock maker, 538,

Mills & Co. watch makers & jewellel's, 18 Ea'stgate street Lower Barton street

Mills Alfred James, grocer & baker, 78 LoweT Barton st Keininger Edwin Joseph, watch maker &c. I Queen st

Mills James, smith, 40 Oxford street Newcombe E. & Co. corn merchants, 29 Commercial r,d

Mills Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 69 Brook street Newcombe Ernest, corn dealer, ~~ Lower Barton street
Newman George, oorn mer. see Fluck, Son &; Newman
Millsom Sophia (Mrs.), tobacconist, ~4 Barton street

Millwater Edward, boot maker, 40 Victoria street Kewman William, coffee house, 99 Victoria sbreet

Milner Henry Robert, dispensing chemist &; photographic Newth George Alfred, Berkeley P.H. Southgate street

material dealer, 83 BaTton street Newth John, butcher, 76 Northgate street

Minahan John, White Hart inn, 12 Kingsholm road Newth William James, grocer &.c. 2 Hopewell buildings,
M~nchin &; Son, grocers, &; agents for W. & A. Gilbey Lower Bart-on street

, Limited, wine &; spirit merchants, 159 "\Yestgate street NeW'th Wllllam .John. builders' merchant &; rick

Minchin William, pharmaceutical chemist (successor to cloth manufacturer, Ladybellegate street

H. Meadows), 15 Westgate street :Kiblett Edwin, a'rchitect & surveyor, 9 Arthur strept

l\Iitchell George, hair dresser, I2a, Lower Barton street :Kice Henry, commercial traveller, 65 London road l

Mitchell George, travelling draper, 2 Oxford street Nicholas David, Crown & Thistle P.R. Barton !!treet

l\fitahell James, travelling draper, 95 Oxford road Nicholas Graham, architect, Bastion ho. Brunswick rd

1.loffatt Joseph & Co. sawing mills, Nettlet<ln road Nichollls Laura (Miss), private school far boyS! & girls,

Moffatt Ernest Godlirey, butcher, Hopewell house, Lower Bastion house, Brunswick road _

Bart-on street ,Nicholls Sarah Jane (MisSo), shopkeeper, 61 Palrk End rd

M.offatt Harry, butcher, 25 London road NichollS! WiIliam, builder, 51 Park End road

Moffatt· Henry, butcher, 24 Kingsholm road Nicholls William, jun. builder, New street

Montani Isabella (Mrs.), Crown hotel, Station road Nicholls Wm. Turner, bldr. & contrctr. 10 St. Paul's J,:d

Moody Wm. carpntr. &. joiner, Berkeley viis. BriSltol rd l'\icks &; Co. timber'merchants &c. Bristol road

Moo re Bros. (successors to Hastie &; Co.), tailor!!, Noakes Robert, deputy registrar of marriages' for the

hatters, outfitters &c. II Eastgate street union, 15 Regent street

~Ioore Benjamin, hair dresser, 76 High street, Tredworth Norman Antonio James, dentist, 30 Londun road

MooTe Clement H. S. barristC'l'-at-Iaw, Berkeley stree1 'Norman Rowland Hy. provision dealer, 137 Westgate :sll

Moore Frederick, P08't office, Wotton hill Norris Edwin, sec. Severn & Canal Cal'rying Co. Lim.

Moore James Philip F.R.LB.A.. architect &; surveyor, Docks

agent for the Caledonian Life, Phrenix Fire & Pelican Norris Henry, coach builder, Market parade

Life & Mutual Accident Insurance Cos. 9 Berkeley st North Gloucester Women's Conservative Benefit Society

Moore Mary (Mrs.), gree~OTocer, Eastgate mlliTket (WaIter Madge, sec.), Bell chambers, Bell lane

Moran James, examining officer H. M. Customs·, Custom Norwich Union Fire & Life Office & Fire Engine Station

house, Commercial road; res. 22 Park road (Charles E. Quilter, agent), 12 Westgate street

Morehen Seamark Harry, huir cutter, 64 Bristol Iroad Naxon William, corn & flour dealer, Painswick road

Moreland S. J. & Sons, match manufactrs. Bristol road Nurse Bros. &; Field, ship chandlers, 16 Commercial rd

Moreton Thomas &; CO'. tea merchanb & agents for Oakey Edwin, apartments, :22 Cromwell ~tree\;

Palmer Bros. biscuits & cakeS' j local office &; sale Odd Fellows' Hall M. U. (counciJor, WaIter Madge,

room, Station rO'ad hon. sec.; Jesse Dyer, curator), 81 Barton street

Morgan Albert, cllIrpenter, 51 Brook street Oldham Fanny (Mrs.), pork butcher, 62 Bristol road

Morgan Charle~l, tailor, 156 \Yestgate street OliveI' George, ooot & shoe maker, 140 Westgate street;

MOl'gan Frank, grocer, 98 Linden road, Bristol road IS Northgate street & Cross Sollthgate gtreet
Morgan George, carpenter & builder, 2 Pilot terrace, On~ey Julia Mary (Mrs.) (late George Onley), pawn-

Southgate sbreeb broker, jeweller & general outfitter, 22 Northgate st.

Morgan Henry, boot Ii; 'shoe maker, 5 Goodyere street &; 13 Southgate street

Morgan Jane C~Irs.), apa,rt.ments, 35 Worcester street Orchard Daniel Fowler, pork butcher, 98 Westgate ~t

Morgan Joseph. eating house. 97 Lower Barton stree' Orchard Robt. Wm. second hand clothes dlr. 6 King st

Morgan 'Thomas, Victoria House P.B. 28 Low. Barton it Orchard Thomas, fatrmer, 35 London road:

Morman Arthur, poultry dealer, Eastgate market ' Organ James, assurance agent, 8 Lower Barton street

Morris Charles, grocer, see Sterry &; Morris Organ John Thomas, F1eece inn, Wotton hill

Morris Henry Charles, sand merchant, Saintsbridge Organ Thomas, Black Dog P.H. I London road

Morris Morgan, monumental sculptor &; engra.ver, Orpin John, coal dealer, 64 Alvin street

Istone &; ma['ble mlfSon; reredos, pulpits, fonts, tombs Osborne Henry, printer, 8 St. Mary's square
kc. designs &; prices on upplication Owner John, inspector of nuisances to the urban sani-

Morris Patrick, c{):!Iee & dining rooms, Iua,Low.Darton et tary authority, Guildhall

01.0U. 13-

196 GLOUCESTER• GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S


Osment Susan CM:~s.), tobacconist, 34 Westgate street Phelps Ju;ia Agnes (Miss), baker &; shopkeeper, 105

Oxford University Extension Lectures (:\1iss Brooke· Falkner street

Hunt, hone sec.), Rikenel, Spa rO'<ld Phelps Nathaniel, school att~ndance officer, Serlo road,

racker Jane (Mrs.), bookseller, 4 College court Dean's walk

Packer John James Thomas, registrar of births & Phelps Samuei, apartments, 19 Worcester parade

deaths for St. John the Baptist sub-district, 51 South- Phelps Samuel. wine & spirit valuts, 5 Eastgate street

gate street Phillimore ~rarill. (Mrs.). tobacconist, 15 London road

Padbury Laura Annie (Miss), shopkeeper, 33 Alfred st Phillips & Son, painters, 81 Worcester street

Page Charles, baker, 22 Alvin street PhiIlips Charles D. engineer, Emlyn engineering works

Page Charles Henry, Royal Oak inn, Low. Westgate st PhiEips Edith (Mrs.), preparatory school, RDstellan,

Page Waiter, ~rocer & prov. dlr. 8] Lower Rarton st Turney avenue

Palin Arnold Henry, local m'clnager tG Francis Barnard, Phillips Hubert, shopkeeper, 33 Sinope street

& consular agent for the United States of America &; Phillips Mary Ann (MIss), fruiterer & florist, see Evans
insurance agent, Commercial road
& Phillips
Palmer Ernest John Clement, grocer & provision dealer, Phillips Robert, county surveyor, Shire hall
21 Lower Barton S1treet
Phi;Iips William, shopkeeper, 51 Westgate street
Palmer John William, Trumpet inn & slater &c. 105 Phillpotts & Co. corn merchants, Docks
Southgate street
Philpott Nehemiah, deputy chief constable, Police sta·
Pardoe Eliza (Mrs.), haberdasher &C. 91 Southgate st tion, Bear land
Park End Hotel (Henry Brookes), Park End road
Parker Caleb, dyer & cleaner, 12a, E11stgate street Phcenix (The) Enamelled Slate Co. (Frank Belcherp
manager), chimney piece manufacturers &c. Quay at
Parker Harriett (Mrs.), dyer, IX Worces,ter street
Picket P. & D. dairy & fruit store, 2] Barton street
Parkinson Owen, provision dealer 27, & butter dealer 58, Pickford & Co. railway carriers (W. A. Severn, agent),
Lower Barton street
Station road
Parry Alice (Miss),tripe dressr.see Tnrner(Mrs.)&Parry Pickford Ephraim, house &; church decorator, 5 Bruns-
Parry Ellen (Mrs.), shopkeepetr, 52 Moor street
wick road
Parsloe George Sim!lon, hardware d'ealer, 37 Barton
SI1:reet & Eastgate market Pickford Frederick Wm. photog-rapher, 75 Nortbgate st
Piggott Alfred, Leather Bottle P.H. Deacon street
Parsons Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkpr. 51 Columbia street Pike Charles, greengrocer. 99 Ryecroft street
ParsQns Henry, Shopkeeper, 2 Havelock ter. Park rd Pike George. manager the Capital & Counties !lank Lim.
Parsons Jas. mast. mariner, Connaught ha. C<Jnduit st
Parsons Valentine Hillier (late Theobald & Co.), &; city treasurer, Eastgate street
Pike George Charles Patriarche, solicitor & commissioner
builders' & furnishing ironmonger, 16 Eastgate street
& 2 Queen street for oaths, I Barton street
Pike Henry Patriarche, sec. to the General Infirmary..
Pall'tridge & Robins, booksellers, stationers, printers,
fancy repository & bookbinders-; publisherSo of the Southgate st. & sec. & treas. of Commercial rms. Docks
Diocesan Calendar for Gloucester & Brist<JI, 155 West- Pimble & Stephens, hay & coal merchants, The Quay
gate street Pimble WaIter &; Son, hay dealers; stores, Quay
Pimm Ann (Mrs.), apartments, 3 Priory place, Greyfriar9
Passey Bridget (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Saintsbridge Pimm. Edwin, hair dresser, 16 Lower Barton street
Passmore Ernest John, hair dresser, 14 Southgate street
Pimm Edwin Leopold, bair dresser, St. Aldate street
Passmore Harry, Fountain inn, 2] Westgate street
Pimm. Florence (Mrs.). hair dresser, 38 St. Aldate street
Payne Arthur J. butC'her, 62 London road
Payne Henry Richard, builders' merchant & stone quaNy Pimm George Roland. hair dresser. 54 Barton street
Pitcher Arthur H. photographer, 7 CQIlege court
owner, Southgate street & Docks
Pitcht10rd Wm. sewing machine agt. 25 UlW. Barton sit
Payne James, butcher, 123 Westgate street
Pitman Alfred Clement, confectioner, 2] Longsmith street
Payne J ames, coal merchant, Clare street
Pitt Edward, Son & Co. hOe furnishers, 20 Low. Barton st
Payne Thomas, brush maker. I] Noorthgate street
Pitt Fanny & Son, bakers & confectioners, Il] High
Payne William, Prince Albert inn, Station road
Peaple Eliza (Mrs.). tailoress, 4 Havelock ter. Park road street, Tredworth
Pearce Adelaide (Mrs.), Railway inn, 10 Bristol road Pittaway William. baker; 48 Westgate street
Pe8lfce Geo. shoeing & genl. smith, 216a. Low. Bart-on sh Pobjoy Edward, wholesale confectioner & manufacturev
Pearce .lames. agricultural & general valuer. of the" Rising Sun" self-raising flour, 64 High street
Polden George WaIter. chemist, 75 Northgate street
L i n t on
Pearce Mary Anne (Mrs.), fancy draper, .30 Southgate sl Pollard Edwin, m~mumental mason, Stroud road
Pomeroy Robert Fry, ironmonger. 84 Northgate street
Pearce William, shopkeeper, 93 Falkner street
Pearl Life Assurance Company (Percy Short, dist. supt.), Ponting Albert John, builder, see Dolman & Ponting
PQnting James Joseph, Chequers inn
IX Park End road
Pearson Edwd. Kendall, journalist,Salisbury viI.Henry rd Poole Chas. Wm. lessee Royal Albert hall, Westgate st
Peckover Joseph Harris, oom. traveller, 74 Conduit st Poole Oliver Alfred, grocer, 38 Millbrook street
Pedersen Kittel, shipwright & vice-consulate for Sweden Poole William, greengrocer, 139 High street, Tredworth
Poole William, shopkeeper, 41 Lower Westgate street
& Norway, 19 Commercial 'road & Docks
Peek Waiter, working jeweller kc. 10 Regent street &; Pope John Rowe, draper, 19 & 20 Northgate street
Porch Nettie (Miss), teacher of music, I Hempstead
4 Queen ·street
Peglar Mary Ann (Mu.), news agent, Sudbrooke, villas, Southgate street

Southgate street Poulton Charles, plumber & house decorator, I3 Upton st

Peglar Richd. btc-hr. 30, & oonfctnr. 32. Low. Barton st Poulton John. beer retailer. 72 Vauxhall road

Pendrey Frances Caroline (Mrs.), aparts. 61 Henry I'd Poulton Wiliiam Charles. cabinet maker, 121 Soutbgate st

Penson Richard, manager of County of Gloucester Bank, Powell Daniel William, upholsterer, 78 Westgate street

branch of Lloyds Bank, 143 Westgate street Powell Edwin. greengrocer. 1I37 High street, Tredworth

Pepperell Francis Edwd. hair dresser, 23 Low. Barton st Powell Elizabeth (Mrs.). apartments, Albion villa, Albion st

Pepperell Mary Ann (Mrs.). apartments, 39 Henry road Powell Goorge, pianoforte tuner, 39 Parliament street

Pepperell William Henry, hair dresser, Worcester street Powell George Jas. shopkeeper &; beer rtlr. 50 Bristol rd

Perkins Elizabeth (Mrs.), Bull's Head P.R. 40 St. Mary sq Powell John, tailor, 4] Derby road

Perkins Matilda. (Mrs.), dress maker, 37 Parliament st Powell Rowland, Red Rover P.H. Barton street

Perkins Thomas, chimney sweep, 55 High street Powell Trevor, coal merchant, 23 Commercial road

Perks Arthur, hair dresser, 21 Worcester street Powell William, apartments, 20 St. Mary square

Perris Alfred, livery stable proprietor. Worcester street Pratt Joseph. stationer, 71 Barton street

. Perris George, beer retailer, 3 Commercial road Preedy George, income tax collector & assistant oversee!'

Perry Amelia Hesther (Mrs.), dress maker. 6 Nettleton I'd to Wottonvill, 16 Whitfield street

Pester Martha (Mrs.), stay maker, 3 College street Preedy Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper. 95a, Westgate street

Peters George, contractor, S<Juthgate street Preedy Henry, shopkeeper, 95 Westgate street

Phelps Hy. J n. & Co. slate enamellers, Lower Westgate st Preen George Victor, hair dresser, 55 Lower Barton st

Phelps & Son, tailors, 20 Southgate street Presdee Henry, shopkeeper, 100 Sherborne street

Phelps A1fu'ed, tailor, 9 Albert street Price, Walker &; Co. Limited, timber & slate importers &;

• Phelps Charles Henry, tailor, 73 Oxford road . saw mill proprietors; offices, Bristol road

Phelps Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkpr. 109 High st. Tredworlh Price Memorial Hall (Moses William Butler, custodian),

Phelps Edwin, dairyman, 5 Lower Westgate street Brunswick road

Phelps Francis Jas. greengrocer & confectnr.6&8London rd Price Arthur Edwin. surgeon, 79 London road

Phelps James, sec. Liberal club & deputy registrar of Price John, boot & shoe maker. 25 Wellington street

births & deaths, South Hamlet sub-4istrict; res. 76 Price Richard, Pheasant inn. Columbia street
Henry r<Jad
Price WaIter G. assistant overseer & collector of rateS'

FheIps Jasper Stephens, beer rtlr. %03 High st.Tredworth for St. Mary-de-Lode parish, 25 Henry road

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. GLOt:CESTER. 197

Priday, Metford &; Co. City steam flour mills, Docks Risbey William George, grocer, Stroud road

Priday Charles, boat builder, Westgate bridge Roach John, greengrocer. 125 Southgate street &; mill-

Priestley William, mechanical engmeer, 4 Pilot terrace, stone maker, Llanthonr road

Southgate street &; Bristol road Roberts Arthur &. Co. grocers, 80 Northgate street

Primrose League (Gloucester habitation) (R. V. Vassar- Roberts &; Co. linen drapers &; milliners, 10 Eastgate st

Smith esq. ruling councillor), Conservative club Raberts & Starr, nurserymen &. florists, 9~ Northgate

Pritchard Charles, plumber &; house decorator, see TUrner street; Eastgate market &; London road

&; t'ritchard Roberts Harry Owen, inventor, patentee &; manufacturer'

Probert William, coal dealer, Chequers lane of table &; parlour games, 4 C{)mmercial I'd. &; Kimbros~

Probyn &; Wood, writers &; grainers, 5~ Barton street Roberts Henry, dairy, 64.Millbrook street

Probyn Henry James, writer &; grainer, 35 Dinely street Boberts Jillia (Miss), dressmaker. 19 Hcmyatt road
RobeTts Welter, ~.ster tnariniJr, Fern tiUas. 1'uffllV av
Probyn James, painter, Dinely street

Proctor Robert Jas. commission agent, 23 Kingsholm rd Roberts William, market gardener, Painswick road

Progressive Boot Co. boot stores, 30 Barton street Roberts \Yilliam, shopkeeper. Raglan terrace,Southgate sb

Provident Dispensary (Richard Mount Cole L.R.C.P.Lond. Robertson Johnathan Edwards, chemist, Kingsholm rd

Oscar Clark &; William (More Hope, medical officers; &,bertSQn Samuel Seaborn, draughtsman, 8 Park road

F. W. Stephenson, sec. j James Franklin, dispenser), Robins Th{)mas, bookseller. see Partridge &; Robins

Barton street Robins William, cabinet maker, 21 Conduit street

Pryce James Jabez, hosier & outfitter, 57 Barton street Robinson John &. Son, rick cloth mas. 18 St. Catherine st

Public Baths (John Maxfield, supt.), Barton street Robinson Thomas & Co. corn & manure merchants, Dock&

PublIc Benefit Boot Co. boot &; shoe stores (Sydney \Va:ter Robinson .Alice (Miss), dress maker, 16 Clifton road

Strange, manager), 45 Eastgate street Robinson George, grocer &; prov. dlr. 59 Lower Barton st-

Pngh Thomas, shopkeeper, 20 Lower \Yestgate street Robinson Henry James, shoe maker. 77 Falkner street

Purton Ann (Mrs.), mid wife, I II High street, Tredworth Robins{)n Lilian Neems (Miss), school. 37 Park End road

Pyart Hubert, baker, 14 Morton street Robinson Mary T. (Mrs.), earthenware &; hardware

Quilter Charles E. insurance agent, 12 Westgate street dealer, 7 Bristol road

Quinn James C. examining officer H.M. Customs, Cus- Robinson William James, house agent, 16 Clifton read

tom house, Commercial road Rock Henry, hay, fruit &; potato dealer &; agent for the

lladbone Edward, grocer &; provision dealer. 22 Eastgate Bear Creek oil &; Shipping Co. Lim.; petroleum im-

street &; 45 Lower Westgate street porters, 84 Bristol road

Radford Charles, New Pilot inn, Sudbrook, Soutbgate st Rock Thomas, fruiterer &; potato merchant, 24 Rrecroft sb

Radford Henry John, Gloucester hotel, Station road Rogers Arthur Clarence, .scenic artist, 36 Mark street

Ram Commercial Hotel (The) (Miss M. E. Jones, Rogers George, commercial trav. St. Elmo, Conduit st

manageress); entirely rebui~t l& refurnished j com- Romans d. & Co. slate &; timber merchants, Docks

mercial, smoke, drawing &. billiard rooms, Southgate st Romans Alfred Henry, 'beer ret1lilet'; 10 Commercial road

Ramstedt Charles Adolf, Seymour hotel, Seymour road Romans Charles, master mariner. 13 Parliament street

Ravenhill &; Co. tobacco pipe manufacturers, Bell lane Rose & Rose, civil, clerical &; livery tailors, 13 Westgate st

Ravenhill Edwin, Star inn &; fruit dealer &;c. Quay Rose Arthur, furniture dealer &; insurance agent, 82-

Ravenh:JI George, haulier, Docks Southgate street

Ravenhill Samuel, wheelwright & smith, Docks j res. Ross John Daniel, cabinet maker &; upholsterer, 59 Barton.

16 Conduit street street &, 64. 65 &; 66 Market hall

Bavenhill William Edward, superintendent of the Cor- Ross Rose (Mrs.), toy dealer kc. Eastgate market

poration sanitary depot, Stroud road Rough Frederick, cycle engineer, 33 Westgate street

Rea Alfred, butcher. 36 Millbrook street Round Francis William Thomas, grain warehouseman, se6

Bea Joseph, shopkeeper, 76 Westgate street Lane (S. W.), Round &; Co

Bea William T. apartments, 24 "",orcester street Rowland Frederick, hairdresser, 3 Longsmith street

Read Reuben, beer retailer, 57 Alvin street Rowles Victor W. &; Co. ship brokers, 17 Commercial rd

Read Richard .A.:M.I.C.E. city surveyor & chamberlain. Rowle~ Victor W. vice consul for Germany, Uruguay &.

Guildhall Portugal, 17 Commercial road

Reading John, beer retailer, Station road Royston Hy. &; Son, boiler mas. &; general smith,Bristol ~d

Reardon Dennis, commission agent, 26 London road Rumsey Thomas Higgs. clothier &; boot warehouse, 85 &;

Redding George, shopkeeper, 87 Westgate street 86 S.outhgate street

Redding Jane Elizabeth (~Iiss), dress maker. 23 Derby I'd Russell George James, shopkeeper, 61 .A1vin street

Reece Henrietta (Miss), dress maker,S Hanman road Rust Fredk. greengrocer, 109 New st. &; Eastgate market

Reed J oseph. dairyman, 7 Alfred place Rust Thomas, greengrocer, 39 Ducie street

Reeves James, agent for Sutton's parcels &; goods de- Ryder Arthur William, Vauxhall inn &; brewer, good bowl-

livery &; passenger parcels &; foreign parcels express &; ing green, 64 Lower Barlon street

agent for the Midland Railway Co. 21 St. John's lane Ryder William Frederick, grocer &; baker, Bristol road

"Reid George Guthrie, tailor & draper, 31 Oxford street Ryland .Alfred James. Plough P.R. Windmill parade

"Renshaw Fred, steward to the County Asylums, County Ryland John, shopkeeper, 46 Hare lane

Lunatic Asylum, Wotton Sable John. market gardener &c. Paul street, Tredworth

Renwlck W. & Co. merchant tailors, woollen drapers, Sadlier &; Slinn, chemists, 10 Norlhgate street

hosiers, hatters, &; agents for Scottish Widows' Fund, Sadler Mary (Mrs.), greengrocer, Eastgate market

12, 13, 14, IS &; 17 Uxford street St. Bartholomew's Hospital (Rev. George Mallett, chap-

Rew Emma Louisa (~Irs.), ladies' &; children's outfitter, lain j Thomas Smith Ellis, medical officer j Miss Ruth

32 Barton str1let Nash, matron), Lower Westgate street

:neynolds James &; Co. .Albert steam flour mills, Docks St. Lucys' Home of Charity (Rev. R. D. Russell Cowan

Rhodes Benjamin, photographer, 15 Park End road M.A. warden), Hare lane

Rhodes llenj. (Mrs.), preparatory schI. IS Park End :rd St. Luke's Mission Cottage (Sister Milica), Bristol road

:nice Abraham &; Sons, monumental masons, Southgate St. Margarets', St. Mary Magdalene &; St. Kyneburgh

street; Lower Barton street & Tredworth road United Hospitals (Thomas Smith Ellis, medical officer;

Rice Jacob &; Son, coal mers. & carriers (by water), Docks Rev. S. Richmond Robert-son. chaplain j Mrs. S. L.

Rice Edwin, coal dealer, 55 Robinhood street Cadle, matron), London road

Riee Isaae, haulier, 4 Leonard p~ace, Phillip street Salt Union Lim.salt manufacturers j offices,Commercial rd

Rice Joseph, coal mer. & haulier, 4 Commercial buildings Sandoe &; Son, house, land &; estate agents, appraisers.

Rich's (Sir Thomas) School (James Crofts, head master), auctioneers &; land surveyors &; insurance agents. 5
Market parade j &; at Malvern
Barton street

Richards Clara Beatrice (.Miss), type writer, 13 Clarence st Sandoe William, certified bailiff, Market parade

Richards Esther (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 28 High street Sanigar Thomas, boot ma.21 Goodyere st.& 82 Falkner st

Bichards Frederick Charles, tobacconist. 14 Southgate st Sanitary &; {Economic Association Limited, sanitary, heat-
Richards John Charles, solicitor & commissioner for oaths, ing, lighting &; electric engineers (Francis T.Bond M.D.,
B.A.Lond., F.R.C.S.E. hon. sec. j J. Fletcher Trew
II Queen street

Richardson John Edward, bookbinder, 23 Longsmith st Mem, San. Inst. resident engineer). Station road j
Richings James Saill, commssn. agent, 34 St. Mark st &; Bristol

Bickards Charles Reuben, butcher, Bristol road . Sante!' Arthur. photi'gtap•• B JIanman road

Ricketts Hy. boot ma. 4 Conduit st. &; 54 Falkner street Sargent Charles, dairyman, 218 Lower Barton street

Ricketts Neville, solicitor. 22 Clarence street Sargent Joseph, coal dealer, 61 Millbrook street

Ricketts ·Walter. hairdresser, Raglan terrace, Southgate st Saunders Cbarlotte (Mrs). apartments, 27 Arthur street

.Ridler Frederick Charles, tobacconist &; wholesale dealer Saunders Honor Dight (Mrs.), clothier, 128 & 129 West-

in tobacconists' goods, 101 High street, Tredworth gate street

ltigby Ben:amin, shoe maker, lIO Westgate street Savage Daniel, cattle dealer, 2 Avenue villas, Tuffiey aven

llippon John Wiles, teacher of music, 16 Midland road . Sceats John Elwin, dair)·man, 102 Reger.t street

198 GLOCCESTER. GLOI;CESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Scholey Charles, timber merchant, see Jaynes & Scholey Simpson Edmund, watch maker, 122 Southgate street

School of Art (municipal) (Arthur Englefield,head mstr.), Simpson James Young, tailor, 5 Whitfield street

Brunswick road Simpson John Alexander Robert, tailor, 37 Victoria stree\

School of Cookery (Gloucestershire le; Domestic Economy 'Simpson Robert Charles, saddler, 79 Westgate ·street

(Miss Flo. Baddeley, orga.nizing lady supt.), Barrack sq Simpson Sarah (Mrs;), wardrobe dealer, 5 Prince stree\

School of Science (municipal) (Allan Ballinger, general &; Sims John Charles, grocer &c. 22 Kingsholm road
' Sims Joseph, builder, 16 London road
organizing sec.), Brunswick road

Scoon Hobert, travelling draper, 98 Oxford road Singer Manufacturing Co. depot. 3 Southgate street

Scoon Walter P. tailor &:, draper, 32 Oxford .street Sisson W. &, Co. engineers &c. Quay Street iron worki

Scorgie John Gibb, marine surveyor &c. 5 Norfolk terrace, Siveter William Alfred, solicitor (firm, Taynton, Sons &>
Siveter), Clarence street
Southgate street
Scott Charles B.A. solicitor &:, official receiver in bank- Skidmore &:, DaIlen, wholesale &; retail coal, hay &:, straw
ruptcy, coroner for the city of Gloucester,commissioner merchants, hauliers kc.; {)ffice, Severn view, Priory

for oaths &: commissioner for taking oaths in the road; wharf, G. W. R. Town station
supreme court of South Australia, County chambers, Skidmore Frederick, fishmonger, 83 Lower Barton street
Skidmore Jabez, coal merchant, 113 Oxford road
Station road; .& at Berkeley
Skudamore Sidney, confectioner, 177 High st. Tredwortb
Scott Charles Herbert, engineer, see Summers & Scott Slader Alice (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 106 Westgate street
Slater Alfred, manager 'Cf the Gloucester Railway Car-
Scott Herbert Harger,iolicitor, Stati<ln rd.; & at Berkeley
riage &, Wagon Co. Lim. Bristol road
Scott Mary (Mrs.), apartments, I Parliament street Slinn Harry Edwin,chemist &. druggist,see Sadlier &:, Soon

Scrivens Annie (Mrs.), dress maker, I Clitheroe villas, Sly In. carpntr. Bristol rd. & coffee ho. 6 Llanthony I'd
Small Henry, pawnbroker &; furniture dealer, 101 &:, 102
Bristol road

Scrivens Henry, livery &:, bait stables &c. Westgate mews,

Bull lane '
Scudamore Albert, corn flour merchant, factor, miller &:, Southgate street
hay & straw dealer,Island Steam l\1ilI~,L:ow.Westgatest Small Henry, jun. shopkeeper, 84 Southgate street

Second Gloucester (Richmond) BuiltJ,ing Society (F. W. Smart Charlotte (Miss), dress maker, 5 Worcester street:
Smart Emma (Mrs.); butcher, 120 Southgate street
Harri", sec.); office, Greyfriars
Sephton Annie (Miss), beer retailer, 82 Northgate street Smart Emma (Mrs.), shop)reeper, 25 Columbia street
Smart James, collector of poor's rates for Barnwood &.
Sessions ,& 'Sons Limited, manufacturers &:, im- Wotton St. Mary Without, Wotton hill

port~r!l of every description of building materials, in- Smart James, cook shop, 183 High street, Tredworth
Smart John, builder, 96 London· road
cIudmg enamelled slate, marble &:, stone goods, joinery, Smart Lucy Ann (Mrs.), stationer, 77 &: 78 Northgate st
Smith Bros. &:, Co. cycle manufacturers, Southgate st
mouldings &:, laths, bricks, pipes &:, tiles; timber, slate Smith &; ,Cornock, corn merchants, 14 Commercial roa<l
Smith R. T. & Co. general carriers & agents for G.W.R.
& cement merchants; 'also dealers in builders' ma-
Station road & Southgate street
chinery, corrugated iron, tanks, hardware, lead, felt, Smith Albert Edward, baker, 24 Morton street
Smith Alfred, second officer of H.M. Customs" deputy
glass &c. Docks; offices, Southgate street
supt. &:, deputy receiver of wreck, Custom house..
Severn &; Canal Carrying Co. Limited (Edwin Xorris, Commercial road
Smith Alfred, shopkeeper, '75 Millbrook street
sec.; George Wing, manager), Docks Smith Alfred H. Prince of Wales P.H. Station road
Smith Alfred 1'\ott, bookbinder, 6 Queen street
Severn Navigation Office (George Harris, receiver ()f Smith Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 83 High street
Smith Charles, baker, 92 Hare lane
tolls), The Docks Smith Ellen (Miss), pork butcher, 42 Lower Barton st
Smith Emily (Mrs.), butcher, 38 Bristol road
Severn Ports Warehousing Co. Limited (Alfred Smith Frank, picture frame maker, 2 Longsmith street
Smith Frederick Wm. butcher, 165 High st. Tredworth
Woodward, managing director), Cammercial road; Smith George, painter, 86 Millbrook street
Smith George, shopkeeper, 91 Theresa st. Seymour road
storage capacity over one million bushels Smith George, stone mason, 68 Vauxhall road
Smith George Edmund, hair dresser, 49 Westgate street
Seyers Albert, coal merchant, Quay Smith George White, greengrocer, 35 Northgate street
Smith Henry, shopkeeper, Painswick road
Seymour Albert, shopkeeper, 54 1Vestgate street Smith James, fishmonger, Eastgate market
Smith James, insurance agent, 70 London road
Seymour Sophia (1\Irs.), apartments, 13 Worcester street Smith James, tobacconist, 7 Lower Barton street
Smith Jane (Mrs.), butcher, 52 Falkner street
Shackell Edward W. pianoforte dealer, see Thompson & Smith In. engineer & cycle maker, 27 Barbican rd.Dock..
Smith Joseph, relieving &:; vaccination &; school attend-
Shackell Limited ance officer No. I district, Gloucester union &, deputy
registrar of births &, deaths, Kingsholm sub-district..
Shakespeare Francis Henry,agent for domestic machinery, 10 Kingsholm road
Smith Mary (Miss), apartments, 15 Ladybellegate street
~ see Woodcock & Shakespeare
Smith Mary Ann (Mrs.), pork butcher, 40 Westgate st
Sharpe Job, ironmonger, 43 Lower Barton street &:; Fal-

kirk house, Bristol road

Sharpness Kew Docks & Gloucester & Birmingham Kavi·

gation Co. (Gloucester &:, Bel'keley canal section) (Hy.

Waddy, general manager; Hubert Waddy, sec.; Fras.

Augustus Jones, engineer), Docks

Shaw Charles Edwin, Star inn, 19 Alvin street

Shaw JQhn Phillip, insurance agent, 141 Oxford road

Shea l?redk. &: Son, tailors & outfitters, 31 Barton street

Sheen Eugene Thos. china dealer, 65 &:, 66 Northgate st

Shekell Stephen, baker &:, grocer, 65 Derby r<lad

Shepherd Howard, Globe P.R. Quay street

Shepherd Roht. James, pharm.chemist, 72 Northgate st

Sheppard Cornelius Frederick, general. smith, 13 Com-

mercial road &. Kimbrose '

Sheppard Henry, upholsterer, St. John's lane

Sherman Thomas, shipwright, Docks

Sherman William, shopkeeper, 30 Hare lane
~herwill Thomas Hamlyn, Northgate commercial &:, agri- Smith Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 73 Southgate st
cultural hotel, 2 London road, near Market, Midland Smith Minnie (Miss), dress maker, 2 Cambridge villas"
Bristol road
&; G. W. R. stations
Smith Rhoder, boot maker, 22 St. Aldate street
Shill Edward, boot maker, Painswick road .
Shipway Rosina (Mrs.),grocer & beer retailer,13 Bart<Jn st Smith Richard, boot maker, 17 Sweet Briar street
Shire Hall (William Teel, hall-keeper), Westgate street Smith William, apartments, 8 Russell street
Smith Wm. hair dresser, Ashleigh house, Southgate st
Short Charles, shopkeeper, 114 Alma place
Short Percy, district supt. Pearl Life Assurance Co. 11 Smith Wm. Alfred, beer retailer, 65 iMillbrook street
Smith William A. chimney sweeper, 90 Westgate street.
Park End road
Sibley Ralph, Avenue hotel &:; cycle &; recreation grounds, Smithin James A. manager Lloyds Bank Lim.Eastgate st
. Smyth Robert Brice M.A., M.B.Dub. junior assistant>
Bristol road
Sibley WilIiam, haulier, Bristol road, &; china dealer, 122 medical officer, County Lunatic Asylum, Wotton
Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (Mrs. Jan&
Westgate street
Sidlington Harriet (Mn.),midwife, 115 High st.Tredworth Packer, agent), 4 College court
Sollers Philip, Boot inn, Lower 1Vestgate street
Sidlington Richard Henry, Hope inn, 23 Barton street
Sievers Ferdinand L.D.S. surgeon dentist, 3 College Soule Leonard, grocer, 12 Barton street
green; 32 High town, Hereford; 54 High st. Stroud; Southern Thomas (exors. of), grocers & agents for W. &.
&; 41 St. Mary Abbotts terrace, Kensington, London W A. Gilbey, wine &; spirit merchants, 106 1'\orthgate st
Sievers Rudolph L.D.S. surgeon dentist, 3 College green; Sowle William, collector, Gloucester &:, Berkeley Canal
32 High town, Hereford; 54 High st. Stroud &- 41 S1. weighing machine, Southgate street
Spa Pump Room (Miss Mary Ford, lessee), Spa
Mary Abb<ltts terrace, Kensington, London W
Sparkes William, baker & grocer, 63 Ryecroft street
Silk Henry, watch maker, 67 High street
Sparrow Theophilus Hawkins, baker, grocer &: confee--
Simmonds John, builder, 88 Howard >street
Simpson A. manager Wilts & Dorset Banking Co. Lim. tioner; wedding breakfasts &, ball suppers IJrovided..
Farmh011'lle bak-ery, Ilrlst0'1 :rood -
The Cross

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. GLOUCESTER. 199

Sparks William, district goods manager, Great Wester!) Tarlor ElIen Gertrude (Miss), confectioner & fancy re-

Railway Co.; offices, London road pository, 61 Barton street ~.

Speck Alfred, marine stOJ;e dealer, Mount street Taylor Ernest Sanderson, pharmaceutical chemist, Myna.

Spicer Jacob, furniture dealer, 61 Lower Barton street house, Barton street --

Spillers & Bakers Lim. corn mers. 44 Commercial road Taylor Ethel (Miss), teacher of music" Barion ,street

Spillman Samuel, tailor, 63 Widden street Taylor George, hair dresser, I Brunswick road

Spink Albert Henry. solicitor & commissioner of deeds Taylor George, saddler, 5 King street

for the State of New York, St. John's lane Taylor Henry Yates Jones, sec. to Conservative club;

Spring Elizabeth (Mrs.), aparts. 34 Wellington street res. 3 Falkner street

Spry Peter, boot maker, 130 Lower Barton street Taylor Jane (Miss), milliner & fancy draper, 82a,Bartn.E4

Stafford Frank, beer retailer, 9 Columbia street Taylor Kate (Miss), dress maker, 13 Cromwell street

Stafford William, greengrocer, Eastgate market Taylor Ruth (Mrs.), dress maker, 8 Blenheim road

Staite Emma (Mrs.). furn. dlr. & remover, 72 Barion st Taylor Wm. fried fish dealer, 159 High st. Tredworth

Stamps John, fruit & china dealer, 49 Low. Barton st Taytor William. superintendent engineers' department

Stanley Clifford, ironmonger, 79 Northgate street , Midland railway, Lower Barton street

Stanton John, shopkeeper, 22 Upton street Taylor WilIiam, tin & iron plate worker, 21 King street

Stanton WilIiam, East End wine vaults P.H. Barton st Taylor William Thomas, shopkeeper, Station road

Stanway Mary (Mrs.), private school, 99 Westgate street Taynton, Sons & Siveter, solicitors, Clarence street

Star Tea Co. 33 Eastgate st. (Fredk. Geo. Trigg, mangr) Taynton Henry John (firm, Taynton, Sons &i Siveter),

Starr Sidney Stephen, florist, see Roberts & Starr solicitor & commissioner for oaths, Clarence street

Stead & Simpson Lim. boot & shoe mas. 7 :Korthgate st Teague James, beer retailer, 46 Napier street

Stephens John, Son & Co. vinegar works Teel WilIiam, keeper of the Shire hall, Westgate street

Stephens Alfred. coffee rooms, 93 Bristol road Theatre Royal (Robert Burge, propr. & mgr.),Westgate si

Stephens Bruce, hair dresser, Bristol road Thody George Ambrose, relieving, school attendance,

Stephens Caleb, house decorator, 9 'Worcester street vaccination & inqUlry officer &; collector for No. 2 dis-

Stephens Frank George, tobacconist, 38 Lower Barton st trict, 6 Withycombe terrace, King's Barton street

Stephens Geo. hay & coal mers. see Pimble & Stephens Thomas & Bayley. importers of foreign wines &v

Stephens Henry, insurance agent, 34 Salisbury road spirits, Greyfriars, Southgate street

Sterry & Morris, grocers, provision merchants &c. 18 Thomas J. & Co. coach builders, Worcester street

Southgate street Thomas W. & Co. tailors & hatters, 2 &; 3 Korthgate st

Sterry Albert, boot maker, 5 Morton street Thomas Abraham, photographer & collector of income

Sterry Fredk. ThoS'. carpenter & undertaker, 17 Bell lane tax, 20 College green

Sterry George, boot maker, 29 Alvin street Thomas Eliza Jane (Miss), ladies' school, 10 College gm

Sterry John, grocer & provision dealer, 52 Low.Barton st Thomas George "Ym. sign writer &c. 48 Knowles road

Sterry \Villiam, undertaker, 90 Victoria street Thomas John, shoe maker, 77 Worcester street

Stevens J. & Co. scale makers, Longsmith street Thomas Mary Ann (Miss), beer retailer, 132 Southgate st

Stevens Jacob, apartments, 20 London road Thomas Maurice, shopkeeper, I Albert street

Stewart Henry, china & umbrella repairer, lIKing st Thomas Thomas Michael, carpenter, 44 Vauxhall rood .

Stock Wm. jobbing gardener, 3 Raglan ter. Southgate st TlJOmpson & ShackeIl Limited, pianoforte dealers (William

Stokes Henry, shopkeeper, 28 Widden street White, maooger), 146 Westgate street: & at Cardiff,

Stout W. & Co. iron merchants, 75 Westgate street Merthyr, Newport, Swansea, Pontypridd & Bristol

Strange Harry, Victoria inn, 18 Oxford street Thompson George, tailor, 9 Oxford street ,

Stretche A.rthur Alfred, wine, spirit & cigar mer. Bell la Thompson James, clerk of the Asylums & clerk to the

Stretton A. C. cycle maker, 103 Westgate street visitors, CQunty Asylum, 1Votton

Stubbs' Limited (Mercantile Offices) (branch) (Richard Thomso'll William, trnvelIing draper, 4 RusselI street

PoweIl Chandler, agent), 7 Queen street Tho,rnbury John, photographer, 3 Brunswick road

Studman's Stores, dealers in groceries, provisions, 'l'hornbury Margaret (Miss), dress maker, 3 Brunswic,k rd

wines, spirits, beers, cigars, cigarettes &; tobaccos, Thurston Benjamin, registrar of births & deaths for Kings-

patent medicines, perfumery, china, glass, ironmongery holm sub-district, Vauxha:l road

&c. &c. 9 Southgate street & 37 Northgate street Tibbitts HaTry Wilson, plumber & gasfitter, 17 St. J{)hn'sla

Styles George, hair dresser, 4 Queen street Tibbitts Joseph WiIIiam, plumber & gasfitter, Somerset

Sully &; Co. drapers &; milliners, 20 Eastgate street & I house, Southgate street

&; 2 Brunswick road Tidmarsh Charles, stationer, see Holmes & Tidmarsh

Sully Ernest Crocker,draper & outfitter,54 &; 56 Bristol rd TiIiion Sarah Maud (Miss), apartments, Lauriston villa,

Summers &; Scott, engineers, boiler makers &; steam en- Henrv road

gine makers, High Orchard Iron works, Bristol road Tilston 'Thomas, cust{)dian of the judges' lodgings, Spa rd

Sumncr Reginald Philip (firm, Haines & Sumner), so- Ting:e George, shopkeeper, Sudbrook, Southgate street

licitor, clerk of indictments for County of Gloucester, Tinker William, senior assistant medical officer, County

clerk to the commissioners of taxes for the divisions Lunatic Asylum, Wotton
of Gloucester city & Dudstone &; Kings Barton & com- Titley John, manager at railway bookstalI, 7 RusseIl'street

missioner for oaths, King street Tombs Mbert Obe, Duke of Gloucester P.H. Quay street

Sumsion Eliza (Miss), dress maker, 52 India road Tombs Job William, corn brol,er, 29 Commercial road

Sutton & Co. (James Reeves, agent), forwarding agents, Tomes Maud & Clam (Misses), confectioners, 126 South-

21 St. John's lane gate street

Sutton Edward, beer retailer &; shopkeeper, 18 Upton st Tomes & Son, woollen warehousemen, 25 Westgate street

Symonds Albert, shopkeeper, 8 Pilot ter. Southgate st Tomkins WiIIiam, butcher, 10 High street

Symonds George, job, cab & funeral carriage master, TDomey George, joiner, Birchmore road

College mews &; 72 London road Toomey Joseph, painter & decorator, 126 Lower BJrton !It

Symonds George, King's A.rms P.H. Hare lane Toomey Thomas, builder, 15 Derby road

Symonds Jane Harriet (Miss), dress maker" 7 Stroud rd 'l'opps Howard, boot maker, 98 Lower Barton street

Symonds Mal'Y Jordan (Miss), stationer & news agent, 48 Toscano Fazzi, confectioner, 46 Barton st. & Eastgate mkt

Lower Barton street Tovey Ida (Miss), dress maker, 41 Brook street

Symonds William Henry, baker, 31 Northgate street Townley Robert, beer retailer, 12 Hopewell street
Tabor }~dwin. shopkeeper, Painswick road Townsend & Co. Limited, oil-cake manufacturers &; c')rn

Talbot & Co. mineral water manufacturers; highest "" seed merchants, Quay street; & at Stroud. See advt

award Great International Health Ex.hibition, London, Townsend Ada (Mrs.), White Lamp P.H. 45 Westgate'sil

1884, Commercial road Townsend Chas. Henry, Spread Eagle vau;ts, Northgate st

Tandy Ernest Daniel, Adega P.H. 98 Nortbgate street Townsend H. B. (Mrs.), apartments, 9 Parliament stree1l

Tanner Alfred, painter &; decorator, 25 Park End road Townsend Tholllils, beer retailer, Mitre street

Tanner George Henry, painter &c. 55 Falkner street Townsend Thomas, pig dealer, 121 Tredworth road

Tanner George Hy. sen. hardware dealer, 36 Alvin st Towyn (The) Co. Limited, marbled slate wDrk~ Bristol rd

Tanner Joseph, tailor, II St. Catherine's street Toy John, Raglan Arms P.H. Regent sweet

Tanner WiIliam, general builder, 15 Park road Trapp Charles, boot maker, 65 Bristol road

Tarling George, blacksmith, Oxford road Treasure Frank, solicitor, St. John's lane

TarIing William, tailor, 19 Worcester street Trehern William, shopkeeper, 48 New street

Tax Office (.Arthur Binns, surveyor), Inland Revenue Trew JQhn FIetcher, architect & civil engineer, County

office, Custom house, Commercial road chambers, Station roa,d

Taylor Charles, shoe maker & parish clerk {)f St. John Trickey Charles, basket maker, 73 Northgate street

the Baptist, 112 Southgate street Trigg Edwin, carpenter, I Bear land

Taylor Edward, butcher, 45 .Alvin street Trouncell Alfred Ernest, butcher, 26 Alvin street

Taylor Edwd. Thos. picture frame maker, 7 L<mdon I'd Tuck Arthur Slade, draper, 28 1Vestgate street

Taylor Edwin, bptcher, 56 Barton street Tucker John Edward, accountant, 35 Wellington street

200. GLOtOESTER. ,

GLOUCESTERSHIRE.

Tugwell Thomas WaIter, hair dresser, 2a, Bell lane Ward Joseph M.P.S. pharmaceutical chemist by ex.

Turk William, wardrobe de-aler &; furniture broker, 98 amination; following the requirements of the Pharmacy

&; 99 Sonthgate street Act, the dispensing is entrusted only to fully qualified

Tur! George, beer retai~er, 32 Southgate street assistants, 39 Eastgate street

Tudey Matilda CIara'(Miss), teacher of pianoforte, 49 New Wareing &; Son, tailors, hatters, hosiers, habit makers &
woollen drapers, 3 Westgate street
Jersey road
Turner Brothers, wheelwrights &; shoeing smiths, 37 Lower Warlow Robert Henry, general ironmonger, cutler & tool
dealer, The Gloucester Tool Warehouse, 44 Westgate
Barton street
street; &; ~ Oast:e iitreet• .:Bristol
Turner &; Holland, corn merchants, Docks
Turner, NoM & Co. Lim. corn merchants, Commercial rd 'Warne Richard, water inspector, 12 Vauxhall road
Turner (Mrs.) &; Parry, tripe dressers &c. 18 Low.BaTton st Warner Mary Ann (Miss), dress ma. Wesley place, Park rd
Turner &; Pritchard, plumbers &; house decorators, 75 &; Warner Waiter. butcher, 81 Northgate street
76 Barton street Warren Emily (Mrs.), apartments, 6 Arthur street

Turner Isaac, pork butcher, 101 F,alkner street Warren Esther Ann (Miss), apartments, 49 Worcester st

Turner John, naturalist, 51 Northgate street Warwick Richard Henrv. watch maker, 31 Regent street

Turner John, tripe dresser, 36 Longsmith street Washbourn Brothers, importers of foreign wines &; spirits,

Turnidge John Hayden, manager to City of Gloucester 4 Bell hme (established 1767)

Tramways Co. Limited, India road Washbourn & Son, solicitors. Barton street

Tuthill Henry, clerk to Gloucester district highway board, Washbourn Robt. Hy. beer retailer, 216 Lower Barton st

to Barton St. Mary united district school board &; to Washbourn Thomas Henry (firm, Washbourn &; Son),

Churchdown school board &; district clerk to county solicitor &; commiss:oner to administer oaths, &; solicitor,

council for main roads; office, Queen street; residence, clerk &; receiver to the Gloucester municipal charity

The Whitelands, Rudford trustees, & to the G:oucester United Endowed Schools,

Twyning William, greengrocer. 26 Lower Barton street & deputy superintendent registrar, Barton street

Tyson .Alice Maud (Miss), dress maker, Conduit street Washbourn William L.R.C.P.Lond. surgeon &; medical

Underwood George, confectioner, 66 Barton street officer &; public vaccinator No. 1 district, Gloucester

Bnderwood Henry John, collector of rates, 7 St. Mark st union, Blackfriars

IUnderwood Mary (Miss), apartments, 20 St. Mark street Watkins William Harris, certified bailiff &; estate agent,

Underwood Samuel, beer retailer &; shopkeeper, II Castle 39 Wellington street

.street, Stroud road Watson Adams William, artist, 1 College green

Upton Samuel, Suffolk Arms, Suffolk street Watson Henry William, photographer, Clarence street

Ursell Susan Eliza (Miss), confectioner, 66 Barton street Watts Albert Lionel, iron & tin plate worker, Kimbrose,

'Uzzell Harriett (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 50 Hare lane Southgate street

Vale &; Kingsford, quantity surveyors, 82a, Barton street Watts Annie (Miss), tailoress, 73 Blenheim road

Vallender Robert Jones (Prov. Cor. Secretary Oddfellows Watts Ellen (Mrs.), shirt &; collar maker, 40 Widden st

(Director) M.U.), 16 Oxford street Watts Ely James, wheelwright, 36 St. Catherine street

Vance William James, tailor &; draper, 23 Clarence street Watts Fred Samuel, commercial travel:er, 89 Park End rd

Veale Charles, wholesale butcher, 79 Worcester street Watts Frederick George, shopkeeper~ 59 Westgate street

Vears &; Baylis. timber &; slate merchants, IJanthony road Watts Mary (Mrs.), apartments, 3 Regent street

Vibert Franeis T. timber merchant, West End saw mills Watts Wm. Edwd. watch ma. & jewe:lerl 76 Southgatest
Vick William &; Co. corn dealers, 82 Northgate street &; Wearwell &; Co. clothiers, 131 Westgate street

millers (water), Barton end Weaver Frederick Edwar;!, surveyor &; S'anitary inspector

Vick Alexander, baker & corn dealer, 45 & 58 Bristol road to rural district council, County chambers, Station road,

Vick James, boot maker, Barbican road & surveyJr to the district highway board, Queen street;

Vicker J. G. & Co: grocers &; provision merchants, The res. 'Willows, Lansdown road

Original City & County Grocery & Provis:on Supply \Veaver Henrv, builder, Elm Tree house, Park road

, Stores, 5 Westgate street Weaver James. 011 stores, 88 Alvin street

Vicker James Godwin, grocer &; wine merchant kc. see Webb Albert, (}attle dealer, ~2 London road

Beaamy & Vicker Webb Alfred WLliam, house agent, 31 Worcester street

Victoria Bakery Co. 42 Victoria street Webb Frederick, shopkeeper, Suffolk street

Viner Edward, Mermaid P.H. Quay street Webb George, smith, Priory road

Viner George, shopkeeper, 44 St. Oatherine street Webb George Edward, hair cutter, 98 High st. Tredworth

Vinson Samuel J. &; Co. iron merchants, Market parade Webb Laura Maria (Miss), preparatory school, 3 Berkeley

Virgo George Alfred, Old Dial inn, 93 Westgate street villas, Bristol road

Volunteer Battalion (2nd) The Gloucestershire Regiment Webb Richard Ayers, pork butcher, 57 Westgate street

(Col. S. E. Atkinson, commanding; Capt. F. M. Hext, Webb Rowland Henry, upholsterer, 49 Regent street

adjutant; A Co. Capt. J. N. Blood, &; B Co. Capt. H. Webb Thomas, toy dealer, 26 Westgate street

Knowles, commandants; Sergt.-Major J. Canavan, drill 'Webb Thomas Henry, plumber, 13 Victoria street

instructor), The BarraCks Webb Waiter, confectioner & tobaooonist, 14 Low.Barton st

Voyce Jane (Miss), dress maker, 56 Brook street Webb William Douglas, pulley maker, Iron works

Waddy Henry, general manager tl) Sharpness New Docks Webber D. G. coach builder, Worcester street

& Gloucester & Birmingham Navigation Co. Docks Webster Thomas, boot maker, 61 Ryecroft street

Waddy Henry Edward D.P.H.Camb., L.R.'C.P.Lond. sur· Weeks Tom, news agent & stationer,Post office,62 Barton st

geon, & senior surgeon to the General Infirmary at Weighill William Lancelot M.R. C.V. S. veterinary surgeon

Gloucester & the Gloucestershire Eye Institution, & shoeing forge, 48 Southgate street

Rhossili, Brunswick road Weighing Machine (Joseph James Gorin), Low.Westgate st

lVaddy Hubert, sec. to the Sharpness New Docks &; Weight Edmund, watch maker &;c. 67 Barton street

G~oucester &; Birmingham Navigation Co. Docks 'Welchman William, toy dealer, 49 Barton street

Wager Esther Ann (Miss), confectioner, 84 High street Wellington &; Co. who. statnrs. &; printers, Southgate st

Wait, James &; Co. corn merchants, Docks Wellington Family Hotel (Henry Richard Braine,

Waites P. &; Son, ironmongers, Northgate street proprietor), opposite the Great Western railway station

W.akefie~d Fredk. Raymond, watch ma. 36a, Northgate st Wellington Joseph, baker, 33 Napier street

Wakeford & Co. grocers, II6 Westgate :;treet Wells Arthur John, chemist &; druggist, 31 Lr. Barton st

Wakeford James Joseph, shopkeeper, 24 Lower Westgate st Wellsted James W. carpenter, joiner &; undertaker;

Wakeman Thomas, confectioner, 62 Westgate street general house repairs; estimates given, 41 St. Mary st

W·alker John, commercial traveller, 57 Worcester street Wessex Hotel. good commercial, coffee &; stock rooms,

Walker Thomas, ticket writer, 14 Southgate street three minutes from G.W.R. & Midland stations. The

Wall William, dyer &; deaner, 63 Victoria street leading temperance hotel in Gloucester. Boots meets

Waller & Son, architects &; surveyors, College green any train on receipt of post card or wire. Moderate

WaIler Frederick Sandham F.R.I.B.A. architect & resi. tariff. Adjoining &; in connection Creamery Cafe. Hot

dent architect to Cathedral, !lee WaIler &; Son dinners daily from 12 till 3. Mrs. Kingscote, proprtrss

Waller Frederick William F.R.I.RA. architect &; surveyor West of England Sack Hiring Co. Limited, Docks

.of dilapidations for the diocese & lecturer at R.A. Weston, Hewlett &; Co. corn merchants, Docks

College, Cirencester, see WaIler & Son Weston John &; Co. corn merchants. I Commercial road

WaIley John, draper, 87 Northgate street Wheatley W. R. music seller, IS7 Westgate street

Waiter W. H. &; Co. stationers &c. 33 Barton street & 12 Wheeler J. C. &; Son, seed growers & merchants, nur·

Eastgate street serymen &c. 99 Northgate street

WaIters Henry, baker &; grocer, 108 Southgate street Wheeler Elizh. (Mrs.), boot &; shoe wareho.42 Eastgate st

Wa:ters Henry Valender. tobacconist, 107 Southgate street Wheeler James, furniture broker, 105 Westgate street

Walwin WaIter, photographic & dispensing chemi,t. 127 Wheeler John, coal dealer, I Norfolk street
Southgata street ' Wheeler John, gl'neral dealer, 101 Ryecroft street

Wheeler Sarah (Mrs.), baker &; grocer, S8 Falkner street

DIRE(;TORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. GLOUCESTER. ~Ol

Wheeler Thomas James,dairyman, 29 Linden rd.Bristol rd Winfield George, greengrocer, London road
Wheeller Benjamin Henry, Bull inn, ~Bull lane
Winfield In. Roynon, grocer & fruiterer, 89 Sonthgate st

Whiley l"rederick, hatter &; hosier, 5a, Lower Barton st Winfield Wm. Roynon Evans, fruiterer, 29 Sonthgate 8t

Whislay Horace, watch maker, 4 Market parade Wing George, manager to the Severn & Canal Carrying

Whitcombe &; Haines, solicitors, chapter clerks to dean Co. Limited, Docks

&; chapter of Gloucester, clerks to Lyson's & to Cox's Wingate Edwin, builder, 21 Clarence street

charity trustees, 19 College green Winney Philip, apartments, I Priory place..

Whitcombe George (firm, Whitcombe & Hames), solici- Winterbottom William, restaurant, 32 Westgate skeet

tor, commissioner to administer oaths & notary public Wintle J ames & Son, brick &; tile manufacturers; office,

& chapter clerk to dean &; chapter of Gloucester, \19 \:.Barlon street; wt»'ks, Llanthony & Walham, near

College green Gloucester, &; Lower Lode, Tewkesbury

White .Alice (Miss), milliner &; dress maker. Albert house, Wintle Frederick William, boot maker, 5 ,Bristol road

Southgate street Wintle Richard, greengrocer, 42 Westgate street

White Arthur, shopkeeper, 19 Millbrook street Wintle Rt. greengro. &; furn. remover, 1 Low. Barton st

White Clara (Miss), dress maker, 32 Clement street Wintle William, blacksmith, 159 Lower Barton street

White Frances (Miss), milliner, 43 Linden rd. Bristol rd Wisby Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 56 Hare lane

White Frederick (late Thomas White & Son), auctioneer, Wood & Son, butchers &; grocers, 64 Victoria street

valuer, estate agent &; accountant, Zetland chambers, Wood Caroline (Mrs.), greengrocer, 5o,Barton street

King street Wood Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer, 100 Westgate st

White Gilbert, inspector of the Gloucestershire &; Ross Wood Frederick, painter &c. see By,ard, Wood &; Co

Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, 50 Wood Frederick, surgeon dentist, /.26 Clarence street

Ryecroft street Wood Frederick Charles, beer retailer, 18 Longsmith st

White Harry, baker, 3 Hare lane Wood John, painter, decora0r &c. 9 Queen street

White Sidney, commercial traveller, Fairfax, Linden rd. Wood John, shopkeeper, P;linswick road

Stroud road Wood Richard Henry F .I.S.E. hydraulic &; sanitary

White Thomas, shoe maker, 8 Hare lane plumber, gas &; hot water fitter, glazier &c.; pumps,

White William, manager to Messrs. Thompson &; Shac- water closets, baths, fixed &; repaired; plain &; orna-

kell Limited, 146 Westgate street mental lead glazing; estimates given, 12 St. Aldate st

White William Henry, furniture broker, King street Wood Robert, commercial traveller, 8 Alexandra road

White William Henry, secondhand book dealer &c. 38 Wood Sarah (Mrs.), Beaufort Arms P.H. 14 St. Aldate st

Westgate street & Eastgate market Wood Thomas, florist, 2 Derby road

Whitehead Harry, florist, 72 Oxford road &; Heathville rd Wood Waiter Bryan A.R.I.B.A. architect, 12 Queen st

Whitfield George T. english &; foreign timber merchant '\Voodcock & Shakespeare, agents for domestic machinery,

&; importer, general builders' merchant &; brick &; tile Westgate street

manufacturer; offices, Bristol road Woodcock Saml. shoeing smith, Dolphin la. Northgate st

Whiting Charles Francis, gasfitter, 5 Clarence street Woodcock William, shoeing smith, 14 Quay street

Whitmore George, tailor, 10 Pitt street Woodcock William, shopkeeper, 87 Tredworth road

Whitson Emanuel, boot & shoe maker, 91 Oxford road Woodward"" Co. Limited. sanitary, gas &; hot water

Whitwill Mark &; Son, ship owners & ship &; steamship engineers, 93 Lower Barton street & cycle depot, 91

brokers, 17 Commercial road Lower Barton street

Wibby Wm. timber mer. &c. .Albion works, Bristol road Woodward Alfred, vice-consul for the ~etherlands, 34

Wigg Frederick, corn broker & merchant, Docks Commercial road

Wigley Henry, shopkeeper, I Carmarthen street Woodward Elizh. (Miss), confectnr. 69 Low. Barton st

Wilcox George, dairy, 57 London road Woodward Frank, baker, 64 Widden street

Wilding Richard, commercial traveller, 5 Heathville rd Woodward James, confectioner, 73 Northgate street

Wildman Frederick, Bell inn, Barton street Woodward James Richard, confectioner, 27 London rd.;

Wilkes John Peters, solicitor, 15 -Clarence street 73 Northgate street & Eastgate market

Wilkins Walter &;, .son, stock &; share brokers, I4 Bell Woodward Joseph, teacher of the violin, I Brook street

lane; & at Cheltenham Woodward Thomas, teacher of singing, I Brook street

Wilkins Alfred Joseph, com. trav. Branksome, Conduit st Wooley Henry & Son, painters, paperhangers &c. Lower

Wilkins George Fredk. tailor, 6 Pilot ter. Southgate st Southgate street

Williams J. B. &;, Co. hay &; coal merchants, Quay Woolley Wm. Henry, stationer, 20 Westgate street

Williams John & Co. coal merchants, 16 Clarence street Worgan George,manager for the Gloucester Qoffee House

&;, Midland wharf Co. 8 Market parade .

Williams W. & Co. builders, Hopewell street Working Girls' Club (Mrs. Meagher, matron), 5 St.

Williams 'Ym. & John, grocers &c. 28 &;, 29 Eastgate st Mary's square •
Williams &; Co. cutlers, II Westgate street
Working Men's Institute, Reading &; Refreshment Rooms
Williams Charles, ]\"ag's Head P.H. Lower Westgate st (Alfred Tyler, sec.), 56 Southgate street
Williams Edwin, 'beer retailer, 57 Lower Barton street 'Yorkman Francis Charles, printer, stationer &; fancy

Williams Elizh. (Mrs.), Marquis of 'Granby P.H.Barton st repository, 82 Barton street

Williams ·Emma (Mrs.), midwife, 42 Clement street 'Yorkman Frederick Joseph, wholesale & retail fruiterer

Williams Fanny (Mrs.), Cooper's Arms P.H. Lower &;, potato merchant, 35 Bristol rd. & 54 Low. Barton st

Westgate street Worsley Edmund Digby, accountant & deputy registrar

Williams Frank, baker &; confectioner 131, &; coffee of births & deaths for St. John the Baptist sub-district,

tavern, The Cross, Southgate street 6 Russell street

Williams James, poulterer, 38 Northgate street Worth Lucy (Mrs.), dress maker, 61 Worcester street

Williams Joseph, coach builder, Black Dog yard Worth Waiter Henry, coal merchant, Midland wharf

Williams Llewellyn, physician &; surgeon & senior medical Worth William Henry, commission agent, 96 Henry road
officer Gloucester Friendly Societies' Medical Associa- Wray Samuel, perfect fitting shirt manufacturer, hatter,

tion, 49 Park road hosier &; glover, ladies' &; gents.' umbrellas, 141 West-

Williams Sarah Maria (Mrs.), restaurant, 51 Bristol rd gate street

Williams WaIter George, relief inquiry, settlement &; Wrigglesworth & Co. grocers &; provision dlrs. 82 High sf;

warrant officer, Union offices, Great Western road Wright Frederick, tobacco &; cigar merchant, g6 South-

Williams William, haulier, Llanthony road gate street; & at Cheltenham & Bath

Willis Brothers, auctioneers, 26 Clarence street Wright John Thomas, tailor, habit & breeches maker, 16

Willis Urbane, grocer, 105 Rye(;roft street Westgate street

Willis William Henry, certified bailiff, 26 Clarence street Wright Wm. Jas. enamelled slate manfs. Low.Westgate st

Wilson Jemima (Mrs.), apartments, 27 Park End road Wyman Phrehe & Son, gas'fitters & 'bellhangers, 49 South-

Wilton Walter, watch maker, 39 Westgate street gate street

Wilts & Dorset Banking Co. Limited (A. Simpson, Wyncoll & -Co. china, glass & pottery merchants, 160

manager); bank open 10 to 3; thurs. 10 to I; sat. 'Westgate street .

10 to 5, The Cross; draw on London &; '\Yestminster Yapp John, grocer, 33 London road

Bank, Lothbury, London E C Yates Elizabeth (Mrs.), apartments, SI Regent street

Windo David Thomas, shopkeeper, Sweetbriar street Yeomans 'Yilliam Daniel, beer retailer, Lower Barton st

Windo Mary Ann (Mrs.), butcher, 69 Westgate street Young Men's Christian Association (Edgar P. Garrett,

Windo William, butcher, 92 Victoria street sec.), Grey Friars house

Wlnfield George "" Son, seed growers &; bulb im- Young Women's 'Christian Association (Miss He1eD.::}f.

porters, corn, cake, manure &; hop merchants, The Riddiford, hon. sec.), Southgate street _.f . ~
Gloucestershire seed warehouse, 154 Westgate street Young Rufus, baker &; grocer, 40 Stroud ro~
Young Thomas, ladder maker, 50 High str~
Winfield Frederick, shopkeeper, 76 Suffolk street

WiIifield Frederick William, greengrocer & fruiterer, 21 Young William, Admiral Benbow P.H. 78 \¥estg4'te st

Westgate street &; 24 Northgate street



202. GQRSLEY. GLO UCESTERSHIRE..._ [ KELLY'S

GORSLEY with CLIFFORD'S MESNE, 2 miles the :year 1882. The living is a vicarage, net yearly va:ue

south-west from Newent station, on the Gloucester and £200, including 3 acres of glebe, with residence, built

Ledbury section of the Great Western railway, and in in 1876, in the ~ift of the rector of Newent, who has

the civil parish of N ewent, was formed into an ecclesias- two turns and, the vicar of Linton one turn, and held

tical district August 13, 1872, from Newent and Lin- since 1891 by the Rev. Solomon Richard Cambie, who

ton, Herefordshire. The parish is in the Forest of Dean resides at Gorsley. Here is an excellent quarry of red

division of the county, Botloe hundred, Newent petty sandstone, well adapted for building purposes. Lord

sessional division, union and county court district, and Somers, who is lord of the manor of Clifford's Mesne,

in the rural deanery of North Forest and archdeaconry and A. R. Onslow esq. are the chief landowners. The

and diocese of Gloucester. Christ church, erected in total population of Gorsley and Clifford's Mesne ecclesias-

1882, at a cost of about £1,5°0, and consecrated by the tical district in 1891 was 888, of which 533 are in G!ou-

Lord Bishop of the diocese in July, 1893. is a cruciform cestershire.

edifice of local stone, with Bath stone dressings, in the , Parish Clerk (St. Peter's), W. Grubb.

Early English style, from designs by Messrs. Rollinson, Post &; M. O. 0., S. B. &; Annuity &; Insurance Office,
architects, of Chesterfield, and consists of chancel, nave,
transepts, organ chamber and a western turret contain- Gorsley.-Mrs. Julia Jones, sub-postmistress. Letters
ing one bell: the stained east window is a memorial to . arrive from Ross at 9.40 a.m.; dispatched at 6.25
)frs. Onslow, late of Stardens, Newent: the carved oak
pulpit was the work and gift of Miss Emma Onslow, of via Newent to Gloucester. Newent, 3 miles distant.
Great Malvern, sister. of Captain Onslow, of Newent; is the nearest telegraph office
·Wall Letter Boxes.-Roadway place, cleared at 6.15,
thera are 300 sittings. sundays excepted; &; Uifford's Mesne, cleared at
Parish Clerk (Christ church), WLliam Read. 6 p.m
The school church, opened August 14, 1872, is a
SCHOOLS, under Kewent School Board.

building of stone in the Gothic style, consisting of small Board, Clifford's Mesne (mixed), built in 1863, for 74

chancel, added in 1877, nave and a belfry on the south Clhildren; average attendance, 51; Arthur Herbert

side eontaining one bell, but it is now used only for Harris, master

school and other parochial purposes. Board, Gorsley (mixed), built in 1877, for 100 children;

St. feter's, Clifford's Mesne, built in 1882, at a cost average attendance, 60; Wm. Henry Martin, master

of £1,100, is an edifice of stone, in a plain style, consist- Goff's Endowed (British) Gorsley (mixed), built in 1819,

ing of chancel and nave and a central belfry containing for 135 children; average attendance, 80; John Cross-

one bell: there are 100 sittings. The register dates from man Shambrook, master •

GORSLEY. Gooch Jas. frmr. &; fruit dlr. Kilcote Colebrook Jas. Alfred. Purley villa
~ames niark€d thus * have letters Goodchap Thomas, farmer, Baldwins Cowles Frederick, Hillside villa

througli Ross, &; are in the ecclesias- Goulding Daniel, farmer, Cues Gregg James, Boulsdon house

tical parish of Gorsley, Gloucester, Hartley John, eowkeeper . MClWilliam William, Glen-cairn

but in the civil parish of Linton, Riggins Edward, farmer, Brassfi€lds ~eares )1iss, The Cottage

Herefordshire *Hitchings Charles, fruit dealer Murray Arthur Silver, Oak house

*Ashton Rev. Edward (Baptist), The *James Eli, farmer Price Octavius Thomas, The Beeches

~Ianse J ames George, farmer COMMERCIAL.

Cambie Rev" Solomon Richard (vicar James Geo. Wm. farmer &; wbeelwrght Apperley George, carrier

of Gorsley-with-Clifford Mesm~) *James Peter, farmer Ballinger George William, builder &;

*James Philip James ""Ym. farmer; Ford Brook farm contractor & brick &; tile makeil"

*Phillips l\Jiisses *Johnson Henry, shopkeeper Blakemore William, haulier

Tattersall ~Irs. Holt ho-nse *Jon<~s John, farmer Brace William, carpenter

Wright Alfred Wm. Green, Quarry ho *Jones Julia (Mrs.), shopkeep€11' Carpenter Charles, birch bxoom maker

COMMERCIAL. Lummas Thos. shopkeeper, Kilcote House Demas, shopkeeper

*Baldwin James, shopkeeper *~Iatthews Charles, beer retaile'l' Lewis John &; Robert, coa-ch builders,

Brook George, farmell" *Phillips John Hy. farmer,Woodhouse wheelwrights, caxpenters, joiners &i

Bunn Edwin, carpenter *Price Sarah (~Irs.), shopkeeper .shoeing &, general smiths

*Cuse Henry, farmer, The Pound P.ritchard George, farme'l', Baldwin9 Le-wis Thomas, farmer, Mesne farm

*Clifford Henry, florist *Roberts John &; Son, ma.chinists Parlour Thomail, farmer, Manor house

Clutterbuck Charles, mason Sharrat Thomas, farmer, The Lodge Poole John Saunders, farmer, Boulsdon

*Cracknell Alfd. In. Jacob, builder &; *Smith Richard, farmer crofb

contractor &; horticultural builder; Ster:ry Samue~, cattle dealeor Rollins Alfred :\1organ, farmer, The

portabl'e buildings of every descriptn Tranter ChristDpher, farmer Green

Davis Wm. Hy. bailiff to A. W. Wright Webb Susan (Mrs.), farmer Wad~ey William, farmer

esq n :M:ES~_E. Whittaker Joseph, farmer &; carrier
Drinkwater .Alfr€d, farmerr, Gorsley et Young Frank, gamekeeper tD Lieut.-
CLIFF'ORD'::s

*EatDn James, farmer Somers Lord Col. H. E. Hudson, Woodgate

GUITING POWER, or Lower Guiting, is a pari;;h Walker and M'l'. Richa.rd .Acshwin, who jointly hold the
manorial rightS' of GuitiILgI Power, Peter Matthews esq. of
and village, on the road from Winchcomb to Stow-on.the- Stroud, James Walker esq. and Mrs. Dent, of Sudeley
Wold, 3 miles north from Notgrove station on the Chel- tastle, are the principal landowners. The soil is stone
tenham and Banbury section of the Great Western rail- brash; subsoil stony. The chief crops are wheat, roots
and barley. The area. is 2,II6 acres; -rateable value,
way, 5 south-east from, Winchcomb and II east from £1,794; the population in 1891 was 428 in the civil and
524 in the ecclesiastical parish.
Cheltenham, in the Northern division of the county, lower
CAS1'LETT, three-quarters of a mile north, is a hamlet
division of Kiftsgate hundred, Winchcomb petty sessional
of this parish; FARMCOT, 4! miles north-west, is ecclesi-
division, union and county court distrct, rural deanery
of Stow, archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Glou- astically annexed to this parish, but was 'by Local Govern-
ment Board Order 14,695, Ma.rcb 25, 1883, civilly added
cesLer. The church of St. Michael is an ancient building to Pinnoek and Hyde, when also a detaohed part of the
of ~tone, in the Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave parish known as Westfield was amalgamated with Baw-
of two bays, aisles, south porch and an embattled western ling.

tower containing 5 fine bells, which, after lying disused Parish Clerk, Jolm Waddingham esq. M.A., J.P.;
for a century, were :replaced in the belfry in 1869: the deputy, James East.

north and south doorways, the former of which ill bricked Post &; M. O. 0., S. B. &; .Annuity &; Insurance Office.-
up, are magnificent specimens of the Norman style: there Richard Cook, sub-postmaster. LetterS' received from
are 300 sittings. The register dates from the year 1560. Cheltenham arrive at 8.15 a.m.; dispatched at 4.20
The living is a vicarage, with: the chapelry of Farmcot p.m. No delivery or dispatch on sunday. Winchcomb
~nnexed, net yearly value £124, with residence, in the is the nearest telegraph office, 6 miles distant
gift of Mrs. Walker and Richard Ashwin esq. and held
County Police Station, William Henry Howes, constable
since 1895 by the Rev. John Edward Green M.A.,Mus.Doc. in c-harge

of St. John's College, Cambridge. Here is a Baptist School (mixed), erected in 1872 by, & the property of,
chapel, built in 1835. There are a few small charrities,
"TJohn Waddingham esq. J.P.; it will hold 120 children;
amounting in all to £34 yearly, of which. £20 is! applied
average attendance, 80; alter Dyer, master j Mrs.
in apprenticing, £12 for clothing distributed to the poor .Amelia Dyer, mistress

at Christmas, and £2 12S. for bread for six poor people,
distributed 011ce a fortnight. Gniting Grange, a hand-
some building in the Italian style, ·is the seat of John

'Waddingham esq. M.A., J.P. and is pleasantly situated in
the midst of very beautiful scenery. John'Vaddingham
esq. who ill lord of the manor of Guiting Grange, and Mrs.

DIRECTORY. ] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. HAMP~ETT. 203

Ashwin Richard Baker Thomas, farmet, Castlett Smith Joshua, boot &; shoe maker

Green Rev. John Edward M.A.Mus. Bartlett George, farmer Smith Keziah P'Iiss), beer retailer

Doe. (vicar), Farmcote wood Cook Charles, pork butcher Smith Phrebe Kear (Miss), shopkpr

Waddingham John M.A., J.P. Guit- Cook Richard, ·shopkeeper, Post office Staite Jane (Mrs.). baker
m• g grange
East James, parish clerk Stanley Charles, carpenter

Walker Mrs Hamlet't Samuel, farmer Swallow John, beer retailer, Fox hill

Harris William, baker Tandy George, carpenter

COMMERCIAL. Phillips J-ohn, blacksmith &; butcher Walker James, farmer

Andrews J oseph, boot &; shoe maker Saanders Frederick, tailor Walker Rabert E.Farmers' Arms P.R

Andrews Joseph, farmer, Greenfield Smith George, assistant overseer

GUITING (or GUYTING) TEMPLE, or Upper )·early in coals. Temple Guiting House is the residence
Guiting, is a parish and village, 6 miles north-west from of the Rev. Frank Lawren-ce Hopkins M.A. The president
and fellows of C<Jrpus Christi College, Oxford, are lords of
Netgrove station on the Cheltenham and Banbury branch the manor and impropriators of the tithes, tUB value oC
of the Great Western railway, and 6 east from Winch, which is £1,400 yearly. The principal landowners- are
the trustees of Lord Sudeley P.O.• F.R.S. (wd:J.o own the
comb, in the !'Iorthern division of the county, lower divi-
sion of the hundTed of Kiftsgate, petty seossionaI division, hamlet of Ford), Messrs. Holloway Brothers, of Stroud,

union and county court district of Winchcomb, rural and Corpus Christi College, OxJord. The soil is loam, with
deanery of Stow, archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese stcny subsoil. The chief crop9 are wheat, roots and
of Gloucester. The church of St. Mary is a building of 1.Jarley. The area is 5,792 acres j rateable value, £2,97°;
stone, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, and the population in 1891 was 443.
nave, 110'rth aisle, north porch and a ma,ssive embattled
western tower, with pinnacles, containing a. clock and 5 FORD, 11 miles north, KINETON, I south, TRAFAL-

bells: there are three small stained windows in the chan- GAR, 11 north-east, FORD HILL, 3 north, and B.ARTON,
cel and one in the nave; and marble tablets to the Rev.
the Hon. George Talbot D.D. vicar, d. Nov. 1782, by 2 south, are hamlets in this- parish.
whom the church was repaired about 1770, and to the Deputy Parish Clerk and Sexton, William Mace.
Beale-Browne family in 1774: the church has been re-
stored since .1873 at a ,cost of £1,081, and affords, 300 Letters from Winchcomb R.S.O. arrive 9.45 a.m.; Wall
sittings. The Il'egister dates from the year 1647. The
living is a vicarage, net yearly value £99, including 28 Letter Box cleared at 4.30 p.m. Wall Letter Box, Ford,
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Chri8ti Church, cleared at 3.45 p.m. Winchcomb is the nearest money
Oxford, and held .since 1885 by the Rev. Albert Grant order office, and Stanway, 3! miles -distant, the nearesl
Lane, of St. Bees, who is also chaplain of Outsdean. There telegraph office
are 28 acres of land. the rent of wmoh i~ distributed
School (mixed), with master's residence, for 100 children;
average attendance, 70; Frank Bpb-son, master; Mrs.
Martha RO'bson, mistresS'

, GUITING TEMPLE. Lane J ane (Mrs.), shopkeeper BARTON.

Hopkins !&av. Frank Lawrence M.A. Lee Thomas, farmer, Manor farm Butler John, farmer
Lovesey Oharles, shopkeeper Meadows John, farmer
Temple Guiting house . Perry William, farmer Swallow \Villiam, farmer
Wood Thomas, farmer
;Lane Rev. Albert Grant, Vicarage
FORD.
COMMERCIAL. KI:8ETO~.
Buttle Wil:.iam. wheelwright
:Andrews Raymond,frmr. Kineton hall Butler Mrs Rarris James, farmer
Mathews William, farmer
Andrews William (Mrs.), .shopkeeper Arkell J'ohn, farmer Phillips John, blacksmith
Staite E.izaoeth (Mrs.), farmer
Baker Thomas, farm bailiff to Messrs. Chandler George, saddler Waring William, farmer
Wiggett Jesse, Plough inn
Holloway Brothers, Trafalgar East Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper Wiggett Lavinia (Mrs.),shopkeeper

Bishop Thomas, blacksmith Hopkins Henry, Halfway inn

East George, farmer, Woodhouse frm Joynes George, carpenter

East Thos. miller (water), Wood mill, Meadows Fred, baker

Finch William -& John, farmers, Ben- Norton Thomas, shopkeeper

borough farm Smith William Carey, farmer

Lane Chas. farmer, WeI:s Head farm I Turner John, carpenter

HAILES, or Hay:es, is a parish, 6~ miles south-east 10,000 marks (£1,666 13s. 4d.), by Richard Plantagenet,

from Beckford station on the Evesham and .Ashchurch second son of King John and brother to King Henry Ill.

branch of the Midland railway, and 2 north-east from Earl of Olrnwall illnd King of the Romans, pursuant to a

Winchcomb, in the Northern division of the county, lower vow he made when in extreme danger at sea: he placed

division of the hundred of Kiftsgate, Winchcomb petty in it Cistereian monks from Beaulieu in Hants, and dedi-

sessional division, union and county c::mrt district. Tural cated it t-o St. Mary and All Saints: it was consecrated

deanery of Campden, archdeaconry of Cirencester and with great pomp Xovember 9, 1250, in the presence of the

diocese of Gloucester. The chapel (name unknown) is a King, Queen, a great number of the nobility and 300

building of stone chiefly in the Decorated style, but re· kIJights, by ,\Yalter Cantilupe, bishop of 1-Vorcester, thirteen

taining portions of the original fabric, erected in the reign other bishops assisting. At its dissolution there were In

of ,Stephen (II35-54), and consisting of chancel, nave, monks, and the revenues were valued at £357; part of

south porch and a turret on the western gable containing the c:oister and other buildings are still extant. The

I small bell: it was rebuilt after the Dissolution, and ha·s Economic Life .Assurance Society hold the manorial rights

go sittings. The register, included in that of Didbrook, and are the sole landowners. The soil is stiff clay and

dates from the year 1556. The living is a ohapelry, an- gravelly loam; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops

nexed, with the rectory of Pinnock-cum-Hyde, to the are barley, beans and wheat. The area is 1,520 acres;
vicarage of Didbrook, united joint net yearly valu~ £173, rateable value, £1,840; the population in 1891 was 63.

including 37 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift Letters received through Winchcomb R.S.O. arrive at
of the Earl of Wemyss and March, and held since 1871 7.30 a.m. ; depart at 6 p.m. Winchcomb is the neares~
by the Rev. William Darke Stanton M.A. of Exeter

College, Oxford, who is also vicar of and resides at Tod, money order & telegraph office, 2 miles distant

Idington. Hailes Abbey was built in 1247, at a cost of The children of this place attend the school at Didbrook
Edwards The Misses . Stock l\Iary (Mrs.), farmer,Ireley frml Stock Wm. farmer, Milhampost frro

James John, farmer, Hailes farm

HAMPNETT is a parish and virage, near the old west end, and the' central tower taken down, till the
roof of the lower part was on a level with that of the
Roman Fossway, s! miles south-west from Bourton-on- chancel, new windows were also inserted on the north side
of the chancel, and on the south side both of chancel
the-Water station on the West Midland branch of the and nave: three of the old Norman windows still remain:
Great \Vestem railway, I west-north-west from North.
leach, II south-east from Cheltenham, and 10 north-by. there are several stained windows, and the interior is
east from Cirencester, in the Eastern ·division of the ornamented with mural decorations: the church wa&
county, Bradley hundred, Nortbleach petty sessional divi- restored in 1868 and has 100 sittings. The register, in,
sion, union and county court district, rural deanery of cluding Stowell. annexed to Hampnett in 1660, dates from
Northleach, archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of the year 1590. The living is a rectory, with that 01
Gloucester. The church of St. George, built c. II6o,
Stowell annexed, joint net yearly value £3II, including 47
is an ancient building of stone in the Norman and Per- acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Earl of
pendicular sty~es, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch Eldon. and held since 1800; by the Rev. John Reynolds
and an embattled western tower containing 3 bells: the
Lane M.A. of Trinity College, Oxford. Lord Henry
tower was originally <lentral, but in the 15th cent. the Francia Hope Pe~ham-Clinton-HQpe,.of CaatlePlaney, (X).

nave ftS -widened on the south -side, a tower built at tha

204 HAMPNETT. GLO UCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Monaghan, Ireland, is lord of the manor and chief land- Letters through Northleach R.S.O. arrive at 7.30 a.m.

owner. The soil is stone brash; sUQsoil, rock. The Wall Letter Box c:eared at 4.55 p.m. The nearesi

eaief crops are wheat, barlev and turnips. The area is money order & telegraph office is at Northleach, 1 mile

1,431 acres; rateable value, £;53; the popu:ation in 1891 distant
Parish School (mixed), built in' 1867, for 45 children;
was 162.

average attendance, 20; there is llo nouse for the mis-

Parish Clerk, Edwin Venville. I Itress; Mrs. Jane Clark, mistress
Bagnal1 Mrs Robinson Thomas Hollick M.A Rowles Tom, farm bailiff to T. H.

Lane Rev. John Reynolds M.A.Rectory Robinson Thomas Hollick M.A.farmer Robinson esq

RANHAM is an ecclesiastical 'Parish, formed in 1842 Enfield, Middlesex, and oeenpied -by R. J. de Carleret.eaq.
from the parish of Bitton, Gloucestershire; it extends is an :ancient and picturesque mansion dating in part
two miles along the north bank of the river Avon and
is 2 miles north-west from Bitton -station on the Mid- from an early period. The inhabitants are chiefly em-
land railway and 4 south-east from Bristol, in the .southern ployed in the manufacture of boots .and shoes. Here is
division of the county, Keynsham union, Lawford's Gate
petty sessional division, Bristol county court district, rural a colliery. Frederick Edward Whittuck esg. of Keyn-
deanery of Bitton and archdeaconry and 'diocese of Bristol. sham, who is lord of the manor, P. W. P. Carlyon-Britton
Hanham Abbots parish church, formerly a chapel of ease
to the church of St. Mary at Bitton, stands within the esg. F.S.A. who is lord of the manor of West Hanham,

grounds of Hanham Court, and its western end is struc- otherwise Hanham Abbots, George Hare Leonard esg. and
turally attached to the mansion: it is a building of stone the trustees of the late Richa,rd Haynes esq. are the prin-
of the early part of the 13th cent. and consists of chancel, cipal landowners. The area is chapelry, 1,212; parish,
nave of four bays, sguth aisle, north porch and an em-
battled western tower, with pinnacles, containing I bell, 1,247; rateable value of the chapelry, £3,852; the
inscribed with the name of St. George, to whom the population in 1-891 was 1,960 in the former, and 1,925
church was probably dedicated: the font is in the latter.
Norman: there are 150 sittings. The original re-
gisters of baptisms and marriages only, and dating Sextoness, Parish church, Mrs. Emma Harris. Christ
from r586, are in the custody of the vicar of Bitton.
The modern register dates from the year 1815. The living Church, Miss Charlotte Rogers.
is a chapelry, gross yearly value £294, with residence,
in the gift of the vicar of Bitton, and held since 1,894 by Post, M. O. & T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,
Parcel Post &; Annuity & Insurance Office.-.Samuel
the Rev. Charles William Bate M.A. of lIertford College,
Burgess, sub-postmaster. Letters through Bristol at
Oxford. Christ ·Church, a chapel of ease, is a rectangular
building of stone, erected in 1842, and ccmsists of chancel, 6.33 a.m. &; 3.30 p.m.; sundays 6.33 a.m.; dispatched
nave, north and south porches and a western turret con.
at 12.20 a.m. & 4.40 & 7.25 p.m.; ,sundays, at 4.30 p.m
taining 2 be:ls: it was reseated in 1878, at the sole ex- Post Office, at Longwells Green. James Gray, sub-post-
peme of W. H. Atchley esq. and in 1891 was considerably
enlarged, at a cost of £1,600, and will now ,seat .~50 per- master. Letters arrive from Bristol. Box cleared 9
sons. The register dates from the year 1842. Here are
lJaptist, Congregational and United Methodist chapels. a.m. 1& 3.30 &; 6 p.m.; sundays, 10 a.m. Postal orders
There is a Free Methodist chapel at Hanham Green. The are issued here, but not paid. Wall Letter Box cleared
charities are of £3 yearly value. Hanham Hall, the seat
of Mrs. Burrough, is an ancient building of stone in the 12.30 &; 7.30 p.m. week days only. Hanha.m, 2 miles dis.
Elizabethan style, commanding a fine view of the surround.
ing' country. Hanham Court, the property of Philip tant, is the nearest monev order &; telegraph office
William Poole Carlyon-Britton esq. F.S.A. of Bitton House,
County Police Station, WaIter Pick, sergeant, &; 4

constables
SCHOOLS.

Christ Church ~ational (mixed &; infants), buUt in 1841,
for 384 children; average attendance, 204 boys & girls
&; 125 infants; Alfred Evans, master; Miss Jane Nowell,

mistress

Wesleyan (mixed & infants), built in 1859, for 450 chil-
dren; average attendance, 280 boys & girls &; 162 in·

fants, &; endowed with an income of £159, arising from
money in the funds; Edward Widlake, master; Mrs.

Sarah Widlake, mistress

(Marked thus * letters received from Beese Robert, hair dresser Harris Edith (Miss), dress maker

BristO'l via Willsbridge.) Bence Wm. Jas. wheelwright, Stonehl Haskins A.aron, carpenter

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Bevan (Mrs.)&; Co.boot manufacturers Haskins George, farmer, Bickley farm,
Billett .Albert, grocer Hanham green
.Adams Mrs Billing Jas. markt. gardener, Stonehl
Bate Rev. Charles Wm.M.A.Vicarage *Haskins Wm. frmr. Longwells Grn

Beese Mrs. Conham Bond Sarah (Mrs.), baker & grocer Hatherea J"oseph, shopkeeper

lJevan Mrs Bready George, coal dealer Head Charles J oseph, shopkeeper

Borrough Mrs. Hanham hall Bright Henry, shopkeeper Hicfus George, boot & shoe maker
elements Rev. Fredk. (United Meth) Bristol United Collieries Lim. (The) Hoare &; Douglas, boot manufacturers
<de Carteret R. .T. Hanham court Britton Arthur, boot &; shoe maker &; Holder Annie (Mrs.) &; Florrie (Miss),
Drew Rev.Wm.Thos. (Congregational)
grindery maker milliners

Evans Alfred BrutonChas.quarry mstr.Hanham mls Hulbert Edith (Miss), dress maker

*Haines Alfred. Long'wells Green Bu11 George, butcher James Ellen (Miss), laundry

lIale Francis, Fernside Bull Jabez, market gardener Jefferies Joseph Wm. pork butcher
Haskins Abraham A. Linden lea Bull Sam!. Parsons, grocer & oubfittr Jones John, mason
J efferies David, Haresfield house Caines Frederick, quarry master KeedwelI Jabez, wheelwright &; smith
Jones Mrs Carey Brothers, grocers Kendall William, haulier & shopkeepr
Cook George, boot manufacturer Kirby William, coal merchant
Lapham William Copp Henry, market gardener Lacey George, grocer
Linthorn Frederick, Tenby house Cottle J'ohn, painter Langdon William Nichoias, Crown &;
Linthorn John Peacock, Laura house Couch Thomas, farmer
J.inthorn William G. Sunnyside Creech John, horse dealer Horse Shoe P.H
~ri('hael Rev. Peter H. (Baptist) Gurtis William, refreshment room!! Leonard Ann (Mrs.), beer retailer,
Monks Herbert, The Grange Dumble Edwin, jun. saddler
Monks Mrs. The Grange *Edwards William, Crown inn, Long- Hanham green
Monks William DouIt, The Grange Linthorn John Peacock & Son, whole-
'*Nurse Robert Wills, The Laurels, wells Green
Ellis WaIter, farmer, Ha:l farm sa:e boot &; shoe manufacturers
Longwells green Francombe Betsey (Mrs.), baker &;
Lockwood Robert, market gardener
Rainstrick Nelson shopkeeper Mills Edward, baker
'Tyler Miss, Hanham Green *Fry John,nurseryman, Longwel:s Grn *Mitchell Arthur Robert, farmer,
Willis John Bradford Galbraith William, quarry owner
Wiltshire Reuben Godfrey Bros. booI &; shoe manufactrs Longwells Green
Moss George, grocer
Moss Lambert, cattle dealer
Nicholas Joseph, hair dresser

COMMERCIAL. Godfrey John, farmer, Martin's farm Nurse Robert Francil;. maltster &;

.Arhms Alfred, Queen's Head P.R *Gough George, beer retailer, Long- 'brewer, Hanham green

.Aadn'\V,> Samuel, shoe maker wells Green Osborne Charles, dairy

Andrews William, baker *Gray James, shopkeeper, post office, Olds J onathan, farmer, Mould house,

.Anstey Tom, shopkeeper Longwells Green Hanham green

.Attwood Abrallam, Chequers inn Griffiths George, smith Painter Arthur, carpenter •

]Jailey Fanny (Mrs.), shopkeeper Guest Alice Elizabeth (Mrs.), shop- Pamter Samuel, carpntr. & undertakr

Bailey WaIter (Mrs.), beer retailer keeper & beer retailer Parsol1S Job, coal agent

Barrell Henry, shopkeeper Gully A1bert Edward, lime burner Peacock Aaron, market gardener

'Bateman Joseph, Blue Bowl P.R Gunning Selina (Miss), mil:iner Peacock George, shoe maker

Bateman Joseph, shopkeeper Harris .A.lbert, grocer Phipps A:bert A.aron, Jolly Sailor P.H

DIRECTORY. ] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. HARESCOMBE. 205

Phipps Joseph Waiter, grocer Stokes Sidney George, farmer, Li. Weeks Lomsa Millie (Miss),

Pillinger Edward J oseph, shopkeeper diards farm teacher

Pillinger Joseph, market gardener Taylor Robert .& James, boot manufrs *Weston Arthur, blacksmith,

Pillinger William, florist *Taylor Joseph, farmer,Longwells Grn wells Green

Read John, baker &; grocer Taylor Joseph Charles, butcher Wid~ake Edward, school master

Roberts Waiter Henry, boot manufr Trayhurn Emily (Miss), dress maker Williams Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Rogers William, dairyman Tripp William Henry, farmer Willis John, shopkeeper

Shellard Septimus, hair dresser Veal Green, farmer Willis John Bradford, draper

Short Edwin, assistant overseer, Cres- Veal John, dairy Willis Lucy (Miss), dress maker

wicke house Weeks Albert, mason Wills Mary (Mrs.), cowkeeper

.Short Gaius,carpenter,Longwells Grn Weeks Alfred William, butcher Wiltshire Frederick, insurance agent

.Slade William, shopkeeper &; beer Weeks George, shopkeeper Woodington Mary (Miss), shopkeeRer

retailer, LongweHs Green West Edwin, ooal dealer Young Herbert, farmer, Court farm

lIARDWICKE is a parish and village, near the Glou- manor, and Lt.-Col John Frederick Curtis-Harways, of
cester and Berkeley canal, and on the high road from Glou- Quedgeley, are the chief landowners. The soil is clay;
subsoil, blue lias. The chief crops are wheat, beans,
cester to Brist<ll, at the point of divergence of the roads roots and pasturage. The area is 2,093 acres; rateable
to Bristol and Bath, 2 miles north-west from Haresfield value, £4,I3~; the population in 1891 was 591.

station on the Bristol and Birmingham section of the Mid- By Local Government Board Order 15,263, March 24,
1884, the tithing of Farleigh was transferred from Hard-
land railway and d south from Gloucester, in the Northern
wicke t-o Elmore.
division of the county, upper division of Whitstone hun-
dred, Wheatenhurst union, Gloucester county cuurt dis. Parish Clerk, Charles Smith.

trict, petty sessional division of Whitminster, and in the Post.&; Telegraph Office.----'M:rs. Jime Davis, sub-post.
rural deanery, archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. mistress. Letters from Gloucester by messenger, arriv6
The church of St. Nieholas· is a building of stone in the about 9·45 a.m. & are dispatched at 5.20 p.m. Postal
Early English and Late Perpendieular styles, consisting
wanorders are issued here, ,but not paid. Bristol road,
of chancel, nave of four bays, aisles, south porch and an
embattled western tower, containing a clock and 6 bells: Gloucester, is the nearest money order ()ffice.
in the church are several ancient monuments of the Trye Letter Box, near the church, cleared at '5.15 p.m.
family, formerly lords of the manor for 300 years: the Letter Box, at Police station, cleared at 5.35 p.m

stained east window is .a memorial to Mr. and Mrs. Fen- County Police Station, Michael Corbett, constable in

wick; the wes,t window of the south aisle, erected in Nov. charge

1,887, is a memorial to Thomas Barwick Lloyd Baker: SOHOOLS.
the church was thorougWy restored and enlarged in 18]6,
National (mixed), built in 1852, enlarged in 1893, for
when the north aisle was added, <the galleries removed, 120 children; average attendance, 72 ; Miss May E.
an organ chamber and organ erected at a cost of £1,800, Hawes, mistress
includin~ the organ, which eost £220: there are 350 sit~
tings. The registers date from the year 1569. The living Reformatory School for juvenile offenders, certified
October 4, 185'4, &; maintained at the expense of the
is a vicarage annexed to that of Standish, joint net yearly Government; it was instituted by the late T. B. L.
Baker esq. &; was the first county reformatory in the
value £310, with 86 a.cres of glebe, in the gift of the kingdom established for the purpose of reducing
juvenile crime; it is now under the management of
Bishop of Gloucester, and held ,since 1889 by the Rev. G. E. L. Baker esq. & is certified for 80 boys; Thomas
Alexander Nash M.A. of Brasenose College, Oxford, 'Who re- Gee, superintendent
sides at Standish. Hardwicke Court, the seat of Granville
Edwin Lloyd Baker esq. J.P. is a modern mansion sur-
rounded by extensive ~rounds and a beautiful park,studded
with timber. G. E. Lloyd Baker esq. who is lord of the

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Clutterbuck John, horke dealer &; far- Meadows Fras. frmr. Madamsend frm

mer, Summerhouse farm Peyt-on John, carpenter &; wheelwright,.

Baker Granville Edwin Lloyd J.P. Cozens Robert, farmer, Church farm Dl'istol fUnd

Hardwicke court Davis Jane (Mrs.), shpkpr. Post office Pitt James, farmer, Field Omrt farm

Baker Henry Orde Lloyd J.P.The Cot Dowdswell Daniel, farmer, Haywicks Powell D'lniel, farmer, Clark's farm

Baker Mrs. Barwick, The Cottage Drinkwater Wm. coal mer. &; hay dlr Powell William, builder

Browning James Waiter, Church ho Gee Tlws_ supt. at the Reformatory Reeves William, farmer, Southfield

Lane Sidney Winter, The Lawn Hawkins William, frmt. Seller's farm Shere John, farmer, Green farm

Smith Thomas, Bristol road Hooper Frederick Raymond, farmer, Sparrow Selina &; Eliza (Misses), far-

COMMERCIAL. Velthouse farm mers, Ellis'.s farm

Hooper William, assistant overseer Vaughan Job, beer retailer

Alder Albert, beer retailer for Quedgeley Webb Thomas, farmer, Road farm

Brookes Austin, 'butcher .Tenner Edwd. Pilot P.R. Sellers brdg Wehb Thomas Isaac, farmer, Hard-

Ooole Frederick, blacksmith Lp's Charles, shoe maker wicke farm

HARESCOMBE is Q parish, on the high road from of children and the relief of the poor. Harescombe Grange

Straud to Gloucester, 2! miles south-east from Hares- is the residence of Crompton Hutton esq. RA., J.P.; and

field station on the Birmingham and Bristol section of the Wynstone Place of Maj{)r-General William de Wilton

}lidland railway, 3! north-west from Stroud and 5 south Roche Thackwell C.R, J.P. There is no lord of the
from Gloucester, in the Northern division of the county, manor. "Bacchus,"" Ladderstyle" and" Abbot's Hill,'''

middle division of the hundred of Dudstone and King's formerly belonging to the abbey of St. Peter's, Gloucester,.
Bal'ton, 'Wheatenhurst union, Gloucester county court and afterwards forming a porti<ln of the endowment of the-

district, petty sessional division of Whitminster, and in see of Gloucester, were sold at the beginning of this cen-

the rural deanery, archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. tury, and are now in private hands. In ancient times II
This parish and Pitchcombe were formerly "in the city castle existed here, near the church, and remains of the-
and county of Gloucester." The church of St. John the moat ate still existing. The soil is loamy; subsoil, clay.

Baptist is an ancient building of stone in the Early The land is almost wholly pasture. The area is 478
English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch acres; tateable value, £2,541; the populati{)n in I89·1
and a bell turret at the east end of the nave, containing was, civil 309, ecclesiastical 129.

2- bells, one of which was recast in 1884: the ancient font By Local Government Board Order 16,495, March 25,
consists of a massive circular bowl, standing on clustered 1885, Springs and another detached part of Brookthorpe
pillars: there are two piscinre and an oak pulpit of the parish was added to Harescombe, Withyrows Farm and

Jacobean period: the church was restored in 1871 at a another detached part of Harescombe transferred to

cost of £470, and has 100 sittings. The register dates Brookthorpe, and Stockend and another detached part of
from the year 1741, but transcripts of earlier registers Haresfield parish was also added.

dating from I569 are preserved in the Diocesan Registry Parish Clerk, Samuel Fluck.

at Gloucester. The living is a rectory, with that of Letters received through Stroud, delivered between 9 &;
Pitchcombe annexed., joint gross yearly value £174, in- 10 a.m. The nearest money order office is at Pains-
wick & telegraph {)ffices at Haresfield statn. & Painswiclt
eluding 15 acres of glebe, with residence. in the gift of
. and held since 1879 by the Rev. John Melland Hall M.A. Wall Box cleared daily at 4.30 p.m

of Worcester College, Oxford. The charities, left

respectively by Messrs. Cox, Huntley and Bedwell, The Harescombe &; Brookthorpe National schools are at

amount to £10 yearly, and are applied to the apprenticing Brookthorpe

(~Iarked thus * letters should be ad-/ Hall Rev. John Melland M.A. (rec-I Hutton Crompton B.A., J.P. Hares-
dressed Brookthorpe, Gloucester.) tor), Rectory combe grange .

206 HARE~COMBE. GLOUCESTERSHIRE.-

*Thackwell Maj,-Gen.William dll Wil- Fluck Samuel, shoe maker *Morris James, farmer, Road farm -

ton Roche C.B., J.P. Wynstone pI Gardner Martin, farmer Ratcliffe Edwin, farmer, Brook farm

Hawkins Frank Henry, farmer Robins Reuben William, miller(water)

COMMERCIAL. Hawkins Thomas, beer retailer Smith Alfred Boole, farmer

*Beddoes John, farmer, Upper Wells Jenner Henry, farmer, Church farm Smith George, farmer, Style farm

Carter Edmund, assistant overseer Martin Henry, farmer, Threshold frm *Smith Richard, farmer, Bacchus fnn

Carter Eliza (Mrs.), farmer *Martin Mary (Mrs.), farmer, Withey- *Taylor John, Four Mile House P.H

Fluck Geo. baker &; grcr. Stock end rows farm

HARESFIELD is a parish, with a station on the Mid- the Malvern Hills, and those of the Forest of Dean.
land railway, and is 6 miles south from Gloucester, 6 Royston is the residence of Henry Minett esq.; near the
north-west from Stroud and 108 from London, in the house is an ancient moat. Haresfield Court, an ancient
Northern division of the county, Whitstone hundred, building of stone, is the property and residence of Robert
Wheatenhurst union, Glouceswr county court district, Ingham Tidswell esq. M.A., J.P. who is lord of the manor
petty sessional division of lVhitminster, and in the rural and chief landowner. The soil is clay and oolite; subsoil,
deanery, archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The stone beds. The chief crops are wheatj beans and pas-
church of St. Peter, repaired in 1840, is an ancient build- turage. The area is 1,980 acres of land and 175 of water;
iug of stone in the Norman style, consisting of two rateable value. £8,948; the population in 1891 was,
chancels, one beyond the other, the further one belonging civil 458, ecclesiastical, 382.

to the vicar, the other to the lay impropriator, nave, COLTHROP, a hamlet formerly in Standish, by Local
north and south porches, and a western tower with spire Government Board Order 15,260, 24 March, 1884, Was
.containing a clock and 6 bells: there are about 200 sit- included in this parish, but for ecclesiastical purposes is
tings. The register of baptisms dates from the year still in Standish. By Order 16,495, March 25, 1885,
1558 ; marriages, 1565; burials, 1559· The living is a Dunder Camp was transferred to Brookthorpe, and Stock-
vicarage, net yearly value £150, arising from 144 acres of end to Harecombe.

glebe, in lieu of tithe, with residence, in the gift of Robert Parish Clerk, John Jones.
Ingham Tidswell esq. :M.A., J.P. and held since 1896 by
Rev. Arthur James Maclean M.A. of St. John's College, Post Office.-Oharles Gardner, sub-postmaster. Letters
,Oxford; there are in addition 278 acres impropriate, received from Stonehouse at 8.15 a.m.; dispatched at
allotted in 1815, in lieu of tithe. The charities of £15 5.25 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
yearly value are derived from a rent-charge on land, of The nearest money order office is at Stonehouse; the
which £4 is for education and £n for the poor. On the telegraph office is at Haresfield station
adjacent hill, an outlying part of the Cotswold range, is a
camp, first constructed by the British, and afterwards Parochial School (mixed), built in 1873, for 80 children;
occupied by the Romans f- a prominent point on this hill, average attendance, 57; Miss Emma Cleverly, mistress,
anciently a beacon, affords a view of the vale of the Severn, with assistant

Railway Station, Charles Stuffins, station master

DuttJ William, Starsmead Ohandler George Cooper, farmer & Hill Charles, farmer, Ring Hill farm

-Chandler Charles Henry, The Vailes agent for R. 1. Tidswell esq. J.P. Jefferies John Robert, farmer, Oak-

Dowdeswell Mrs . .Albion villa Chesnut farm . ley farm

Macl'ean Rev. Arthur Jas. M.A.Vicarge Coleman Emma (~rs.), grocer & beer Jenner Arthur, farmer, College farm.

Millett Henry, Royston. retailer Jeremy Richard, farm bailiff to R. I.

Tidswell Robert Ingham M.A., J.P. Gazard George, farmer, Hayes farm Tidswell esq. Lower Green farm

Haresfield court Hawkins William, farmer, Park end Keen Charles Wm. farmer, :Mount frm

Higgs Mary Ann (Miss), grocer, Up- Neems Henry, farmer, Malt house

COMMERCIAL. per green Rickards Charles Reuben, butcher

'Chandler Elizllo 1& 8arah (Misses), Humphreys Edward Poole, Deacon & Warner Robert Edward, farmer

farmers, Round house Railway howl

HARNHILL is a parish and village, between two 1882, joint net yearly value ,£220, including 210 acres of

roads, the one leading to Fairford, the other to Cricklade, glebe, with residence, in the gift of J. C. Bengough esq.

3! miles east-south-east from Cirencester stations on the and held since 1887 by the Rev. Richard Mainwaring
M~dland ~nd South West~r~ !unction and Great Western I Williams M.A. of St. Pewr's College, Cam~ridge. John
ses-:railways, ill the Eastern dIVISIon of the county, hundred of i Charles Bengough esq. D.L., J.P. of the RIdge, Wotton-
Crowthorne and Minety, Cirencester union, petty under-Edge, is lord of the manor and principal land-
sional division and county court district, and in the rural i owner. The soil is clay and stone brash; subsoil, clay

deanery and archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of and rock. The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and
Gloucester. The church of St. Michael is an edifice of I turnips. The a'l'ea is 708 acres; rateable value, £945;
stone in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, I the population in 1891 was 56.

nave, south porch and a shingled western turret contain- I Parish aerk, Matthew Millin.

ing 2 bells: over the south entrance is a rude carving of Wall Letter Box cleared. at 5.50 p.m. Letters through

St. Michael combating the Dragon: there are 100 sittings.1 Cirencester arrive at 7.45 a.m. Poulton is the nearest

The register dates from the year 1740. The living is a money order & telegraph office, about 2 miles distant

rectory, with the vicarage of Driffield anll-exed, July 7th, Th~ childre~ of this parish attend Driffield school

Cole Edward, Mill house AUen Charles George, farmer,Manor ho Radway Edwd.W.steward W. Flux esq

Larke Wil~iam E Cole Henry Edwin, ,miller (water & Tombs Saml. Kendall, farmr.:M'anor ho

Williams Rev. William Richard Main- steam), Harnhill mills

waring M.A. Rectory

HARTPURY (Hardeper, Hardepery), anciently Mere- dence, in the gift of the Bishop of Gloucester, and hela
ment, is a. parish, bound~d on the west by the Leadon,
which here receives the Ell rivulet, about 2 miles north since 1856 by the Rev. William Geo'l'ge Sinclair Addison
from Tibberton station on the Gloucester and Ledbury M.A. of Hertford College, Oxford. The Catholic ohapel,
branch of the Great Western railway, 5 north-west from dedicated to St. Mary, was erected at the expense of the
Gloucester, 6 east from Newent and IX south-east from
Ledbury, in the Northern division of the county, hundred Canning family in 1830; and there is also a Wesleyan
of Dudstone and King's Barton, petty sessional division chapel, built in 1887. The charities amount to about
of Gloucester, Newent union and county court district,
and -in -the rural deanery, archdeaconry and diocese of £55 yearly value, derived from land, and are distributed
in kind and money. The Royal troops unoor Colonel
Glouceste.r: the high road from GlOUCester to Hereford Mynne suffered great loss in a skirmish fought here
during the Civil War. Hartpury House, the residence of
nnd Worcester intersects the parish. The church of St.
Mary is a building of stone, of the Norman, Decorated William James Gordon-Canning esq. J.P. is pleasantly
and Perpendicular periods, consisting of chancel and nave,
west porch and an embllttled· western tower containing 5 seated, and approached by a caI'Tiage road nearly a
bells: the south door is Norman: in the window on the
north side .are some Temains of stained ~lass: in the quarter of a mile in length; the estates appurtenant to
ehimcel are memorial windows to the Rev. Charles this mansion are of considerable extent. Robert Francis
Crawley, vicar from 1838, and to Mr.- Joseph Hooper, late Gordon-Canning esq. of Hill House, who is lord of the
of Gloucester: the church was thoroughly restored in manor of one portion of the parish, and Mrs. Herbert,
lady of the other, are the chief landowners. The parish
1882, at a cost of about £700, when the pews were re- contains 3,500 acres of loamy clay land, of which about
placed by open seats and the gallery removed, under the 1,185 are in pasture, 395 applied to meadow, and the
direction of Mr. Wailer, the diocesan architect: there are residue is arable, with a small portion of woodland, the
whole being productive of excellent crops, especially the
170 sittings. The register dates from the year 1571. meadows that lie on the banks of the 'Leadon, subject to
'The living is a vicarage, yearly value £200, with resi- frequent inundations during certain periods of the year,
and which are very fertlle: the Leadon Valley Commission

has been instituw<J, for the purpose of making improve-

DmECTORY.] GLOGOESTERSHIRE. DOWN HATHERLEY.. 207

ments in respect to the floods; the subsoil is maTl and Wall Letter Box, near MU1"rell's End, cleared at 7.15 p.m.
clay. The apple and pear trees produce much fruit of week days
very excellent quality, from which cider an~ perry are
made. The area is 3,500 acres; rateable value, £4,735; Police Station, William Read, officer in charge
the population in 1891 was 781. National School (mixed), a handsome slione building, built

BUTTERSEND and BL.A.CKWEL]).S GREEN END, in 1869 &; enlarged in 1893, &; 1Io class room added in 1895.
for 140 children; average attendance, 108; Thomas
I! miles north-west, and CORSE END, I! north, are Alfred Gibbins, master

phces here. CARRIERS TO GLOUCESTER (passing through &; re-
turning same days).
Parish Clerk, Henry Harris.
Awford, from Tirley, man. &; sat
Post &; T. O. &; Express Delivery Office.-Miss Kate Boughton, from Corse, wed. &; sat
Valender, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive from Glou- Cox, from Hartpury, man. &; sat
cester at 7.40 a.m.; dispatched thereto at 5.45 p.m.; Davis, from .Ashleworth, wed. &; sat
closes 5.40 p.m.; no post on sunday. Postal orders are Shaw, from Bromsberrow, wed. fri. &; sat
issued here, but not paid. Gloucester is the nearest Turner, from Hasfield, mono wed. &; sat
money order office Willis. Bailey &; Parker, from Redmarley, man. wed. &; sai

Addison Rev. William George Sinclair Cox Thos. frmr. Blackwells, Green end Houldey William, farmer & h(}rse dealr

:M. A. Vicarage Cracknell Susan (Miss), district nurse, Hughes Thomas, carpenter

Baylis Miss, Little Buttercup Post office Lane Henry, farmer, Green farm

Gordon-Canning Roberl Fra.'l. Hill ha Dance George, hay trnsser Lane Thomas, baker &; grocer

Gordon-Canning William James J.P. Dance William, hay trusser Long William, gamekeeper to 'W. J.

Hartpury house; &; Boodle's club, Dent Arthur, farmer, Woolridge farm Gordon-Canning esq

St. J ames', London Ellis John Pearce, frmr. Tweenhills Marmon Harry, horse dealer

Stephens Miss, Post office Evans Chas. carpenter &; wheelwright Marmon Joseph, farmer, poultry dealr.

lrade Rev. Reginald D. (curate) Evans Wm. beer retailr. &; shopkeeper &; assistant overseer, Eloper's farm

COMMERCIAL. Ferris J ames, hay trnsser Marmon "\Yilliam, poultry dealer

Blake William, hay truS'Ser Fowler William, frmr. Corse End farm Parker In. frmr. Blackwells Green end

Burford George, horse dealer Hanby Charles, farmer, Buttersend Phillips James &; Co. millers (water)

Burford Henry, butcher Hearle Peter Oliver, frmr. Hartpury ct Poole George, blacksmith.

Burford Michael, castrator Hearl6' Robert, farmer, Drews Sivell Charleil, Canning .Arms P.H

Burford Thomas, horse dealer Higham George, mason, Deane cot Sutton William &; David, farmers

Butt William, farmer, Murrells end Higham Henry, horse dealer Vallender Jane (Mrs.), frmr.Laughtons

Clutterbuck Harry William, farmer Higham William Robert, horse dealer Wiikes Charles, boot &; shoe maker

Coleman James, farmer, Coopey farm Rooper Thomas, farme·r, Grove farm Williams Evan, frmI'. Prestberrie grng

RASFIELD is a parish and village, on the west bank ing apparatus was fixed, at a oast of about £120: there

of the navigable river Severn and between the road from are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1559.

Gloucester to Worcester, and on one of the roads from The living is a rectory, gross yearly value from 175 acres

Gloucester to Tewkesbury, and is 8 miles north-east from of glebe, £370, with residence, in the gift of the trustees

Newent station on the Gloucester, Ledbury and Worces- OV the late Mrs. Sevier, and held since 188r by the Rev.

ter branch of the Great Western railway, 8 north from Charles Martyn Reed }'LA. of Care College, Cambridge,

Gloucester and 6 s>outh-west fuoom Tewkesbury, in the and F.R.G.S. Hasfield Court, a mansion of Bath stone

Northern division of the county, lower division of West- and the seat of William Meath Baker esq. M.A., J.P.

minster hundred, Gloucester petty sessional division, is pleasantly situated on an eminence. W. M. Baker esq.

Tewkesbury union and county court district, rural deanery who is lord of the manor, the trustees of the late Mrs.

of Winchcomb, archdeaconry and dioOCese of Gloucester. Sevier and the rector are the chief landowners. The

The church of St. Peter is an edifice of stone in the soil is various, partly stiff clay; subsoil, rock. The

Norman and Later styles, consisting of chancel, nave crops are wheat, barley and pasturage. The area is

of four bays, north aisle, south porch and an embattled 1,420 acres .of land and 26 of water; rateable value,

western tower, with pinnacles, containing 4 bells: the £2,929; the population in 1891 was 225.

north aisle, erected about 1850, was chiefly completed Parish Clerk, Alfred Radley.

by the Rev. James Sevier, rector from 1833, and the Post &; T. O. & Express Delivery Office.-Alfred Radley,

widow and relatives of Thomas Fulljames esq. formerly sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from Gloucester at 8

of Hasfield Court; the east window of the north aisle a.m.; dispatched at 5.30 p.m. Postal orders are issued
is a memorial to Thomas Fulljames and fumily: in the here, but not paid. The nearest money order office is
chancel is a stained window presented by the Rev. J. at C,orse Lawn

Sevier, and two memorial windows to the wife and only Wall Letter Box, at Hasfield Court, cleared at 5. 20 p.m
daughter of the late Rev. Henry .Adams hSeerregisio~n Atwood Parochial School (mixed), built in 1851, for 60 children;
M.A.. vicar of .Ashleworth r839-80; t another

memorial window to "\Villiam Miller esq. of Cheltenham: average attendance, 34; &; supported in part by an

the monuments include one of great antiquity to the endowment of £10 yearly, derived from land; there

Pauncefoot family: the font is a plain work of Norman is a house f.ar the mistress; Miss Sarah Ann Babb, mist

date, and there are some well-carved bench ends: in Carrier.-Turner, t(} Gloucester, every mono wed. &; sat.

1895 the church was thmoughly restored and a new heat- returning same days .

Baker William :Meath M.A., J.P. Has- Collins Alfred, builder &; farmer Greening Thomas, farm bailiff to W.

field court Creese Frank, frmr. Wickeridge street M. Baker esq. 01d farm

Beed Rev. Chas. Martyn M.A.•F.R.G.S. Davis Thomas, carpenter Richardson William, shopkeeper

(re,ctor) Fowle-s Harriet (Mrs.), farmer, Wick- Surman William, farmer, Great house

Barnfield Frederick, farmer, Woodside eridge street Trehern Frederick George, beer retailr

IJartlett Joseph, blacksmith Merchant Chas. farmer, l'he Beeches Voice William, farmer, 1Yickeridge st

DOWN HATHERLEY, or Hatherley Down, anciently of four bays, north aisle, north porch, and an embattled
<:alled Athelai, is a parish and village, being a short western tower containing one bell: there is a mural tab:et
distance east from the road leading from Gloucester to to William Gibbs esq. d. 1785, and two hatchments with

Tewkesbury, 2 miles north from Churehdown station on the arms of Sir Matthew ·Wood bart. Alderman and

the Gloucester and Cheltenham section of the Great twice Lord Mayor of Lonrlon, d. 25th September, 1843,
Western railway, 5 west from Cheltenham and 4 north- and Maria (Page), his wife, d. 2nd July, 1848: there are
north-east from Gloucester, in the Northern division of 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1563.

the county, hundred of Dudstone and King's Barton, The living is a rectory, net yearly value £150, chiefly
Gloucester union, petty sessional division. and oounty dreived from about 160 acres of glebe (allotted in lieu
court district, rural deanery of Winchcomb and in the of tithe), with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chan-
archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The river cellar, and held since 1856 by the Rev. Henry William
Chelt, here called Hatherley Brook, and receiving at Sand- Maddy M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, hon. canon
hurst another rivulet which rises in Badgworth, passes of Gloucester, rural dean of Winchcomb, and surrogate.
through the parish and falls into the Severn at Sand- The charities am~mnt to £20 a year, arising from 2 cot-
hurst. This place gave the title of baron to Sir William tages and 4 acres of land left in I7II by Henry Brett

anPage Wood kt. Lord Chancellor (1868-72), who was so esq. and a share of Cox's charity. left in 1654, which

created in 1868, but this peerage became extinct on his is distributed yearly. Hatherley Court, a fine old moated

death, loth July, 1881. The church of St. Mary and residence, beautifully situated and finely timbered, is the

Corpus Christi, restored in 1859, is an edifice of stone seat of Mrs. .Anthony Gilbert Jones. The trustees of

in the Perpendicular· l!!tyle, consisting of chancel, nave the late Anthony Gilbert JoneSl are lords of the manor.

208 DOWN HATBERLEY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Mr. William Priday, Mrs. Harriet Helps and the rector remainder to Churchdown parish; the population in 1891
are the chief landowners. The soil is a mixture of clay was 172.
and sand; subsoil, clay and sand. The larger portion Letters delivered through Gloucester at 8 a.m. Wall Let-

of the land consists of pasture and orchard; the remainder ter Box cleared at 5.35 p.m. Gloucester, 4 miles

is arable, and is applied to the growth of wheat and distant, is the nearest money order & telegraph office
beans. The area is 8r2 acres; rateable value, £r,5r6. Sir Matthew Wood's Endowed School (mixed), built in

Under an Act of Parliament, over 100 acres have been r846, for 46 children; average attendance, 4r; there is.
taken from this parish and the greater portion added a residence for the master attached; Thomas Durrett,
to the parish of Wotton St. Mary (without), and the master; Miss Ann Durrett, mistress

Maddy Rev. Canon Henry William Hood George, farmer, Lodge farm Roberts Leonard, Hatherley farm •
Smith Emma (Mrs.), market gardener
M.A.(rural dean & surrogate),Rectry Lodge Edwin, haulier Soule William, farmer, The Park farm

Jones Mrs. Anthony Gilbert, HatherleJ Oaklev Joshua, fa.nner, The Poplars

court Padgett Richard, market gardener

UP HATHERLEY is an ancient parochial chapelry, has been preserved and is in use: in 1894 the chancel

and was formed into an ecclesiastical parish in January, was decorated with mural paintings by J. Edie Reid
1887; it is 2 miles south-west £rom Cheltenham, in the esq.: there are r33 sittings. The register dates from
Northern division of the county, upper division of Dud- the year r886. The living is a vicarage, yearly value
stone hundred, Oheltenham union, county court district £30, in the giflt of Mrs. Gretton, and held since r886 by

and petty sessional division, rural deanery of Cheltenham the Rev. William Henry Cotes :M.A. of Worcester College,
and archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The ancient Oxford. The principal landowners are Capt. Tickell, Mrs.
church was destroyed in '1640, and the inhabitants for Gretton, of Coney Gree, and the trustees of the late
many years attended Shurdington: the present church David Bowly esq. The soil is clayey; subsoil, clay. The

of SS. Philip and James, erected in 1885-6, at a cost of chief crops are cereals and roots. The area is 810 acres;
£2,000, entirely defrayed by the Rev. W. H. Gretton rateable value, £1,236; the population in r891 was 99.

M.A. and Mrs. Gretton, is a building of stone, in the Letters through Cheltenham arrive at 7 a.m. Wall Letter
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, north Box cleared at 6.20 p.m. No collection or delivery
• porch and a bell turret on the south-west containing on sundays. Cheltenham, 2 miles distant, is the nearest
one bell: the east windows, consisting of simple lancet money order &:, telegraph office
lights, together with the west window and two on the The children of this place attend the day school at St.
south side, are stained, and one of these commemorates Mark's Cheltenham, but a sunday schoolroom for the
the 60c years' reign of H.M. the Queen: the ancient font parish was erected in 1896

PRIVA.TE RESIDENTS. COMMERCIAL. Day Thomas, market gardener

(For other names see Cheltenham.) Apperly Edward, farmer, .Alma villa, Green Thomas, market gardener

Apperly Edward,.Alma viJ.Hatherley I'd Hatherley road Hooper George, market gardener

Cotes Rev. William Henry M.A. The Baldwin .Alfred, market gardener Kearsey Albt. market gardnr.Bank side

Vicarage Bishop John Jas. frrnr.Greatfield farm Mayo William James, farmer

Cresswell Miss, Witley lodge Brown John, dairyman, Green farm Randall John Benjamin, farmer, South

Gretton Mrs. Coney Gree Brownett James, rate collector Park farm

Johnson Miss K. A. Greenwode Leghe Brunsdon Thomas, thrashing machine Swordy Robert, manager to Miss K.

Tounsend Frederick, Sunnymeade proprietor, Snnny field A. Johnson, Hawksclough

Walsh Lieut. George Sarsfield R.N. Cox Edward G.market garden, Wood- ShillJn.market gardnr.Oakland cottage

South park bine cottage Stafford Ja.cob, Hatherley inn

Young Frederick, Hatherley manor Cox George, pig dealeT Veninder Frank, farmer, Brick house

HATHEROP is a village and parish, 3 mileS north Hatherop Castle, the seat of Sir Thomas Sebastian Baz-
from Fairford terminal station, on the East Gloucester- ley bart. M.A., D.L., J.P. supposed to have been erected

shire branch of the Great Western railway, and 9 east- in the reign of Henry VII. is a remarkably fine edifice,
by-north from Cirencester, in the Eastern division of surrounded by gardens and a picturesque park of 200

the county, hundred of Brightwel1s Barrow, Fairford acres; it was formerly the residence of the Blomer

petty sessional division, union and county court district family, and afterwards of Sir John Webb bart. whose

of Cirencester, rural deanery of Fairford, archdeaconry third daughter, Anna Maria, married James (Radclyffe),

of Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The church third Earl of Derwentwater, beheaded on Tower Hill,
of St. Nicholas, rebuilt in 1855, is an edifice of stone, 24th February, 17r6: Barbara, daughter of Sir John

in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, Webb, 5th bart. married Anthony, fifth Earl of Shaftes-
aisles, north porch and a central tower containing 6 bury, by which marriage the estate ultimately passed to

bells, the gift of Sir John Webb bart. in 1715, and 8 the first Baron de Mauley, who restored the castle at

clock with chimes, presented by Sir Thomas S. Baziey considerable cost about 1850. Sir T. S. Bazley bart. is

bart. in 1868: there are 20 stained windows, and at- lord of the manor and principal landowner. The soil is'
tached to the church is a beautiful mortuary chapel, stone brash; subsoil, oolite. The chief crops are wheat,

with a marble monument, by Monti, to !Barbara, Lady barley and oats. The area is 2,124 acres; rateable
de Mauley, who died 5th of June, r844, erected by her value, £1,494; the population in 1891 as 307.

husband, William F. Spencer Ponsonby, first Lord de Parish Clerk, Edmnnd Gardner.
Mauley, who also restored the church about 1850, and ..
died 16th May, 1855: the carved font was the gift, in
1856, of William Longbourne esq. in memory of the same Letters arrIve from Fanford S.O. at 7 a.m. Pillar
Baron de Mauley: the communion plate includes a Letter Box cleared at 5.5°. p.m. The nearest money
order &:, te~egraI!h office IS at CoIn St. .Aldw•yn's.
chalice, dated 1599: there are sittings for 230 persons. about rl mIles dIstant

The register dates from the year 1670' The living is a Parochial School (mixed), built, with residence for mis-

rectory, net yearly value £300, including 300 acres of tress, in 1856, by the Hon. Ashley George Ponsonby,

glebe, with residence, in the gift of Sir T. S. BazIey as a memorial to the 1st Lord de Mauley, for 90
bart. and held since 1869 by the Rev. '"Robert Prichard children; average attendance, 65; Miss FIorenc~

Davies M.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. Clark, mistress

Bazley Sir Thomas Sebastian bart. Gardner Edmund, parish clerk Mustow George, boot maker

~LA., D.L., J.P. Hatherop castle Geach Edwin, farmer, Barrow Elm frm Perry Samuel, farmer, Glebe farm

Bazley Gardner Se,bastian J.P. Hath- Geach Nicholas, assistant overseer, Pufiett William, mason

erop castle Barrow Elm Sims Reuhen, foreman carpenter

Davies Rev. Robert Pritchard M.A. Hawkins Henry, grocer Wheeler George, gardeneT to Rev. R.

Rectory MJ-al1ett William, steward to Sir T. S. P. Davie'S

COMMERCIAL. Bazley bart White Charles, gamekeeper to Sir T.

Maulden Arthur William, gardener, S. BazIey bart

Cook Richard, farmer, Dean farm Hatherop castle

HAWKESBURY, a parish, 4 miles east-south-east Mary is an ancient building of stone, in the Early English
from Wickwar station on the Midland railway, 7 north- and Perpendicular styles, with some traces of earlier
east from Chipping Sodbury and r5 east-north-east from work, and consists of chancel, with south aisle, clere-
Bath, in the Southern division of the county, Grumbalds storied nave of four bays, south aisle, south chantry
Ash hundred, Chipping Sodbury union and county court with a piscina, north and south porches, with a parvise
district, petty sessional division of 'Sodbury, rural over each and a lofty embattled western tower contain-
deanery of Hawkesbury, archdeaconry of Bristol and ing one bell: a room in the tower has a fireplace and
diocese of Gloucester. The old road from Bath to Ciren- chimney, and the same is the case with each parvise:
cester runs through the parish. The church of St. in the north porch is a portion of a. stoup, and the chan-

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. HAWKESBURY. 299

eel retains a double piscina, and the canopy of an TRESHAM, 5 miles north-east, and SADDLEWOOD.

eastern sepulchre; the doorways of the rood 10ft re- 4 north-east, form a chapelry annexed to Bawkesbury.

main in the wall of the south aisle: the richly-sculptured The chapel at Tresham, rebuilt and consecrated in May.

stone pulpit has been repaired, and is a Perpendicular 1855, is a small edifice of stone in the Norman style.

work: there are mural tablets in the chancel to Sir consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a western

Robert B. Jenkinson bart. and 2nd Earl of Liverpool turret containing one bell: it is seated with open benches

K.G. Prime Minister of England from 1812 to 1827, who affording 50 sittings: in the churchyard stand the base

died 4th December, 1828; and to Charles, first Earl of and shaft of an ancient cross.

Liverpool, who died 17th December, 1808; and one in
the west wall to the Rev. Potter Cole, 73 years vicar of UPTON is I mile east, and LITTLE BADMINTON
this parish, who died in 1802, aged 97: the church was 21 miles south-east.

thorougWy restored in 1884, under the direction of Mr. mLLESLEY and KILLCOTT, portions of this
Wood Bethell, architect, of London, at a cost of /;2,3°0, parish, for civil purposes, form a separate ecclesiastical
raised by subscription, when the galleries were removed, parish, and will be found under a separate heading.
the nave roofed with oak, the chancel refitted with oak,
and the Norman doorway repaired: there are 400 sit- Parish Clerk, Oharles Danie1s, Hawkesbury, Upton.

tings. The register, including Tresham, dates from the Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,

year 1603. The living is a vicarage, with the chapelry Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office, Hawkesbury
of Tresham annexed, net yearly value £216, including 3
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Sir George Upton.-Mrs. Harriet S. Caates, sub-postmistress.
Bankes Jenkinson bart. and held since 1893 by the Rev.
Edward Richard Mosley M.A. of St. John's College, Letters arrive through Chippenham at 7.45 a.m. &I
Cambridge. Here are Congregational, Baptist and 5.30 p.m.; dispatched at 8.30 a.m. &; 6.20 p.m
Primitive Methodist chapels, and a meeting-house for
Plymouth :Brethren. A cemetery of half an acre wll.s Wall Letter Boxes, Tresham, cleared at 4.30 p.m. week
formed in 188o, at a cost of £300, and is under the
control of a Ilurial Iloard of 9 members. A fair is held days, & on sundays at 11 a.m.; Little Badminton,
on the last Friday in August for cattle and sheep.
cleared at 7.30 p.m. week days; not on sunday;
A Reading Room and Working Men's Club was founded Hawkesbury Upton, West End, cleared at 6.15 p.m.
week days; &; Hawkesbury, cleared at 6 p.m. week
days only

Police Station, John Goulding, sergeant, &; 2 constables

in 1884, and has suitable premises; the library contains PUBLIC OFFICERS.

upwards of 300 volumes; the vicar is president. The

charities amount to about [30 yearly, derived from Medical Officer for Hawkesbury District of Chipping

£800, left by Sarah Hewett; £100 by Isaac Tyler in Sodbury Union, William Isidore Cox, Western villa.
1852, land left in 1704 by Richard Thynn, 3011. yearly Upton
bequeathed by Daniel Bazsire in 1733, and £100 left by Assistant Overseer &; Rate Oollector, John Il. Cox.

Daniel Walker in 1734: of the whole sum £10 is applied Hawkesbury Upton

to educational purposes, and the rest distributed to the SOHOOLS.

poor. On the brow of the hill, commanding a fine view

of the country, is a tower, surmounted by a gilt crOSli1, National (mixed), Upton, built, with master's residence,

erected in 1846 W General Lord Robert Edward Henry in 1846, for 160 children; average attendance, 40 boys.

Somerset G.C.B., K.T.S. who died in 1842. Sir George 50 girls &; 45 infants; William R. Ellis, master; Mrs.

Bankes J enkinson bart. of Eastwood park, Falfield, who Eills, mistress

is lord of the manor, the Duke of Beaufort K.G. and National, Tresham, built, with master's residence, for

Major-General Robert Hale, of Alderley, are chief land- 100 children; average attendance, 24; Miss .A1ice Rose,

owners. The soil is barley brash on the inferior oolite; mistresii

subsoil, hill sides, sand; valley, blue Has. The chief CARRIERS TO: •
crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area of the

parish is 9,770 acres; rateable value, £10,597. The Bristol, John Thompson, wed
population af the parish in 1891 was: civil, 1,795; Ohippenham, John Thompson, mon
Bristol, George Bleaken &; Howell, tues. &; fri
ecclesiastical, 1,25°.

HA1WKESBURY. UPTON. Mills William, baker

Aust Arthur Charles, Cropredy house Richings Elizabeth (Mrs.), Fox inn

Mosley Rev. Edwd. Rd. M.A. Vicarage Cox William, Isidore, Western villa Ricks John, shopkeeper &; 'baker

Robinson Jame-s. Court farm COMMERCIAL. Search William, shopkpr.&; blacksmth

COMMERCIAL. Bennett Ste'phen, farmer, Dunkirk frm Stinchcomb ,farmer, Petty France

Blamire William, beer retailer Thompson Edmund David, carpenter

:Bleaken George, carrier Callaway Mary Elizabeth QMliss) , pri- Thompson Eliza (Mrs.), shopke'eper &;

:Bleaken J ames, farmer &; haulier vate school baker

Bleaken William, jun. builder Chappell George, farm bailiff to Geo. Thompson John, carrier

Cemetery (John B. Cox, clerk) H. Jones esq Toghill Charles, farmer, Warren farm

Chappell Geo. farmr. Buckesbury frm Olack Abraham, woodreeve to Duke of Toghill Oharles Edward, farmer

Chappell Henry, pig dealer Beaufort Watts Alexander, jun. farmer

Cook Edwin, dairy farmer (postal Clack Robert, farmer, Dunkirk Watts Perey, beer retailer

address, Horton, Chipping'Sodbury) Coates Harrie-t S. (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Watts L~i, machinist

Davis John, farmer, Ozleaze farm Post office Wilkins Charles Henry, saddler

Isaac Charles, farmer, Inglestone' farm Collins Rosina (Mrs.), farmer,Back st Wood Stephen Roger, butcher

Limbrick John Pullen, dairy farmer, Cox William Isidore M.R.O.S.Eng.Sl\lr- LITTLE BADMJh."ITON.

Lower Chalkley farm (postal ad- geon It. m~cal offi~er .for Hawkes- L()ng Thomas

dra-;s, Horton, Chipping Sodbury) bury distTlct of Chippmg Sodbury Jones George Hewitt farmer

Minett Chas. frmr. 0& butchr.lStiTt· frm union, Western villa TRESmM
CoxllJohton B. assistant overseer &; rate Letters received thro~gh Wotton-
Minett Joseph, draper I&; grocer under-Ed e
Nichols, Matthews &; Co. auctioneers, co ec r

valuers &; estate agents (postal ad- Davis Robert Cuthbert, farmer Evans . ~arpengte.r &:. ..
dress, Rorton, Ohipping Sodbury) Edwards Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper FranCls, Jomer

Nichols John, farmer, Upper Chalkley Eels Frederick, butcher Exell Thomas Gillman, farmer, Holy-
~~~lol ~fa7rm
farm (postal address, RoTton, Chip- HawkesburyInstitute &Working Men's H D .cl, Burden
ping Sodbury) presi-
Club (Rev. E. R. Mosley M.A. am farmer,
dent; William R. Eills, s~) M ~all aJ~ b
Pearce Charles, farmer ·1 fto.
Robinson Arthur, farmeT', Pool farm Rensley Geo. Milton, grocer &; draper ars 0 n, eer retal er 0lI armer

Shearman Jesse, beer retailer Hapkins Jesse farmer Shewell Thomas, carpenter

Stinchcomb Daniel, farmer, Court frm Kendall John, insurance agent Wor1()Ck Robert Thomas, farmer

Thompson Alfred, shoe maker Lewis Charles Henry, farmer SADDLEWOOD.

Whittem William, thatcher Lilly Th()mas, beer retailffi" Letters received through Wotton-

Winbow William Ne'ale,farmer &; wood- Mealing Sidney, carpenter under-Edge.

reeve to the Duke of Beaufort Millard Frederick, Beaufort inn TIes 'William, farmer

HAWLING is a parish and village, 2~ miles north. hundred of Kiftsgate, Winchcomb petty sessional divi-
sion, union and county court district, rural deanery of
west from Notgrove station on the Cheltenham and Ban. Srow, archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Glou-
bury branch of the Great Western railway, ID east from cester. The church of St. Edward is a plain building of
Cheltenham, and 5 south-east from Winchcomb, in the stone, in the Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave.

Northern division of the county, lower division of the

• • GLOU. 14



210 HAWLING. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

south porch and an embattled western tower with pin- value, £883; the population in 1891 was 152 civil and
nacles containing 3 bells: the church has been restored 132 ecclesiastical.
since 1873 at a cost of £810: there are 100 sittings.
The register dates from the year 1677' The living is WESTFIELD, a. detached part of Guiting Power, was,
a rectory, gross yearly value £71, including 12 acres by Local Government Board Order 14,695. March 25.
of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees of 1883, amalgamated with this parish for civil purposes.
Lord H. F. H. Pelham-Clinton-Hope, and held since
1:859 by the Rev. James Empson Alcock M.A. of Lincoln Parish Clerk, Ely Kilby.
College, Oxford, who is also vicar of Charlton Abbots.
Here is a Wesleyan chapel built in 1837. The trustees Letters received from Andoversford R.S.O. Wall Letter
of Lord Henry Francis Hope Pelham-Clinton-Hope are Box cleared at 4.50 p.m. every day except sunday.
lords of the manor and sole landowners. The soil is Andoversford, about 4 miles distant, is the nearest
stone brash; subsoil, stone. The chief crops are wheat, money order &; telegraph office
roots and barley. The area is 1,867 acres; rateable
National School (mixed). built in 1860. for 50 children;
average attendance, 32; there is a house for the mis-
tress; Mrs. Margaret Armstrong, mistress

Alcock Rev.•Tas. Empson M.A.Rectory Gegg John, carpenter Walker Hannah (Mrs.), farmer, Middle

Comley Thomas, farmer, Westfield ho Hall William, shopkeeper farm

Corson Thomas, farmer, Manor farm \\rood Basil, farmr. Hawling Lodge frm

HAZLETON is a parish and village, on the Cotswold Y.ANWlORTH, anciently 11 Enworlh." is a hamlet and
Hills, half a mile east of the Cheltenham and Oxford chapelry, 4 miles south, bounded on the south by the

road, 2l miles south from Notgrove station on the Ban- river Coin. The church of St. Michael is a. small build.

bury and Cheltenham branch of the Great Western rail- ing of stone in the Norman and Perpendicular styles.
way, 3 north-west from Northleach, 10 east-by-south consisting of chancel, nave. north transept, south porch
and small embattled western tower containing 2 bells;
from Cheltenham, and 1:2 north from Cirencester, in the the south entrance is a fine and perfect specimen of 8
~astern division of the county, Bradley hundred, North- Norman doorway: there are 65 sittings. The register
leach petty sessional division, union and county court dates from the year 1695. The Earl of Eldon is sole
landowner. The area is 1,263 acres; rateable value,
district, rural deanery of Northleach, archdeaconry of £740; the population in 1891 was 131.

Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The church of Parish Clerk (Hazleton), John Hyde; clerk (Yan-
St. Andrew is a small building of stone. in the Norman worth). Henry Betteridge.
sty!e, consisting of chancel. nave of two bays. north
aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower, con- Post Office, Hazleton (Railway Sub-Office. letters should
taining 2 bells: the church was restored in 1866, when have R.S.O. Gloucestershire added).-Henry Edward
Wheeler, sub-postmaster. Letters are received at 7
it was reseated with low open seats and the chancel with a.m.; dispatched at 5.45 p.m. Postal orders are
stalls and a small stained east window inserted: there issued here, but not paid. The nearest money order
are also three other stained windows: there are 130 &; telegraph office is at Andoversford. 4 miles distant
sittings. The register dates from the year 1597. The
Post Office, Yanworth.-William Fry, sub-postmaster.
living is a rectory, with the chapelry of Yanworth an- Letters from Northleach R.S.O. 'arrive at 9 a.m.; dis-
patched 4. IS p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but
nexed. yearly value £260, with 295 acres of glebe and not paid. Northleach is the nearest money order &
residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held telegraph office, 4 miles distant

since 1860 by the Rev. William Henry Stanton M.A. of SCHOOLS.
Exeter College. Oxford, hon. canon of Gloucester, rural
Parish (mixed), built in 1885. for 50 children; average
dean of Northleach and J.P. for the county. Edmund attendance, 31; Mrs. Elizh. A. Trinder, mistress
Waller esq. of Farmington Lodge. Farmington, is lord
of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is clay Day, Yanworth (mixed), for 40 children; average attend-
and stone brash; the subsoil, clay and rock. The chief ance, 40; Mrs. Mary Jane Withey. mistress
crops are wheat. barley and roots. The area of Hazle-
ton township is 1,566 acres; rateable value. £583; the
a.rea of the entire parish is 2,829 acres; rateable value,
entire parish, £I'3II; the population in 1891 was, town-
ship, 172; parish, 303.

HAZLETON. Dancer William, farm bailiff to the YANWORTH.

Stanton Rev. William Hy. :M.A., J.P. Rev. Wm. Hy. Stanton, Old Rectory

(hon. canon of Glouoester '& rural Minchin Richd. frmr. Hazleton priory Evans Thos. farm bailiff to Lord Eldon

dean), Rectory Minchin Wm. Beman, frmr. Manor fnn Fry William, shopkeeper, Post office

Cove Adolphus, Puesdown inn & coal Wheeler Henry Edwd.shopkpr.Post off Gillett Hy. farm bailiff to Lord Eldon

merchant Wheeler George, blacksmith Holland Geo. gamekpr. to LoIld Eldon



HEMP STED, or Hempstead, is a parish and villag~, Exeter College, Oxford. The rectory is a. substantial and

on the east side of the river Severn, Ii miles south-west interesting house, built in 1671 at a eost of £700 by John,

from Gloucester, in the Northern division of the county, first Viscount Scudamore, of Holme Lacy, who also pur-

Dudstone hundred, Gloucester union, county court dis- chased and gave to the rectory the great tithes. The fine

trict and petty sessional division, and in the rural deanery. old village cross was restored and fixed in its present posi-

archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. This village is tion by the late Canon Lysons. Newark House, a train-

a. pleasant suburb of the city of Gloucester, and the views ing home for girls, is under the care of the sisters of St.

from near the church, of the Cbtswold Hills, the Forest John the Baptist, of Clewer, near Windsor. Several large

of Dean Rills; the Severn, and Gloucester cathedral and timber meTchantsr have their premises and yards within

city in the rear are very fine. The Gloucester and Ber- this parish, but their names will be found under Glou·
keley canal runs through the parish. Gas workS' for th~ cester; here also are the brick work& of Messrs. James

supply of the city of Gloucester were erected between Wintle and Son. The charities are considerable; about

1:87... and 1877 on the Bristol road, within this parish, £15 yearly is available for apprenticing, and a nearly

under the direction of Mr. Robert Morland C.E. The equal amount for clothing; £18 distributed in coal from

church of St. Swithin, believed to have been erected by fundS' left by the late Mr. Higford; £38 yearly derived

Henry Dene, incumbent of Hempsted, prior of Llanthony from the sale of parish land some few years since is in

and archbishop of Canterbury 15°1-3, is an edifice of the hands of trustees, and is appropriated to the main-

stone in the Early Perpendicular style, consisting of chan- tEnance of the school and other parish purposes. This

cel, nave, south porch and a. low central embattled tower parish vas in succession the home of the well-known

containing 6 bells: the stained east window. a memorial historians of Gloucestershire, Sir Rabert Atkins kt. and

to the late Mrs. Crawley, was erected in 1885. and there Daniel Lysons esq. F.8.A. lligford Higford esq. the

are five etlhers: in the chancel is an altar tomb with full Sylvanus Lysonso trustees, Col. L. G. Lysons and Mr. D.

length effigy, in robes, of RichM"d Atkyns, chief justice of H. Fawkes are the chief landowners, and there are several

North Wales, ob. 1610; and a. fine inscribed brass, with other freeholders. The soil is loamy; subsoil, gravel.

shields of arms, to the six cl1ildren of Arthur Porter esq. The land is chie1ly pasture. The area. is 1,43° acres of

and .A.1ys his wife, 1548; there a.re also several tablets to land, 17 of water, 43 of tidal water and 5 of foreshore;

'tbe memory of the Lysons family: the font is Norman: rateable value, £9,391; the population in 1891 was 422.
the church was thoroughly restored in 1885-6, at a cost
By Local Government Board Order 16,525, March 25,
of £1,717, when the nave was lengthened and a. vestry 1885, a detached part of Hempsted, including Hazeldine
House, was transferred to Tuffiey, SimmsrBridge and Rea
with cloister erected: there are about 180 sittings. The Lane to Quedgeley, and two house~ in Bristol ,road and
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a'l'ectory,

net yearly value £1,000, including 7 acreS! of glebe, with Netheridge Farm. transferred from Quedgeley to Hemp-
residence, in the gift of Higford iHigford esq. and held sted, and that part of Hempsted in the city of Gloucester

since 1879 by the Rev. Benjamin !Smith Dawson M.A. of added to South Hamlet.

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. HENBURY. 211

Sexton, 'William Merrett. but not paid. Bristol road, Gloucester, is the nearest

:sPost Oftice.-Gharles Wilson, sub.postmaster. Letters money order & telegraph office, 2 miles distant
received through Gloucester week days only at 7 a.m. ; fltional School (mixed), built in 185 I, for 70 children;
dispatched at 6.25 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, average attendance, 36; Miss AgneSl Foskett, mistress

(For other names in thi9 parish, see Bear Creek Oil &i Shipping Co. Lim. Halford William Henry, boat builder.

Glouceste~.) petroleum stores (Henry Rock,agt.), Hempstead bridge. See advert

Crawley Misses, Elm lodge Hempstead wharf Hall William, boat 'builder, Oanal side

Dawson Rev. Benj. Smith M.A.Rectry Cale Richard, frmr. Upper Rea farm Lulham Arth. Robt. fannr.Manor frm

Hicks Misses Collins Arthur, clerk in charge of Gas Morland Robert C.E. manager &i en-

.Tones Francis A. The Bungalow works gineer of the -Gloucester gas works,

Lane Alfred Charles, Fern bank Colthurst & Rarding,petroleum stores, Lochryan house, Bristol road

Lewis Arthur, Milo croft Canal side Newark House Training Home for

Morland Robert C.E. Lochryan house, Fawkes David Henry, farmer, land- Girls (under the care of the Sisters

Bristol road owner &; overseer, Netheridge farm of St. John the Baptist of Olewer.

Pike George, Hempstead court Ferris Da.vid, farmer, Church farm near Windsor)

COMMERCIAL. Flux Thomas, gardener to the Misses Pegler Dianl' (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Carter Edward &; Sons, farmers, Pods- Crawley, The Laurels Williams Wm. Ha:rold, farmr.Rel' farm

mead farm Goulding 1Ym. farmer, Newark farm Wilson Charles, carpenter, Post office

HENBURY is a village and parish in Gloucestershire, 15,409 a(lres-viz. 7,530 acres of land and 2,360 acreS' of •
containing the tithingS' of Stowick, Compton, Charlton, water in Barton Regis union and 2,057 acres of land and
King's Weston and Lawrence Weston, on the navigable
:river Severn; Henbury is 3 miles west from Patchwuy 3,460 acres of wate..• in Thornbury union; rateable value,
station on the Bristol and South Wales section of the £20,242; the population of Henbury in 1891 was 2,026 in
the civil, and 2,182 in the ecclesiastical parish.

Great Western railway, 4 north-west from Bristol, and 17 By Local Government Eoard Order 12,127, March 25.
1,886, Oompton Greenfield parish was amalgamated with
north-west from Bath, in the Southern division of the Henbury, and a detached part of Westbury-on-Trym
county, Henbury and Berkeley hundreds, Barton Regis parish also transferred to it, under the .provisions of the
"Divided Parishes Act, 1882."
union, Bristol county court district, Lawford's Gate petty
sessional division, rural deanery of Stapleton, and in the Sexton, Henry' Prewett.

archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. The church of St. Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,

Mary is an ancient building of stone chiefly in the Early Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office.-Mrs. Sarah
Stevens, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive through
English style, with Decorated and Perpendicular inser- Bristol at 7 a.m. &i 12.30 &; 6 p.m. &; on sundays at 7
tions, and consists of chancel, nave of eight bays, aisles, a.m.; dispatched at 10.30 a.m. &; 4 & 8.15 p.m.; sun-
nerth porch and a low we~tern tower containing a clock days, 8.1'5 p.m
and 6 bells; the nave dates from the reign of King
Stephen (II35-54): on the south side is a small chapel Wall Letter Box, Brentry, cleared 9....5 a.m. &; 7.40 -'>.r :
built in the reign of Renry IH. (1216-72): there are
sundays, 9.10 a.m
eleven memorial windows, various mural tablets to the Post Office, Hallen.-Henry Maggs, sub-postmaster. Let-

Soutnwell family, and one to Edward Capell, ob. 1681: t(>rs a:rrive at 8 a.m. &; 6.30 p.m.; sundays, 8 a.m.;
the ,pulpit is, of stone richly (ls,rved, and was presented by

the family of the vicar: the church was repaired and en- dispatched at 8.10 a.m. &; 6.30 p.m. week days' only.
larged in 1833, and completely restored in 1878, at a cost Postal orders are issued here, but not paid. The nearest

of £6,000, and has 600 sittings. The register dates from money order &; telegraph office is at Henbury, 2 miles

the year 1538. The living is a vicarage, with the chapel. distant

ries of Aust and Northwick annexed, joint net yearly value Post Office, Cribbs Causeway.-Mis9 Williams, sub-post-

£600, including 4 acres of glebe, with :residence, in the mistress. Letters through Bristol; delivery at 9·5
• g"ift of trusteeS', and held since 1860 'by the Rev. John a.m. &; 6 p.m.; dispatch at 9.50 a.m. &; 7 p.m. Postal
orders are issued here, but not paid. Henbury is the
Hugh Way M.A. of Oriel College, Oxford, and rural dean

of Stapleton. There are \Baptist and Wesleyan chapels nearest money order &; telegraph office, 3 miles distant

and a meeting house for the ,Society of Friends. The 'Vall Letter 1Iox, Compton Lodge, cleared 9.40 a.m. &; 6.50

charities are of £400 yea.rly value for educational pur- p.m. week days only
poses, and £70 for church purposes, besides £40 distri· Post Office, Charlton.-Kate Wilkins, sub-postmistress.

l'ut(>d annually to the poor. Blaise Castle derives its Letters from Eristol arrive at 7.45 a.m. &; 6.45 p.m.;

name from St. Blaisius (Feb. 3), the Spanish patron of sundays, 7·45 a.m.; dispatched at 9.15 a.m. &; 7.20
wool combers, to whom a chapel was dedicated on the p.m.; sundays, 9.15 a.m. Postal orders are issued
hill in the grounds wmere the castle now stands: the here, but not paid. The nearest money order & te~e-
modilrn building bearing that name, a plain and sub- graph office is at Westbury-on-Trym, 3 miles distant
stantial mansion, is the s-eat of Mrs.Harford. There is a Wall Letter Box cleared 9.15 a.m. &; 7.20 p.m.; sundays,
Roman encampment in the castle grounds 'and another 8,4° a.m
on the King's Weston Hill; and through the grounds Compton.-Letters should be addressed Compton Green-
'l'uns a. long valley, shut in on either side by rocks about field, Bristol
200 feet in height. Blaise Cutle hamlet, or "Henbury Wall Letter Box cleared 10 a.m. &; 7.20 p.m. week day9
Cottages," consists of a number of substantially-built only
cottages, of varied design, erected in 18II from plans by Post Office, King's Weston.-Letters received from Bristol,
Mr. John Nash, and surrounded by a spacious inclosed vi~ Shirehampton, which is the nearest money order &;
garden, with pleasant lawns, flower beds and luxuriant tt'legraph office, about 3 miles distant
shrubberies; these delightful cottage homes are almost Wall Letter Box cleared 9 a.m. &; 7.30 p.m. week days
unique in their beauty and picturesqueness, and have long only

held a chief place among the attractions of the neighbour- Lawrence Weston.-Wall Letter Box cleared at 7.45 a.m.

hood. Adjoining the chn.rch is a fine mansion of Eliza-. &; 7 p.m.; sundays at 7.45 a.m. The nearest money

bethan character, the property and reSlidence of Edward order &; telegraph office is at Henbury, 2 miles distant

Sampson esq. M.A., J.P., D.L. Pen Park is the residence SCHOOLS.

of John Atkin Waller esq. Sir John Henry Greville
Smyth bart. of Ashton Court, Long AsJhton, Somerset, National (boys), founded by Anthony Edmunds, merchant,

and Charles Edward Hungerford Athole Colsron esq. of in 1624, &; rebuilt in 1830, fOO' 130 ohildren; average
Roundway Park, Wilts, are lords of the manor. The attendance, ]08; Albert Riggs, master
principal landowners are Phillip Napier Milee, Kings- National (girls &; infants), erooted in 18740 for 200 chil-
weston, Edward Sampson esq. John Charles Harford dren; average attendance, 136 ; Miss Mary Webb, mist
esq. of Lampeter, Rabert Cann Lippincott esq. of Over National (infants), Hallen, erected in 1863,for 60 children;

Court, Almondsbury, and John O. Bengough, of Poole, average attendance, 58; Miss Mary J. Jefferies·, mist

Dorset. The soil is loamy; subsoil, limestone. The land CONVEYANCE.

is cniefly in pasture. The area of the entire parish is Omnibuses to &; from Bristol &; Shirehampton twice daily

HENBURY. ~Bryant M1rs. Erentry lodge Uarrott Edward

'Marked thus t should be addressed 'A>oper Miss, The Den ?erceval Ml'ls. Severn house

Brentry, Westbury-on-Trym. Daniel Harry A. Hood, Hill end Pease Thos. H. Ormston, Henbury d.
Ford John Sampson Edward M.A., D.L., J.P
Tanner Charles Young, The E1m.I
PRIVA.TE RESIDENTS. Hariord Mrs. Blaise castle

Aldridge Chas. Joseph, Chesterfield ho .Jolly Frank, Rockwell Tanner James, The Elms

Baker Arthur, Henbury Hill house Matthews Henry Charles, Henbury ldg Tebbs Mrs. Hill side

tBennett Wi1liam, Brentry Matthews Mrs. Berwick lodge ThompsoD Rev. John, Endcliffa

GLOU. 14-

212 HENBURY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLy'a

Wade Miss, Alma villa Hopkins John, farmer, Elmington frm Barton Horatio, farmer

WaIler John Atkin, Pen park Blunt Wm. Chas. farmer,Crook's marsh Everett Francis William, farmer

Way Rev. John Hugh 'M.A. Vicarage Joyner John, wood dealer Hale John, farmer

Williams George, Henbury hCl.use Maggs Henry, wheelwright, .& post off Hillier Joseph Benjamin, farmer

COMMERCIAL. Millard William, shopkeeper Trott Thomas, farmer

Ball Edwin, miller (water) Neall Sam!. In. farmelf, Hallen marsh 1'rott William, Carpenter~ .Arms P.H
Biggs John, farmer
Pearce Thomas, farmer, Chittening Watts George, farmer

Evans J ames F.ear, shopkeeper farm, Hallen marsh Wilkins Gecrrge, haulier & shopkeeper
Fenner James, jobbing gardener Peglar Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper Wilkins Peter, shopkeeper

Fenner Martha (Mrs.), shopkeeper Pullen Elizh. (Mrs.), farmer, Greens- Williams Henry, milk seller

Flook Thomas,builder & mason,Brentry plott farm ,
Ford Ellen (Mrs.), Salutation P.HJ Pullin James, farmer, Spaniorum KING S WE8TON.

Grigg Parmenas J. shoeing & general Stokes Henry William, King William Letters received throughShirehamptn.

smith & cycle fitter & repairer the F0U;rth P.H. & Hallen brewery Miles Mrs. King's Weston hause

Harvey Frederick Taylor, plumber Taylor Elizabeth(Mrs.),farmer,Worthy Miles Philip Napier J.P

Henbury Working Men's Club (Edmd. farm, Hallen marsh .A.nstey William, market gardener
H. Kendall, sec)
Hodges Charles, nurseryman Thomas Jas. farmer, Crook's marsh Davis William farmer Kingroad farm
How Thomas Henry, fly proprietor Pearce Charl~s Edwa'rd farmer Sea
Thomas William, farmer
W~~ams .Augustus S. frmr. Moorhse mills (letters through 'Stoke Bi~hop)
• Kendall Edmund H. beer retailer Wllliams James Thomas, fa:rmer, Wel- Pea-rce Frederick William farmer

Newroan Chas. Mfd.assistant overseer linghouse farm Pullen George farmer (lette·rs through
Parsons George, nurseryman Willis George, farmer, Hallen marsh .Avonmouth)

Prewett Henry, carpenter SrrOWICK. Tanner John Barton, farmer
Smith William M~Ewan, farmer

Stevens Sarah (Mrs.), Post office Pearce Henry, farmer, Stowick farm LAWR'ENCE WESTON.
Wetmore Emily (Mrs.), farmer W~lI:ver Art~ur Joseph, frmr. Berwick Fedden Henry J.P. Fernhill
Willis Geo. Jun. farmer'& hay dealer Robinson. Arthur
BJALiL,EN.

Baker Mrs. Mills, Hallen lodge OOM!PTON. Baker Austin, bee-r retailer

Bond George, Helenbrook house Davis Lady Hollywood tower Britton Chas. Cosham, farmer, Rock-
ingham farm; residing at Hra1J..en
Jones John Gover Henry.
Davis G:~rge, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Stock Gregory, Compton house ~ 'Yll~am, farmer, Madam farm
HIll William, sh~pkeeper
Brewer John, Washingpool farm, Hal- Thring Robert

len marsh A'lvis Albert, farmer

Brewer William, farmer, West House England Henry, farmer Ogborner Fredenck &; John, farmers,

farm, Hallen ma'l"Sh Foster Frederick, iarmer Aust farm
Tanner George, farmer
Britton Charles Cosham. farmer, Mb.y George Henry, butcher

Crook's marsh Pullin William, farmer Tanne:r George Barton, farmer

Britton Mark, farmer, lSevern bank Stock Gregory, surgeon CRJBiBS OAUSEWAY.
(letters through Pilning) Virgo Tom, farmer

Cullimore George Leonard, farmer, Williams Francis F. farmer Bence Mrs
Cawley Commander George R.N.R
Paclrgate farm Williams Thomas, farmer

Davis Edward, farmer, Moorhouse CH.'''''LTON. Cowlin William Henry, Brentwood
Edmonds Thomas, farmer,Aibelton lane Pearce Mrs. The Laurels
.an.

(lettBlf"s through iPilning) Letters are received through West- Perry William

Griffiths John, Severn House farm bury-on-Trym. Applin Henrietta (Mrs.), beer retailer

Griffiths Wm. In. farmer, Berwick frm Everill Reginald Rumney John, shoe maker
Hignell Thomas, farmer, HaIlen flLl"ID. Barnfield William George, farmer Willis Letitie (Mlrs.), milk dealer

HEWELSFIELD is a village and parish, bounded on Briavels, gave it to the hospital which he had founded in

the west by the river Wye, which here divideS' the county that town, but being escheated, with his other property,
from Monmouthshire, ani is near the road from Chep. to the Crown, Edward I. regranted it in free alms' to the
Ahbot of the Cistercians at Tintern; and when that house
stow to Coleford, 2! miles north-west from Woolastone -f(mnded by Walter de Clare ~n II31-was dissolved in
station on the South Wales section of the Great Western 1537, it was given, with other adjoining estates, to Henry,
railway, 9 south-east from Monmouth, 6 north from Earl of Worcester, in whose familY' it "Was vested for about
300 years: there is' now no lord of the manor. The prin-
Chepstow, 7 south from Coleford and 5 west from Lydney, cipal landowners are Sir William Henry 'Marlingl bart. of
in the Forest of Dean division of the county, ihundred of Stanley 'Park, King! Stanley, Capt. Walter Bentley Mar-
ling, of Clanna, Lydney, and Francis Lamb esq. The
St. Briavels, union and county court district of Chepstow, soil is clayey; subsoil, limestone and sandstone. The
petty sessional division of Lydney, rural deanery of South chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 1,518
Forest, and in the archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. acres; rateable value, £1,623; the population in 18g1
was 409.
The church of St. Mary Magdalene, standing at an eleva-
Parish Clerk, Manoah Darby. •
tion of about 600 feet above the river, is an ancient
building of stone of the Norman period, consisting of Post Office, Brockwear. Samuel Burfitt, SUb-postmaster.
chancel, north transept or Gough oha.pel erected in 1558, Letters from Chepstow arrive 7.45 a.m.; dispatched at
6.20 p.m. Postal orders are i9sued here, but not paid.
nave of five bays,. north aisle, south porch and! a. central Tintern, 2 miles distant, is th; nearest money order &:.
tower containing 5 bells: there are lIittings- for 164 per. telegraph office
sons: the churchyard, entered by a lych gate, contain's a
Letter Box, Hewelsfield, cleared at 5 p.m
venera'hle yew tree. The register dates from the year 1663. This parish is included in St. Briavels United School
The living: is a rectory, net yearly value £80, with resi-
dence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Hereford, Board district, formed November 24, 1874
and held since 1881 by the Rev. William Shawcross, of the Board School, Brockweir Common, for St. Eriavels &
University of London. The Moravians 'have had a mission
here since the commencement of the present century. Hoewelsfield (mixed), erected in 1896, at a cost of
£2,000, for 105 children; average attendance, 85; '!'hos.
There are charities amounting to £12 yearly value, de- Yeo, master; Mrs. MaryE. Yeo, mistress •
Carrier to Bristol.-Bowen, every fortnight
rived from land and two cottages, and applied to church

and school purposes and the poor. The manor is taxed

at tliree hides in Domesday, and included in the Forest
of Dean by s.peci.u command of the Conqueror; John de

Monmouth, constable of the neigthbouring castle of St.

Comer Mrs. Bellevue Burroughs Wm. farmr. 0Yws Hill farm Jones Isase, farmer, The Common

Lamb Frailcis, Hart Hill grange Burton Alfred, farmer, Common KeedweU Thos. farmr. The Common

Ramsdale .Toseph, Wye:vern Cola Jane (Mrs.), Royal Arms inn, Moulton Nehemiah, Parrot inn

Shawcross Rev. William, Rectory Brockweir Phillips Thomas, farmer, Brook fa.rm

COMMERCIAL. Dibden Edwin, carpenter, fen-ryman '& Pride Arthur, farmer

Adams William, farmer boat proprietor, Brockweir Prince John George, family butcher,

Bird William, farmer,Yew Tree cottage Dibden James, ferryman, Brockweir grocer & provision dealer & baker,

Blunt Williarn, farmelf, Poolfield farm Dibden John,shopkoopelf" & sloop ownr. Back house, B1'Ockweir

Bond George, farmer, Court farm general carrier to Bristol, Brockweir Pritchard Fred, butcher

Bowen John, coal deaJer, Erockweir Dibden Susan (Mrs.), grocer, provision Pritchard In. Carpenters' Arms P.B.

Brown John, boat builder, Brockweir dealer & apartmts. & ferry,Brockweir farmer &; shopkpr. Tumpkin Ayles

'ij.UTfitt Samuel, baker, grocer, corn & Faller Frank, watch maker Pritchard William, tea dealer

meal factor, & post office, Brockweil' Heyward Edwin, New inn, :Brockweir Rymer Edgar, farmer, Railreddingfl'Il1

DffiECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. BILLESLEY. 213

Rugman Marrianne (Mrs.), ladies' Shotton Stephen, master mariner, Townshend Wm. farmr. The Common

school, &se cottage, Common Carlisle house Townshend William Hy. shopkeeper

Scrivens Wm. farmer. The Common Thomas William, farmer Whittingham Elizabeth (iMliss) , far.

Selby Shadrach ,& Sons, maSlOns, The Thorn Elias, farmer & shopkeeper. mer, The Common

Common The Common Williams.Henry, farmer

HIGHNAM, OVER and LINTON, formerly ham- and dothing club. Highnam Court, a noble mansion,
surrounded by extensive park-like grounds of 56 acres,
lets of Churcham, were formed June 27, 1851, into the well laid out and studded with timber, is the seat of
ecclesiastical parish of ffighnam, and are 12 miles north- Charles Hubert Hastings Parry esq. J.P. who is lord of
west from Gloucesrtier, in the Northern division of the th·) manor and chief landowner. The soil is clay and
county, Dudstone lower hundred, Gloucester union,county loam; subsoil, principally clay. The chief crops are
court district and petty sessional division, rural deanery wheat, beans, roots and pasturage. The area is 2,004
of North Forest, and in the arethdeaconry and diocese of acres; rateable value, £5,648; the population in 1891 was
Gloudester. The church of the Holy Innocents, built in 313, of which 210 are in Highnam proper.
1851, is a splendid edifice of stone in the Early Decorated
OVER, which was a &man settlement, lies on the bank
style, consisting of chancel, nave of five bays, aisles, south of the western channel of the Severn, and is connected
porch and a tower with lofty spire containing 3 bells, and
was erected and endowed at the sole cost of the late with Gloucester by a bridge repaired at the expense of the
ThomaS' Gambier Parry esq. of Highnam Court, who county; the population in 1891 waS! 88.

with his own hand painted the frescoes with which the LINTON contains one farmhouse and some cottages, 2

interior is profusely enriched: over the chancel arch is a miles west from Gloucester; the population in 1891 was IS.
representation of "The Last Judgment"; the wall of the
north aisle exhibits the triumphant entry of Our Lord Sexton, Henry Greening.
into Jerusalem, the principal New Testament characters Post Office.-Henry Greening, sub-postmaster. Letter!
.being represented in the procession; on the first bay of
the south aisle of the nave is "The Expulsion from Para- arrive from Gloucester about 6.50 a.m.; dispatched at
clise," and on the corresponding bay of the north is" The 6.25 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
Anllunciation "; there are about 250 sittings. The regis- Gloucester. 3 miles distant. is the nearest money order
&:; telegraph office
ter dates from the year 1851. The living is a vicarage, Wall Letter Box at Over cleared at 15.30 p.m
gross< yearly value £II8, including 2 acres of glebe, with National School, Highnam (mixed), erected by the late
residence, in the gift of C. Hubert H. Parry esq. and held T. Gambier ParTY esq. in 1851, for 99 children; avr·· :'.
'Since 1892 by the Rev. Philip Lees Park M.A. of attendance. 64; there is a house for the master; Wm.
Trinity College, Oxford. Qlx's (Badgworth) charity, left M. Sedgley, master
Several carriers pass along the high roads from Newent.
in 1620, now amounts to a'bout £3 a year, which is given Newnham & Ross through this parish

by the trustees in the form of a subscription to the coal

HIGRNAM. Rea William, carpenter Cooper Sarah (Mrs.), Dog P.H

Sowray John, land steward to Charles Haine Frederic:k, farmer, Over farm

Park Rev. Philip Lees :M. A. Vicarage H. H. Parry esq Healer & Son, coach builders

Parry Charles Hubert Hastings J.P OVER. LJiNI"ON.
Elis Henry Arthur, farmer, Home frm

Rarris Charles, organist Bullock Edmund, The Poplars Pearce Jamed, agricultural appraiser

Hawkins Martin, frmr. Highnam frm Merre<tt John, Vineyard cottage 0& farmer

Hyett William, shopkeeper Priday Mrs. ffill house

HILL is a parish and village, on the navigable river Julian, to whose great-great-great-grandson, Sir Herbert

Severn, 4 miles north from Thornbury terminal station Jenner, Dean of the Arches, the manor descended in
o()f the branch from Yate junction, 6! south-west from
Bel'keley &ad station on the Sharpness and Severn and 1841 on the failure of issue of the descendants of Edward:
Wye branch of the :Midland railway, 9 west from Dursley
-and 15 north from Bristol, in the Southern division of Sir Herbert J enner thereupon assumed the name of Fust
the county, lower hundred. of Berkeley, Thornbury union
~md petty sessional division, Dursley county court dis- as an addition to his surname, and took also the arms of
trict, and in the ,rural deanery of Dursley and archdea-
conry and diocese of Gloucester. The church of C::;t. the Fust family: tradition says that the site of Hill Court

'Michael is an ancient building of stone, in the Early was formerly occupied by a nunnery, possibly an offshoot
English style, repaired about 1816, and consists of chancel
with south chapel, nave, south porch and a small em- of the celebrated one at Berkeley: a female skeleton has
battled western tower, with pinnacles and spire, contain-
been found built up in one of the massive old walls, and
ing one bell: the old oak benches date from the 14th
century: the chancel is raised consideraibly above the two others, also those of females, were brought to light
nave, and has on its south side the Fust mortuary chapel,
when the present house was built, in 1863; but a mano!
built by Sir Edward Fust, srd bart. about J.700: there
are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1629. house has existed here from a very early period: the

The living is a vicarage and a donative, net yearly value engraving in Atkyns' "History of Gloucestershire" shows

£140, with residence, in the gift of Herbert Jenner-Fust an irregularly built gabled house, in close ;proximity to

esq. and held since 1886 by the Rev. William Dnett the church: this house was, at a subsequent date, mate-
(;oates M.A. of Pembroke College, Cambridge. The
rially altered and extended until it joined the church:
oeharities are of about £3 yearly value. Hill Court is the
-,*,at of Rerbert Jenner-Fust esq. LL.D., J.P. The manor the square garden in front has remained unaltered. and
<of Hill, alias Hull, formed part of the original grant made
the walls surrOl1nding it bear vases, on which are sculp-
by Henry n. to Robert Fitzhardinge (ancestor of the
tured armorial bearings, showing the marriages of the
.Berkeleys, of Berkeley Castle), who gave it to his third
..son Nicholas, who was lord thereof in II70 : Robert Fust family from 1564 to 1763. Rerbert Jenner-Fust
.Pointz, of Iron Acton, married Katherine, the heiress 01
esq. who is lord of the manor, and Lord Fitzhardinge are
this line of the Berkeleys, and became lord of Hill in
~404: his direct descendant. Sir John Pointz, alienated the principal landownerS'. The soil i~ alluvial; subsoil,
the manor in 1'604, and Richard Fust became lord thereof
in 1609; he had two children, who left surviving issue, red marl and clay. The land is principally in pasture.
viz.-a son Edward, created a baronet in 1662, whose
The area is 2,050 acres of land, 3 of water, 65 of tidal
.descendants became extinct in I841; and a daug-hter
water and 218 of foreshore; rateable value, £3,512; the

population in 1891 was 214. .

Parish Clerk, Theophilus Thomas.

Post Office.-Thomas Edward Nelmes', sub-postmas,ter.
Letters are received through Falfield R.S.O. & arrive at
8.30 a.m.; cleared at 4.50 p.m. Postal orders are
issued here, but not paid. Falfield, 4 miles distant, is
the nearest money order & telegraph office

Church School (mixed), built in 1872, for 60 children;
average attendance, 54; there is' a house for the mis-
tress; Miss Elizabeth .A.llen, ·mistress

Ilranscombe George Herbt. Hill cot Cox Robert Hewett, farmer Lea Robert Taylor, farmer

Coates Rev. Wm. Dnett :M.A.Vicarage Gazard Thos. farmer, Day House farm Nelmes Brothers, cycle agents

.Jenner-Fust Herbert LL.D.,J.P. Hill ert Gazzard John William, farmer Nelmes 'thomas, builder, Post office

COMMERCIAL. Jenkins Thomas, farmer Sealey William, farmer, Scotland farm

lJarton Richard, farmer Jones John. farmer Smith John, farmer, Nup Down farm

lJruton Eli &; Sons. carpntrs. & bldrs ,Laver John, farmer White Richard, blacksmith

B:ILLESLEY with XILLCOTT, formed into the section of the Midland railway, 21 south from Wotton-
under-Edge and 8 north-by-east from Chipping Sodbury,
.ecclesiastical parish of Hillesley in 1852, from the civil in the Southern division of the county, Grumbalds Ash
hundred, Chipping Sodbury union and county court dis-
ilarish of Hawkesbury. is on the Bath road, 3i miles east-
trict, petty sessional division of Sodbury, rural deanery
north-east from Wickwar station and 4 east-south-east

from Charfield station on the Bristol and Birmingham

214 HILLESLEY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

of Hawkesbury and in the archdeaconry of Bristol and I principal landowners are the Duke of Beaufort K.G. and

dioce~e of Gloucester. The church of St. Giles, conse· John ehas. Bengough esq. of The Ridge, Wotton-under.

crated 1851, is a building of stone, in the Early English Edge. The soil is clay and sand bra...h; subsoil, oolite.

style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of eight The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots, but the

bays, aisles, vestry, south porch and a. western turret principal part of the land is in pasture. The area is

containing 2 bells: the church occupies the site of a for- 1,100 acres; the population in 1891 was 440.

mer church of the same name, many curious remains of I KILLCOTT is a mile south-east.
which were found in digging the present foundations, .

including an ancient but shattered font: there are 200 ParIsh Clerk, George Werrett.

sittings, all free. The ancient chapel belonging to this I Post &; M. O. 0., S. B. &; Annuity &; Insurance Office.-

place, also dedicated to St. Giles, had been converted Miss Annie Thomas,sub-postmistress. Letters through

previous to 1712 into tenements for the poor. The re- Wotton-under-Edge, arrive at 8.35 a.m. Box cleared

gister dates from the year 1851 only; earlier entries are at 5 p.m. week days &; at II.40 a.m. on sundays.

in the register of Hawkesbury. The living is a vicarage, Hawkesbury Upton is the nearest telegraph office, a

npt yearly value £102, with residence, in the gift of the miles distant

Bishop of Gloucester, and held since 1888 by the Rev. National School, Hillesley (mixed &; infants), for 160

Edmund Joseph Francis Johnson M.A. of St. John's children; average attendance, 86; there is a house for

College, Cambridge. Hillesley House is the residence of the master, Charles Manning; Mrs. Emma Werrett,

Lady Robinson. Here is a Baptist chapel. Major-Gen. infants' mistress

Robert Hale, of Alderley, is lord of the manor. The Carrier to Nailsworth. IGeorge Thompson, wed. 7 a.m

HILLESLEY. ChappeIl Albert Henry, butcher Thompson George, carrier

.Arthurs Mrs Cornock Charles Tratman, farmer, Thompson Jesse, carpenter &, joiner

Chappell John Hrillesley farm Thomas Thomas, shoe maker

Johnson Rev. Edmund Joseph Francis Davis Charles Enoch, baker &; grocer Werrett Reuben, builder &; contractor
Davis William, blacksmith
LloMy.dA.MVrsicarage Grist Laurent, farmer, Lovett's wood
KILLCOTT.

Robinson Lady, HiIlesley house Hopkins John Lewis, miller (water)
Hopkins Lewis John, baker &; shopkpr Hannam-Clark Frederic,The Bungalow

COMMERCIAL. J otcham Mary Ann (:Mrs.), Fleece inn Chappell Henry, farmer, Up. Killcot"i

Alway WiIliam, dairy farmer Lewis John, Portcullis P.H Curtis George, grist miller (water)

Arthurs Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper RobinsonEdwd.dairy frmr.NewMill fm Gunter Elizh. Ann (Mrs.), dairy frmr

Brown Ambrose, carpenter Robinson John, wheelwright Hayward Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Brown Charles, baker Stinchcombe In. frmr. Day House fm J otcham Frederick, farmer

Carter Edward, boot &; shoe maker Summerfield "rilliam, tailor Watts Alfred, farmer

HINTON-ON-THE-GREEN is a village and parish, of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees of
on the river Isborne and a short distance west of the the late William Laslett esg. and held since 1877 by the
road from Tewkesbury to Evesham, and bounded on the Rev. Charles Arthur Baker B.A. of Jesus College, Cam-
north, south and west by Worcestershire, with a station bridge. The trustees of the late William Laslett esq.
on the Evesham and Ashchurch branch of the Midland are lords of the manor and sole landed proprietors. The
railway, and is 3 miles south from Evesham and 120 soil is clay and blue lias; subsoil, clay. The chief crops
from London, in the Northern division of the county, are wheat, beans and barley. The area is 2,198 acres;
hundred of Tibbaldstone, Evesham union, Winchcomb rateable value, [1,715; the population in 1891 was 175.
county court district and petty sessional division, rural
deanery of Campden, archdeaconry of Cirencester and Sexton, Daniel WaIton.
diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. Peter is a Post Office.-Thomas Lampett, sub-postmaster. Letters
building of stone, in the Perpendicular style, with traces
of Norman, consisting of nave, south porch and a western through Evesham, arrive at 7.45 a.m.; dispatched at
embattled tower, with pinnacles, containing 5 bells, four 6 p.m. Evesham is the nearest money order office.
of which are inscribed with a chronogram of the date Evesham, 3 miles distant, is the nearest telegraph
1693: the chancel, said to have been destroyed by fire office for delivery, but the Railway station is the nearest
before the Reformation, was rebuilt on the old founda- for collection
tions in 189S, at a cost of about [540' from designs b~ .A School Board of 5 members was formed November 21,
the late Mr. J. D. Sedding, architect, of London: there 1874; George Nind, 3 Swan terrace, Evesham, attend-
are 100 sittings. The register of !baptisms and burials
ance officer
dates from the year 1735; marriages, 1755. The living Board School (mixed), built in 1883, with residence for
is a rectory, net yearly value £200, including 30 acres
mistress, for QO children; average attendance, 39;

Miss .Agnes Matthews, mistress
Railway Station, George Brincklow, station master

Baker Rev. Chas.Arthur B.A.Rectory Idiens John & Sons Limited, coal Kewman John, farmer, Hinton cross

COMMERCIAL. merchants, Railway station Newman Joseph, market gardener

Barnett Lee, farmer, Blakes hill Llewe;lyn John, farmer, Downrip Prosser David, farmer, Graville hall

Bury John, farmer, Cow Pasture MarshaIl George, market gardener Roper Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Bury Thomas, farmer, Furze hill Marshal! John, tobacconist Roper Thomas, market gardener

13ury Wm. farmer, Narrow Meadow Moore John, farmer, Manor farm Tidmarsh Charles, farmer

Deakins Charles, farmer, Ballads farm :Morris WaIt. farmer &; miller (water)

HORFIELD is a parish, pleasantly seated on the Great register, dating from 1543, is well written and in good
Northern road to Gloucester and Birmingham, 2 miles preservation. Tho living is a rectory, net yearly value-
north from Bristol, in the lower division of the hundred £272, including 20 acres of glebe, with residence, in
of Berkeley, Barton Regis union, Lawford's Gate petty the gift of the Bishop of Bristol, and held since 1879 by
sessional division, Bristol county court district, rural the Rev. Fanshawe Bingham M.A. of Trinity College,
deanery of Stapleton and archdeaconry and diocese of Cambridge. Dudden's charity of about £1 8s. yearly
I1ristol. value is distributed in bread on New Year's Day. In
1885 Mrs. Richards left £200, the interest to be e::orpended
The "Local Government Act of 1858" 21 &, 22 Vie. by the incumbent for the time being in the purchase of
c. 98) was adopted by part of the parish, May 18, 1866, clothing for 20 deserving poor women of the parish; also
and the district was extended under 44 & 45 Vie. c. 99. the interest of £500 for the relief of the sick and deserv-
A Local Board was formed in 1871, but by the "Local ing poor; the interest of £100 to be given as annual
Government Act, 18'94" (56 &; 57 Vict. c. 73), this has prizes in the National schools; and the interest of £150
now been superseded by an Urban District Council of for keeping up the inclosure in the churchyard belong-
ing to the Richards family. Horfield is the depot of
IS members, and included, for parliamentary purposes, the 28th Regimental district assigned to "the Gloucester-
shire Regiment": there are infantry barracks for 600
under the provisions of the "Redistribution of Seats men, with a school chapel, in which Divine service for
Act, 1885," within the borough of Bristol. the remainder the soldiers is held every Sunday morning; all other
of the parish being in the Southern division of the county services are held in the parish church. Horfield Castle
of Gloucester. The church of the Holy Trinity, rebuilt is the re;;idence of .Alfred William Francis esq. Bishop
and enlarged in 1847, and again enlarged in 1893, by Monk's Horfie!d trustees are lords of the manor. J.
the erection of a new tower, at a total cost of £2,159, is Shad well esq. and Mervin Herbert Nevil Story-Maskelyne
an edifice of stone, in the Perpendicular style, consisting esq. of Bassett Down House, Swindon, are the chief
of chancel, nave of six bays, aisles, chapel of St. Andrew, landowners. The soil is loam; subsoil, clay and stone.
porch and an embattled western tower containing a Lime abounds here. The chief crops are hay and corn.
clock and 5 bells: there are several stained windows and
a screen: the church was restored in 1878 and 1884. at
a total cost of £.600, and will seat 400 persons. The

nmECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. HORFIELD. 215

The area is 1,301 acres; rateable value, 1897, £45,930, Acting Surveyor &; Sanitary Inspector, John Alfred Wright

including Bishopston, and 1,800 houses; the population C.E. 91 Berkeley road, 'Bishopston
of the urban district in 1891 was 7,557, and of the civil Collector, Charles White, 12 Logan road, Bishopston

parish 8,202, including 457 in the barracks and 173 in MILITABlY.
H.M. Prison; and in the ecclesiastical parish, 2,912.
DepOt. Horfield Barracks.
Parish Sexton, Samuel Brooks. Regimental District No. 28.

Town Sub-Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. :B., Express The Gloucestershire Regiment, 1st Battalion (28th Foot).

Delivery, Parcel Post. Annuity &; Insurance Office.- &; 2nd Battalion (6Ist) .
Mrs. Charlotte Halford, sub-postmistress. Hours of

delivery from head office, Bristol, 8 &; II.45 a.m. Col. Commanding Regimental District, Col. F. J. Curtin

&; 2.15, 6.30 &; 8. IS p.m.; sundays, 8,3° a.m. Letters Medical Officer, Deputy-Surgeon-General H. C. Herbert

dispatched at 8.50, 9.50 & 11.5 a.m. &;. 12.35, 2·50, 3rd Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment.

4.5, 5·5, 6.50, 8,35 &; 11.30 p.m.; sundays, 4. 8.30 (Royal South Gloucestershire Militia.)

&; 11.30 p.m Commanding Hon. Col. WiIliam Alex. Hill C.B
Wall Letter Boxes :-Near the Church, cleared at 9·30 Majors, Hon. Lieut.-Col. L. S. Benson &; C. D. Guise
Instructor of Musketry, Capt. W. H. de Griffith
a.m. &; 12.15, 3.45, 6.30 &; 8.10 p.m.; sundays, 3.50 Adjutant. Capt. A. C. Lovett
p.m.; Golden Hill, cleared 9.35 a.m. &; 12.30. 3·50, Quartermaster, Hon. Lieut. Thomas Smith
6,35 & 8.15 p.m.; sundays, 3.50 p.m.; New road,
cleared 8.50, 9.50 &; II·5 a.m. &; 12·35, 2.5 0, 4·5, 5·5,

6.50, 8.35 &; 11.30 p.m.; sundays, 4' &; 11.30 p.m.; 4th Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment.
Wellington place, cleared 9.25 a.m. &; 12.10, 3.40, 6.25 (Royal North Gloucestershire Militia.)
& 8.5 p.m.; sundays, 3.40 p.m Head quarters, Cirencester.

HORFIELD URBAN DISTRICT COUNCIL. Commanding, Hon. Col. W. B. Marling

Offices, 293 Gloucester road, Bristol. Majo:rs, Hon. Lieut.-Col. L. S. Benson &; C. D. Guise

Meetings held at the offices, 2nd & last tuesday in each Instructor of Musketry, Capt. J. E. Harden
Adjutant. Capt. J. S. Hobbs
month, at 7 p.m.
Quartermaster, Hon. Capt. B. N. Spraggett
Chairman, Richard Brown.

Vice-Chairman, Robert Charles Smart. MajorAJr.m•Fy. Pay Department.
Chisholm Batten (staff
Members. , Paymaster, paymaster)

North Ward. tCharles Chorley SCHOOLS.

tWilliam Alfred Davis tWilliam Henry Curtis A Scpool Board of 7 members was formed July 25, 1893;1

tEdwin Thomas PhilIips tMark Butt Charles Thomas Davi:!, 20 Lancashire road, Bishopston.

Nathaniel Morgan tCharles James Lowe clerk to the board; James Thomas Wilde, 61 Church

Alfred Webb tRobert Charles Smart -road, Horfield, attendance officer
IWilliam Mag-gs "John Perriman Hartnell
Board meets at Board Schools, Bishop road, on 3rd

11Sydney Middle IIJohn Hunt tuesday in each calender month, at 6.30 p.m

South Ward. IIAlfred George Stennard Bishop road, built in 1895, at a cost of £8,815, for 186
t Richard Brown boys, 184 girls & 232 infants; average attendance, 95

Marked thus t retire in April. 18'98• boys, 84 girls &; 94 infants; Alfred Wallace Edgar,
Marked thus t retire in April, 1899. master; Miss Sarah A. Morgan, mistress; Miss Edith
Marked thus 11 retire in April, 19°0. E. Kellaway, infants' mistres·s

Officers. Ashley Down road (temporayy) (mixed), for go children;!
average attendance, 90; Miss Rosa Young, mistress
Clerk, John Hucker, Ash road
National (St. Edm<lnd's Trust) (boys), Gloucester road,

Treasurer, J. Elliott Mills, Capital &; Counties Bank enlarged in 1880, for 210 children; average attend-

Limited, Bristol ance, 2°7; Alfred James Smith B.A. master

Medical Officer of Health, John Henry Parry L.R.C.P. National Church of England (girls & infants), built by

& S.Edin. 199 Cheltenham road, Bristol the Rev. F. Bingham in 1880, for 200 children; aver-

Surveyor. Albert Player Isaae Cottrell C.E. 5 Logan road, age attendance, no girls &; 87 infants; Mrs. Ella

Bishopston Webber, head mistress; Mrs. Pearson, infants' mistres-s

Bingham Rev. Fanshawe M.A.Rectory Hucker John, clerk to urban district SchU!bert Hy.Anton,Royal George P.H

Bryant Lieut. .AlIen. Horfield barracks council, Ash road Schubert Thomas, commercial travellr

Francis Alfred William. Horfield castle Hunt Alfd. Rt. beer ret. Golden lane Smith William Reuben, milk dealer.

Hunter Lieut. 'Charles- Norris. Hor- Hunt Geo. Wm. beer ret. & florist Horfield common

field barracks Hunt WaIter In. frmr. Duckett farm Stacey Giles, shopkeeper, Golden hill

lRichardson-Griffiths Maj. Charles du Hutton James, dairym!1n, Old Well- Turle Wil1iam Henry, wholesal6

Flat, Horfield barracks ington hotel butcher, St. Ann's cottage, Hor-

Rosling Mrs. Horfield common Leach John, farmer, Court farm field common

Russell Capt. Vernon Eliott, Hor- Martin James, dairyman, Golden hill Tut,ton Edmd. A1Jfd. farmer, Quab frm.

field barracks Nation Sarah Jane.Eophia (Mrs.), far- Walker Charles, manager Horfield Ur-

Smytal Hon. Lieut. Thomas, Hor- mer, Berry Lane farm ban District Council Sewerage works

field barracks Newton James, Golden Hill laundry Weston Chas. farmer, Horfield commn

COMMERCIAL. Palmer William &; Son, farmers, Hor- Whiting James, laundry, Golden hill

Chaplin Fredk. shopkpr. Prospect ho field Down end Wilde James Thomas. school attend-

Cook George Slade. Wellington hotel Paxman Emma (Mrs.), dyer, Elm road ance officer, 61 Church road

Cox Wm. Sam!. farmer, Manor farm Phillips l"rederick, coal dealer, Horfield Williams George, laundry, Golden hill

Dewfall Edward, dairyman, Horfield common WillsWilliam,farmer,HorfieldDown end

Down end Pitt Edwin, beer retailer

Hennessy John, farmer, Haze:ton farm Ritchie Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress, (For remainder of Names see Bristol

Horfield Urban District Council Sewer- Horfield common streets.)

age Works (Charles Walker, mngr) Saunders Jas. farmer, Lock'leaze farm

HORSLEY is a parish and village, on the road between, annexed, net yearly value £176, including 26 acres of
Stroud, Dursley and Wotton-under-Edge, I mile south- glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Glou-
west from Nailsworth terminal station of a. branch of the cester, and held since 1894 by the Rev. William HeIU'Jj
Midland railway from Stonehouse, 6 north-west from Tet- Silvester Davies M.A. (If Pembroke 'College, Oxford.-
bury. 5 south from. Stroud, about IS south from Glou- There is a Wesleyan chapel. with sittings for about 80
cester and 101 from Lond<Jn. in the Mid division of the persons. There are charities of £33 yearly value for
county, Longtree hundred. Nailsworth petty sessional blankets, coats and cloaks for the poor. In the village
division, Stroud union and county court district. rural is a reading room. George Lowsley-Williams esq.
deanery of Stonehouse, and in the archdeaconry and dio- who is lord of the manor, Sir Robert Nigel Fitzhardinge
cese of Gloucester. The church of St. Martin is an edifice Kingscote K.C.B. and William Leigh esq. are
of stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, I chief landowners. Ilarton End House is the residence of
nave, transepts and a tower containing a. clock and 6 I MajQr Lawrence William Edward Williams J.P. The
bells: there is one stained wind'Ow: the church was re- soil is sandy and loam; subsoil, oolite. The chief crops
stored' in 1887, at a. cost of £642, and affords sittings for are wheat, barley, oats and roots. The area is 3.506
800 personi1. The register dates from the year 1587. acres; rateable value: £4,248; the population in 1891:.
The living is a vicarage, with the chapelry of Ohavenage was 1,136.

216 HORSLEY. GLOUOESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

SHORTWOOD, formerly in this parish, was in 1896, a.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid. The
by an Order in Council, transferred to Nailsworth. nearest money order &; telegraph office is at Nailsworth.
2 miles distant
CHAVENAGE, 3 miles south-east, is a chapelry, yearly Wall Letter Boxes. Horsley hill, cleared at 5.25 p.m. j
value £30, annexed to Horsley. The old manor house at Barton end, cleared at 4.<t:5 p.m
Chavenage is a venerable mansion, erected in the reign Police Constable, Thomas Simpson
of Queen Elizabeth by Richard Stephens esq. with an
SCHOOL.
attached chapel, and is now the residence of George
l..owsley-Williams esq National Enllowed (mixed &; infants), built in 1824, &
rebuilt in 1894, for 150 children; average attendance,
Letters through Tetbury 100 boys &; girls & 38 infants; there is a house for the
B.lltTON END, half a mile east, Nupp End, about a master; the school is in part supported by the endow-
ment, which is derived .from various sources, & pro-
quarter of a mile north-west, and Tickmore End, half a duces £100 yearly j Frank Arnold, master; Miss E. S.
mile north, are hamlets in this parish. Riggs, infants' mistress

Parish Clerk, Lewis Parke. Carrier to Stroud. George Pride, mono & thurs
Post Office. Mrs. Emily Keyes, sub-postmistress. Let-

ters arrive from Stroud at 8.30 a.m. ; dispatched at 5. 10
p.m. j sundays, arrive 8.30 a.m.; dispatched at 9.55

HOR:SLEY. Alway Ellen (Mrs.), cowkeeper Rutton Janet (Mrs.),farmer. Nup End
(Marked thus * letters received Beard E. &; Co. umbrella stick & *Jenner Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer.
through Nailsworth, Stroud.) walking stick manUJfacturers, Hon- Lower Lutheredge

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. ley mill Jones Richard, dairyman

*Blackwell William, Barton End Bick Joseph, baker Lord WiHiam, butcher

Clarke Mrs. Horsley court *Bishop Saml. farmer, Up. Lutheredge Maller John, Black Horse P.H. Til-

Cook Charles, Marsden villa *Blackwell John Howard, farmer, as- tups End

Cunningham Major-Gen.Percy Scuda- sistant overseer & clerk to parish Newth Charles, farmer, Downend

more, The Priory council, Barton End *Parke Lewis, shoe maker, Washpool

Davies Rev. William Henry Sylvester Clark John &; Hy. farmers, Cranmore *Pegler Alonzo, farmer, Yooks

M.A. Vicarage Clayfield Joseph. plasterer, Downend Pride George, carrier

Elliott Mrs. Mount Pleasant aayfield Jaseph, stone mason, Tick- Ratcliff Charles, carpenter, Downend

iEssex Mark, Fir Tree cottage more End Reading Room(Jsph.Farmiloe,'hon.sec)

*Green Hy. The Retreat, Barton Ertd Creed Hy. White Hart P.H. Downend Reynolds Louisa (Mrs.), Boot inn

*Gwynne Mrs. Barton grange Davies Edward, farmer, Court farm Rogers Charles, watch ma. Horsley hI

Horsley Major-Gen. Frank, Manor ho Earl Ethelbert, farmer, Tiltups End Russ Henry, boot maker, Downend

Lord Charles, HorsIey hill Elliott George, tiler & plasterer Sawyer Joseph, farmer, Sugley farm

Marriott Misses, Nup End Farmiloe John. Bell &; Castle P.H. &, Stacey William, farmer, Hay lane

Mi~ls Thomas Benjamin Maysey, coal dealer Tainton Henry, baker, Dowend

Tickmore End house Ford Elizh.(Mrs.),frmr. Rockness hill Waite John, farmer, Tiltups End

Swan Mrs. .sunnyside Gage Thos. Yew Tree P.H. Nup End

*Tainton Mrs. Washpool Gillman Harry, grocer OHAVEKAGE.

"Wheeler Mrs. Barton End Gi:,Iman Nigel, farmer, Nup End Postal address, Tetbury.)
ItWilliams Major Lawrence William Hawkins William Henry, cattle spice

Edward J.P. Barton End house manufac'turer. Tick'more End Lowsley-Williams Geo. Chavenage ho

COMMERCIAL. Heaven Isabella (Mrs.), laundress Bozworth Albt. farmer, Cha.venage fm

Abbott Thomas Vincent, farmer, Hay HitchingS' Ann Maria. (Mrs.), shpkpr Garlick Elizabeth (Mrs.), frmr. Lodge

Lane farm Horsley Cricket Club (Rt.Heaven,se<:) Knight Moses, farmer

Alway & Son, carpenters,wheelwrights *Howell Robert, shoeing &; general Nichol James, gamekeeper to George

& smiths smith. Barton End Lowsley Williams esq

,HORTON is a parish and village, near the Gloucester Baptist chapel here, end in the parish are the remains of
and Bath road,S miles north-east from Yate station on
the Bristol and Birmingham section of the Midland a Roman encampment. The charities are of about £8
railway, 3 north-east from Ghipping Sodbury and 16 yearly value, arising from legacies left at various times
north-east from Bristol, in the Southern division of the by the Brooke, Green and Alway families, and invested in
county, Grumbalds Ash hundred, Chipping Sodbury the funds. Part of the old manor house, which has been
union and county court district, Sodbury petty sessional restored, is the property of Admiral Sir Frederick William
division, rural deanery of Hawkesbury, archdeaconry of
Richards G.C.B., F.R.G.S. of 121 Victoria street, Lon-
don S W, who is lord of the manor; the house is at pre-

:Bristol and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. sent (1897) unoccupied. The Duke of Beaufort K.G.,
'James is an ancient building of stone, in the Early Eng- P.C. Admiral Sir F. W. Richards G.C.B. and A. G. Mus-
!ish style, consisting of chancel, nave of three bays, north grave esq. are chief landowners. The soil is sandstone

aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower with in the valley and inferior oolite <In the hill; subsoil, lias

pinnacles, containing 4 bells: there are monuments to clay and lias limestone. The chief crops are wheat, bar-

John Paston 1737, llnd Frances (Tichborne), and Anne ley and roots. The area is 3,540 acres; rateable value,

(Calvert), his wives; William Paston 1769, and Mary '£'3,493; the population in 18g1 was 342.

(Courtenay), 1747, and Mary (Chichester), his wives; Parish Clerk, Joseph James Collins.
William Paston 1673, Mary (Lawson), his wife, and Post Office. Obed Butler, sub-postmaster. Letters

others of the family; and the Hon. Anne Paston 1731: through Chipping Sodbury arrive at 8.5 a.m. & 4.30
the church was restored in 1865 at the cost of Mrs. E. p.m. &; dispatched at 8,45 a.m. &; 4.45 p.m. Postal
Fayle, the rector and parishioners: there are 300 sittings. orders are issued here, but not paid. The nearest
The register dates from the year 1567. The living is a money order &; telegraph office is at Chipping Sodbury,

rectory, net yearly value £400, including 39 acres of 3 miles distant
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees of Mrs. National School (mixed), built in 1860, for 80 children;
Brooke, and held since 1892 by the Rev. Alfred John average attendance, 42; Arthur Austerberry, master;

Begbie M.A. of Trinity College. Oxford. There is a small Mrs. Elizabeth Austerberry, sewing mistress

Begbie Rev. Mfred John M.A. (rec- Edwards John Edwin, farmer Morrish Martha (Mrs.), farmer, Fatt-

tor), Rectory Greenwood Eliza (Mrs.), farmer, ing House farm

Emmott William Rhodes, Hodon hall Woodman's farm Pullen James Hacker, farmer, Tun-

COMMERCIAL. Hatherell James, farmer &; landowner. grove farm

Alway Daniel, farmer, Totter Oak frm Wadden hill Reading Room (Rev. A. J. Begbie

Burnen William, boot maker Hawker John, farmer, Heskin'i farm M.A. hon. se<:)

JButler Obed, shopkeeper, Post office Hes Joseph, farmer Shipp iRichard J. C. frmr. The Farm

Clark Joseph, frmr. Grickstone farm Isaac Moses. farmer Shipway Alfred, wheelwright, carpen-

Collins Joseph James, regis-trar of Kello Jas.& Son,frmrs.Mapleridge fm ter & blacksmith, as'sistant over-

-births & deaths & vaccination officer Keepings Alfred, shopkeeper seer & tax collector

for distri.ct of Hawkesbury. Chip- Lewis Hy. In. farmer, Steven's farm Slade James, shopkeeper

ping Sodbury union Limbrick William, farmer, Court frm White Sidney Lewis, farmer, Hor-

iDavis Mrs. Uraina, farmer Long Obadiah Russel.frmr. Mil~ farm wood farm

RUCCLECOTE. origiIrally 8 large hamlet of Ohurch- station, and 7 south-west from Cheltenham, in the
down, but enjoying all the privileges of a township and Northern division of the county, hundred of Dudsklne
and King's Barton, Gloucester petty sessional division,
parIsh, having its own officers, was formed into an eccle- union and county court district, and in the rural deanery,
archdeaconry and diocese 01 Gloucester. The church at
siastical parish June 27. 1851; it is on the old Roman SS. Philip and James is a building of stone, in the Deeo-

Ermine street from Gloucester to Cirencester, 2! miles

south-east from Gloucester, where is the nearest railway

nmECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. !COMB. 217

rated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and cr(}ps are wheat, barley, beans, roots and some land in
3 western turret containing one bell: the east window
and five others -on the s-outh side are stained: there are pasture. The area is 1,420 acres; rateable value, £4,148 ;

about 250 sittings. The register dates from the year the population in 1891 was 459; ecclesiastical parish, 404.
1851. The living is a vicarage, yearly value £"200, with
residence, in the gilt of the Bishop of Gloucester, and held Parish Clerk, William Winters.
since 1868 by the Rev. Christopher Heath BoA. of Jesus
College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan chapel. This Post & M. O. 0., S. R & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
parish receives a share of Cox's (Badgworth) charity, Mrs. Tom Forester Worgan, SUb-postmistress. Let-

varying from '£3 too £4 yearly. Here are brickfields. ters arrive from Gloucester by messenger at 7.30 a.m. ;

Elmbridge Court, an interesting structure, partly Eliza- dispatched at 9. 15 1l.m. & 6·35 p.m. on week days only.
bethan, and surrounded by a moat, is now a farmhouse The nearest telegraph office is at Churchdown, 3 miles
in the occupation of Mr. Henry Melville Harvey. The distant

trustees of the late Joseph Lovegrove esq. are lords of A School "Board of 5 members was formed April 20,
the man'Or; the principal landowners are Thomas B. Sar- 188o; A. D. K. Godwin, 12 Queen street, Gloucester,
geant esq. Henry William Matthews esq. and Richard
clerk to the board
Wood esq. The soil is chiefly clay, but very fertile; sub- Board School (mixed), built about 1851, for 80 children;
soil, partly clay and blue lias and part gravel. The chief
average attendance, 60; Miss Blanche Collett, mistresi

Conveyance. Omnibus (Symonds) t(} Gloucester every
hour daily

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Roberts George, Chosen house Mathews Henry William,Yew Tree frm

Allaway Francis Henry, Rosslyn Sadler Mrs. 2 Elton villas Middleton Henry, market gardener

Apperley John, Cleethorpe Sly Arthur, Brookfield Middleton Robert, market gardener

Arkell Joseph, Firtree cottage Smith Miss, Notley Morgan Fredk. farmer, 'Pitmill farm

Arkell Mrs. The Green Taylor William George, E;mleigh PooIe Emily (Mrs.), farmer, :Broad-

:Bampfylde The Hon.Charles Warwick, Thorpe William Jarrett, Foley house croft farm

Hucc1ecote house Wilkins Miss, Gartage house Poole Thomas Henry, baker

"Berry William Edwin, 3 Elton villas Wood Richard, Hucclecote court Roan William Vaughan, farmer,

Ilrimmell Miss, Old :Farm cottage Beaconsfield farm
Colwell Wi;~iam, The Elms
COMMERCIAL. Roberts George, district representa-

Corbett Misses, Millbridge Bil'cher Henry, jobbing gardener tive for Nobel'sExplosives Co.Lim. ;

Edwards Mrs. Sunnybank Bircher WiHiam, market gardener telegrams, "Roberts,Gloster"; tele-

Evans James, BodaIla house Brazington Hy. frmr. The Zoons frm phone 305, Chosen house

Freer Mrs. Silverdale Ohambers Frederick WiIliam, brick Sterry Daniel WiIliam, beer retailer

Harvey Henry Melville, Elmbridge crt manufr.& proproHucclecote brick yd Teague James, blacksmith

Hea.th Rev. Ohristopher RA. The Chapman Mary (Mrs.), frmr. Noke crt Topps Simeon, builder, Brookside

Vicarage Cowcher Francis, nurseryman Tunley John, wheelwright

Jones Conway, Blenheim house Harvey Henry MelviUe, horse dealer Tuuley Thomas, tailor

Long WiI.:iam Thomas, Rosevi:Ie & farmer, Elmbridge court Wells Charles, farmer, The Noke

Merchant Henry, Green street Jones Daniel, farmer, The Green farm White Emily (Mrs.), Royal Oak inn

Page WaIter, Vine cottage Lea Henry, Waggon & Horses P.H Wilkes Geo. In. frmr. Hucclecote grn

Prebble Charles Trew, C.E.Temperley Lea Thomas, tailor

HUNTLEY is a village and parish, on the high road Probyn esq. of glebe house and land was effected in 1865,
from Gloucester to Ross, 3! miles north from Grange
and the rectory house, a picturesque Elizabethan resi-
Court and 2! east from Longhope stations on the R<Jss, dence of red brick, with Bath stone dressings, was built
in 1866, by the present rector: the views from the grounds
Hereford and Gloucester secti-on of the Great Western
are extensive, <the Cotswold, Malvern and Forest Hills
railway, 7 north-north-east from :Newnhain, 7 west from forming a fine background. A working men's reading-
Gloucester and 9 from Ross, in the Forest of Dean divi- room was built by the present rect-or in 1885, and has
sion of the county, duchy of Lancaster, union of West- now 25 members. There are charities of about £35 ~s.
yearly value, derived from land and houses. Huntley
bury-on-Severn, county court district of Gloucester, Manor is the seat of Benjamin St. John Ackers esq. J.P.
petty sessional division of Newent, rural deanery of North
Forest, and archdeaC'Onry and diocese of Gloucester. The lard of the manor; the house is built in the style of a
French chateau and was rebuilt in its present form from
church of St. John the Baptist was entirely rebuilt, with designs by Mr. S. S. Teulon, architect. R St. John
the exception of the tower, in the year 1863, at the sole
expense {)f the Rev. Daniel Capper, of Cheltenham, rect-or Ackers esq. and Inglis Jones esq. are the chief land-
owners. The soil is red sand; subsoil, sandstone rock.
from 1839, from designs by Mr. S. S. Teulon, architect; The chief crops are wheat, barley, roots, and much fruit,
it is a building of red sandstone with Painswick stone
dressings, in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, and some land in pasture. The acreage is 1,347; rate-
able value, £1,947; the population in 1891 was 422.
nave of three bays, transepts, north aisle, south porch,
vestry and a western tower, with spire of Painswick Parish Clerk, Waiter Williams.
Iltone, added in 1863, and containing 6 bells: the reredos
is of alabaster, mosaic and marble, with carved represen- Post, M. O. k T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,
tations of "the Lord's Supper," the" Nativity" and the
Parcel Post & Annuity &; Insurance Office. William
"Resurrection"; the pulpit, of the same material, is
Hart, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from Gloucester
also handsomely carved: all the windows are stained:
the fitting'S are of oak: there are sittings for 279 adults at 7.50 a.m.; dispatched thereto at 5.45 p.m
and 113 children. The register dates from the year 1663.
The living is a rectory, gross yearly value £321, includ- National Schools (mixed), erected by the present rector
ing 70 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the in 1875, at a cost of £2,000, for IS0 children; average
Rev. P. E. Miles RA. rector of Odstock, Salisbury, and attendance, 61 boys, 38 girls & 29 infants: there is a
held since 1866 by the Rev. Henry Edmund Miles M.A. house for the master &i mistress; William Humphreys,
of Magdalene College, Cambridge: an exchange with E. master; Mrs. Alice Humphreys, sewing mistress

Carriers to Gloucester. Thomas Phelps, Thomas Ruck,

George Gardner & Charles Harnes, every wed. & sat

Ackers Benjamin St. John JoP. Hunt- Clissold Daniel, shoe maker Harrison Emma (Mrs.), laundress

ley mm. ; k Carlton club,Londn.SW Cockburn John, farmer Hart Wm. builder & grcr. Post o:ffice

:Birt Mrs. Robert Davis William, farmer, Wood End frm Huntley Reading Room (Rev. R. C.

Blood John N. Huntley court Dobbins 'William, farmer Jenner, sec)

:Blood Mrs. Huntley court Dobbs Sukey Rudge (Mrs.), farmer, Knight Albt. farmer, Deep Fillin~ frm

Jenner Rev. Robert Christopher M.A. Coppice farm Matthews William, Red Lion P.H

(curate) Eacott Robt. farmer, Little North end Perry Robert,poultry breeder,Glouces-

Miles Rev. Henry Edmund M.A. (rec- Flatman George, head gamekeeper to ter Prize Poultry farm, Huntley

tor), Rectory B. St. John Ackers esq Phelps Thomas, carrier

Abbot R. & Co. incubator & other Gardner George, carrier Ruck Thomas, carrier

poultry appliance manufacturers, Gardner Jane (Mrs.), laundress Shewell John, castrator

engineers &c Green Joseph, grocer 0& boot dealer Williams Hannah (Mrs.), laundress

:Bennett William, head gardener to R Hale Albert, farmer &i dres~ maker

St. John Ackers esq Hale Eliza (Mis.s), beer retailer Williams Jane (Miss), day school

:Blayney Jordan, farmer & steward to Hamlen Joseph, saddle & harness ma Wyman Edwin. basket maker

B. St. John AckeI'S esq. Home frm Harper Oharles, blacksmith

100MB, or Iccomb, is a parish and village, 2 miles cester, in the Eastern division of the county, Slaughter
south-east from Stow-on-the-W{)ld station on the Ban- hundred, Siow-<m-the-Wold petty sessional division, union
bury and Cheltenham branch of the Great Western rail- and county court district, rural deanery 'Of Stow, arch-
way, 8 north-by-west from Burford, 26 east from Glou- deaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The

218 !COMB. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

church of St. Mary is a building of stone, chiefly in the divided between this and the neighbouring parish of

Early English style, and consisting of chancel, nave, south Stow-on-the-Wold. Icomb Place, the old manor house.

porch and a western -tower containing 4 bells: the chancel built by Sir John Blaket's father, and afterwards pur-

retains a piscina and attached to the nave is a south chased by Col. William Cope, is now the residence and
chapel, built in the 15th century as a burial place for property of Samuel Matthews Simpson esq. by whom i~

the Blaket family, and retaining a piscina: beneath the has been restored: the refectory is panelled with oak in

south window is a recumbent marble effigy of Sir John the linen pattern and bears traces of colour; 11 room in

Blaket knt. said to have fought at the battle of Agin- the attic story has a ship painted in distemper on the wall.

e<>urt, October 25, 1415, representative in Parliament for The manor of Icomb belongs to the trustees of the late

Leicestershire 1407-10 and 1413-14 and a resident at Dr. Hayward, of Stow-on-the-Wold, and that of L~urch

Icomb Manor House, who died in the year 1431; in front Icomb to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. The chief

of the tomb, under pointed arcades, are several sculp- landowners are the trustees 'Of the late Dr. Hayward, E.

tured figures of saints and other personages, the Eternal Reynolds, Richard Kibble esq. and Mrs. Reynolds. The

Father and Son appearing in conventional style in the soil is stone brash and clay; subsoil, clay and gravel. The

centre: there is also a monument to William Cope esq. chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 1,156

and his wife, the Lady Elizabeth Cope (nee Fane), cire. acres, divided into the hamlet of Icomb, with 651 acres,

1691, wid'Ow of his kinsman, Sir John Cope bart. of Han- and Church Icomb, formerly in Worcestershire, with 506

well, Oxon: the interior of the church was thoroughly acres; these tW'O portions are separately rated, Icomb,

restored in 1870 under the directions of Mr. Hopkins, £595, Church Icomb, £575. The population in 18'91

architect, of Worcester: there are sittings for 120 persons. was Icomb hamlet, 15; and Church Icomb, 120. .

The register of baptisms dates from the year 1545; mar- Sexton, William Turfrey.

riages, 1563; burials, 1602. The living is a rectory, net Post Office. Mrs. Ann Phillips, sub-postmistress. Let-

yearly V'lllue £90, including 96 acres of glebe, with resi- ters from Stow-on·the-Wold S.O. arrive at 9.15 a.m.

dence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Worcester, &; are dispatched at 5 p.m. week days only. Postal

and held since 1883 by the Rev. Herbert John Randall 'Orders are issued here, but not paid. Stow-on-the-

Marston M.A. of Hatfield Hall, Durham University. The Wold, 3 miles distant, is the nearest money order &;

Rural Institute and Reading Room was built in 1892 by telegraph office

subscriptions. There are charities of £33 yearly, derived National School (mixed), built in 1871, for 37 children;

from land left in 1691 by William Oope esq. and equally average attendance, 15; Miss N. Hughes, mistress

Johnson Joseph ICollett Thomas, shopkeeper Simpson Samuel Matthews, farmer

Marston Rev. Herbert John Randall' Hambidge Robey, shopkeeper Smith Brothers, farmers

M.A. Rectory Lane Richard, farmer Turfrey William, farm bailiff to Mrs.

Simpson Sam!. Matthews, Icomb place Rural Institute &; Reading Rooms Reynolds

Smith Charles Frederic (E. C. Stephens, hon. sec)

IRON ACTON is a village and parish, on the river os. 3d.. Until 1828 there stood in the grounds of Acton
Laden, and on the road from Bristol to Stroud, bounded House the remains of an ancient oak, from which it is
on the south by the river Frome, with a station on the said the place in part derived its name. Miss Cailtle
is lady of the manor. The principal landowners are the
Thornbury branch of the Midland rail;way, Ii miles north- trustees of the Rev. Johu Mayer, and there are several
west from Yate junction, 3! miles west-north-west from small landowners. The soil is clayey; subsoil, prin-
cipally coal and limestone. The chief crops are wheat,
Chipping Sodbury and 9 north-by-east flrom Bristol, in barley and roots. The area is 2.944 acres of land and
the SQuthern division of the county, Grumbalds Ash 8 of water; rateable value, £5,466; the population in
and Thornbury hundreds, Chipping Sodbury union and 1891 was 1,034.
county court district, Thornbury petty sessional divi-
sion, rural deanery of Bitton and archdeacQnry and diocese Under the provisions of the "Divided Parishes Act,
of Bristol The church of St. J ames is an ancient build- 1882," Nine Elms, 3 detached part of Iron Acton, 'Was
ing of stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chan- transferred to Alveston
cel, nave of four bays, aisles, north porch and an em-
baWed western tower with pinnacles, containing a clock ..\.CTO.N ILGAR is a tithing.
and 6 bells: in the church is a hamlet be:onging to one
L.A.TTERIDGE is a hamlet, li miles north-west.
of the Poyntz family, who lived in the reign of Henry
VII.; there is also an ancient m{)nument to Mr. John Parish Clerk, John Fugill.
Trewman, dated 1686: in the churchyard are the re-
mains of a very handsome but mutilated stone cross Post &; M. O. 0., S. B. &; Annuity &; Insurance Office.
with steps: the interior of the church was thoroughly -John Fugill, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive through
restored at the beginning of 1870, and the tower in Bristol at 7.15 a.m. &; 3.15 p.m.; dispatched at 3.45
1892, at a cost of £3,400: there are 300 sittings. 'l'he k 6.50 p.m.; dispatched on sundays at 3.45 p.m. The
register dates from the year 1570. The living is a rec- nearest telegraph office is at Frampton Cotterell, 2
tory, net yearly value £500, inc:uding 60 acres of glebe, miles distant

with residence, in the gift of Christ Church, Oxford, and Wall Letter Box, at Mudgedown, cleared at 8.55 a.m. &-.
held since 1889 by the Rev. George Rickards Browne 5.30 p.m. week days only
M.A. of Brasenose College, Oxford. There are Congre-
gational and Wesleyan chapels. Fairs are held on April Police Station, William Tayler &; John Edgington, pO'lice
constables
25 and September 13, for cattle, horses, sheep and pigs;
when these dates fall on a Saturday the fairs are held National School, erected in 1873-4 by subscription, on
on the following Monday. The charities consist of a
sum of £n, arising from land left by Thomas Listen a site given by the late rector, the Rev. John Salter, fur
esq. which is distributed to the poor in bread. Ray's 180 children; average attendance, 39 boys, 40 girls & 30
gift all £6 15s. derived from the interest on £150 of infants; James Chas. Cheddon, master; Mrs. Gertrude
Draper, mistress
4l per cent. Preference Stock in the London, Chatham Railway Station, Andrew Hy. Clutterbuck, station master
Carriers to Bristol.-Mainstone, tues. thurs. &; sat.;
and Dover Railway Company; and Hayes's gift of £2 White, from Wotton-under-Edge, tues. thurs. &; sat

mON AC'DON. Baker Hy. Chas. grocer &; gen. stores Nichols Henry, frmr. Acton Court fm

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Barnfield William, farmer, Wotton rd Nichols Samh (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Bradshaw Edwin, Ivy lodge Bazer James, farmer, Clay lane Nichols· William Henry, saddle &; har-

Browne Rev. George Rickards M.A. Blanchard Albert, Rose & Crown P.H ness maker, &; deputy registrar of

Rectory Codrington Sidney, butcher births &; deaths, Iron Acton 1lUb-

Callaghan Miss Cook Pharoah, farmer dis·trict, Chipping Sodbury union

Cox Mrs. The Laurels Cryer Jane (Mrs.), grocer Owen William, farmer, New lodge

GwinneU Alfred Elliott Mary (Mrs.), farmer, Dyer!!' la Panes Joseph, farmr. Box Bush farm

Hedges Mrs Fugill Mbt.Stphn. carpntr.pntr.&;grcr Pinnell Henry, market gardener

Mainstone James, jun Fugill John, builder, Post office Rugman !<'rancis, farmer, Acton lodge

Marshall Mrs. Horm Ray Jordan George, Lamb inn Shepherd Harriet (Miss), farmer.

Pike Mrs. Ivy dean Kendall Henry, assistant overseer Mill farm

Shipp Miss, Hill house Kendall Solomon, boot &; shoe maker Smith Frederick George, auctioneer

Tayler Edwin Mainstone Alfred, shopkeeper &; farmer, Mudgedown farm

Wickham Mrs. Henry Mainstone James, boot &; shoe dlr Smith Sidney, frmr. Rangeworthy rd

WilIiams John, North End house Mainstone Mark, sho'Pkeeper Tayler Edwin, White Hart P.R

COMMERCIAL. Marsh William, mason Taylor Thomas, farmer, Pool farm

.Alsop George, farmer Mills Charles, blacksmith Tyler Samuel, pork butcher

Amos Edwin, boot &; shoe maker Nichols, Matthews &; Co. auctioneers, Wadley Henry, farmer &; water miller,

Amos Gabriel, grocer, Chaingate lane valuers &; estate agents Nibley mill

DIREarORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. KEMERTON. 219

Washbourne In.Codrington Arms P.H Hall Joseph, farmer Gibbs Mrs. Hill house
Sandford Henry
Watkins George, farmr. Nibley lane Meredith Mark, farmer
COMMERCIAL.
Watkins Henry, farmer, Pool farm Meredith Thomas, farmer
Beak William, farmer
Weaver Sidney, farmer Taylar Celia (Mrs.), farmer Cam Ann (Miss), shopkeeper
Fletcher Sarah (Mrs.), haulier
Webb Benjamin, farmer, Wotton road Taylor GeOl'lge, farmer Gibbs J oseph, yeoman, Grove cottage
Gibbs William, farmer
Wollen James, farmer Weston George, grocer Maskell William, beer ret. Whitehorse
Squibbs Samuel, carpenter
UTTERIDGE. .AiarON !LGAIR.

Blanch Alvan, farmer

Cullemore Jas. carpenter &; wheelwrt Fry WiIIiam

KEMBLE is a parish and scattered village, 4 miles by the Rev. Richard Howell Taylor. The charities amount
to about £30 yearly foor the poor not receiving parochial
south-west from Cirencester stations on the Great relief. Kemble Manor House is the seat of Michael Bid-
dulph esq. M.P., D.L., J.P. who is lord of the manor.
Western and Midland and South Western Junction rail- and with William Price Jones esq. the principal land-
ways, 8 north-east from Malmesbury and 91 from Lon- owner. The soil is stone brash and clay; subsoil, gravel
don, in the Eastern division of the county, Cirencester and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats, beans
and turnips. The area is 3,058 acres of land and 20 of
hundred and petty sessional division, Cirencester union water; rateable value, £5,771; the population in 1891
was 482.
and county court district, rural deanery and archdeaconry
EWELL (or Ewen), is a hamlet, I mile east. Elm
of Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The parish
was formerly in Wiltshire, but from 1st April, 1897. Green is the residence of Richard Demson Cumberland-
Jones esq.
was annexed to the county of Gloucester by an Order
of the Local Government Board, dated 30th April, 1896. Parish Clerk, Richard Clifford.
Post & Telegraph Office.-Charles Saunders, sub-post-
which Order was confirI(l.ed by the Local Government
Board's Provisional Orders Confirmation (No. 13) Act, master. Letters through CireIft:ester arrive at 8.20
1896. One of the sources of the Thames is in this parish. a.m. -& are dispatched at 5.45 &; 8.30 p.m.; sunday.
Here is the junction station of the Cirencester line with 6.10 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
Cirencester is the nearest money order office; there
that from Swindon to Gloucester and Cheltenham. The is also a telegraph office at the railway station for dis-
church of All Saints, rebuilt in 1877-8, at a cost of patch only
£2,000, is an edifice in the Early English style, consist- Railway Station, Kemble Junct.ion, Jeremiah Greenaway,
station master
ing of chancel, nave of two bays, north aisle, mortuary
A School Board of 5 members was formed 15 Sep-
chapel, south porch and western tower containing 5 bells,
tetnber, 1888; J. DaIlman, clerk to the board &; a.ttend-
and surmounted by a steeple 120 feet in height: it ance officer
contains an ancien~ tomb of a Knight Templar and some Board School (mixed), erected in 1873, for 90 children, &;
interesting monuments: in the mortuary chapel is a enlarged in 1890 for 130, with house for the master;
average attendance, 96: Harry Bridgwater, master;
curious triple window oil the 13th century, said to have M~8S }<'lorence Moffatt Lewis, infants' mistress
been brought from Salisbury cathedral: the porch, re- Carrier to Cirencester.-Thos. Morton, mono wed. &; fri

markably large, was built in the time ot Henry Ill.:

over the entrance is a beautiful Norman arch with the

chevron ornament: the church has 250 sittings. The
register dates from the year 1679' The living is a vicar-

age, gross yearly value £250, net £230, arising from glebe,
in the gift of M. Biddulph esq. M.P. and held since 1861

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. COMMERCIAL. Morton Edmund, gardener to W.Price

Biddulph Michael M.P., D.L., J.P. Barnes Tom, grocer, Ewen Jones esq. Ewen

Manor house; & 19 Ennismore gar- Barton Charles, farm bailiff to M. :\{orton Thomas, news agt. &; carrier

dens & Reform & Brooks' clubs, Biddulph esq. M.P Painter Thomas, faremr, Ewen

London S W Compton Raymond, carpenter, Ewen Parker Edwin, stone mason, Ewen

Cumberland-Jones Richard Denison, Compton WilIiam, vermin destroyer Sargeant Annie Ru!h (Miss), farmer &;

Elm green Compton 1ViIIiam Harry, butcher miJer (water), Kemble mill

Gouldsmith Jes-se Devenish DaIIman John, estate manager to M. Saunders Chas.blacksmith, Post office

Hathaway John, Brookside ho. Ewen Biddulph esq. M.P Saunders- Eliza Matilda (Miss),shpkpr

Mackay WilIiam, Ewen house Davis John & Co. drapers & grocers Saunders John, assistant overseer

Taylor Rev. Richard Howell (vicar) Jaques Thomas, shopkeeper Winchcombe Geo. Coffee tavern,Statn

Veasey Alfred M.A. (curate) Morton Maurice, haulier &; frmr.Ewen

KEMERTON is a village and parish on the high road brings in £21 yearly. On the summit of the Bredon

from Tewkesbury to Evesham, It miles east from Bredon hill is an ancient Roman camp surrounded by a deep

station on the Midland railway and 5 north-west from trench; at a somewhat lower level is a piece of ground

Tewkesbury, in the Northern division of the county, lower evidently intended for military purposes. The trustees

division of Tewkesbury hundred, Tewkesbury union, of the late John Hopton esq. of Canon Frame, Hereford-

county court district and petty sessional division, rural shire, whG are lords of the manor, the rector, Mrs.

deanery of Winchcomb and archdeaoonry and diocese of Wadley, Mrs. Tidmarsh and Mr. George Smith are the

Gloucester. The village is situated in a delightfully chief landowners. In the neighbourhood are good

picturesque locality, surrounded by hills commanding quarries: 1St stratum (top of the hill), oolite limestone;

extensive views, Bnd is near the Carrant brook, which 2nd, upper lias; 3rd, marlstone; 4th (valley), lower

runs into the river Avon: the parish is ooundeil on the lias. The chief crops are barley, wheat, beans and roots.

north, east and west by Worcestershire. The church of The area is 1,629 acres; rateable value, £2,569; the

St. Nicholas, rebuilt, with the exception oft the tower, poulation in 1891 was 469.

in 1847, is a building of stone in the Decorated style, Under the provisions ()f the "United Parishes .Act,

consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, porch and an em- 1882," a detached part of Aschurch was added to

battled western tower with pinnacles, containing 6 bells Kemerton.

and a clock: the tower was restored in 1879, at a cost Sexton, John Figget.

of £520: a few ·moderf nthm uralt tabtl'ets, rfemthovedh fromh the Post, M. O. &; T. 0.,. T. M. 0 ., S. R,ExprDess eh.very,
the t Ime 0 e res ora IOn 0 e c urc ,are
chanceI at Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office. Mrs. Elizh.
now in the north aisle: the east window and seven others Hillman, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive by mail cart
from Tewkesbury at 7.45 a.m.; there is a day mail
are filled with stained glass: there are sittings for 330 on week days arrives at 3 p.m. &; letters can be had
persons. The register dates from the year 1572. The
living is a reet{)ry, net yearly value £360, with 3°1 acres by calling at the office at 3. 15 p.m.; dispatched at 5.20

of glebe and residence, in the .gift of the OJrporation of p.m. & sundays II a.m. Telegraph office open from
Gloucester, as trustees of St. Bartholomew's Hospital
of Queen Elizabeth's t\mndation, and held since 1877 by 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. week days &; from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.

the Rev. Jerome John Mercier. The Catholic church, on sundays

dedicated to St. Benet, is a building of stone, consist- SCHOOLS.

ing of chancel and nave, and will seat about 130 persons: National (mixed), for 90 children; average attendance,

the east window is stained and has a figure 01 St. 69; & built in 1847 by the late rector &; endowed with

Benedict, the patron saint of the church: attached is land to the amount of about £5 lOS. a year; Thomas

9'a residence for the priest: there is also a Wesleyan chapel, Cross, master; Miss Jane Smart, infants' mistress

and each has a burial ground. A plot of acres of Catholic, flar 60 children; average attendance, 32; there
land, left for the repairs of the church, was sold in 1885 is a residence for the mistress; Mrs. Mary Cassere, mist

lfor £750, and the money invested in the funds: it now Carriers.-Booth &; Smith, to Tewkesbury, wed &; sat
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. tBuckle Miss, Hill cottage de Winton Alfred

Barnes Edward Henry, KemeTton farm Bagnall Mrs Holland Mrs. King's lea

220 KEMEBTON. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Hopton :Mrs. Upper court Williams Mrs. The Priory Grizzel1 John, shoe maker

Hyatt John COMMERCIAL. Hipkins Edward Tenry, butcher

:Mann Mrs. Kemerton lodge Alien Charles, baker & butcher James Isaac, miller (water), Lower ml

:Mercier Rev. Jerome John (rector), Alien Emily (Mrs.), baker Long Boory James, grocer &; draper

Northwood Aston James, wheelwright Martin Eliza (Mrs.), Crown inn

O'Brien Miss Barnes Edward Henry, farmer, Kem- Nind Frederick, farmer, Aston farm

Pearce Miss, Malvern view erton farm Pearl Louisa (Mrs.), beer retailer

Phillips Thomas, Lower court Blackwell Elizabeth(Mrs.),parish nurse Smith George, farmer

Robinson Alfred, The Castle Clarke Mary Ann (Mrs.), provsn. dlr Smith Job, builder &; contractor

Rudd Miss Devereux James, boot maker Smith John, beer ret. & miller (water)

Rudd Mrs de Winton Alfred L.R.C.P.Edin., Smith William, farmer, Rectory farm

Smith Mlrs. Floral villa M.R.C.IS.Eng. surgeon & medical Spiers Emma (Mis1s), grocer

Spencer Mrs officer & public vaccinator for Over- Spiers William James, miller (water),

Smith George, jun bury district Upper mill

Smith The Misses, Primrose bank Dudfield .Alfred, farmer Walker John, market gard.eneT

Thomas Rev. Charles Moysius O.S.B. Girls' Friendly Society Home of In- Wallace Ann (Mrs.),farmer, Home frm

(Catholic) dustry (Mrs. Mercier, hon. sec.; Williams Thomas, blacksmith

Tidmarsh Mrs. The Grange Miss Francis S. Barber, matron)



KEMPLEY is a parish on the confines of Hereford- 100 'persons: there is also a Baptist chapel, 'built in 1856.

shire, near the high road from Gloucester and Newent The charities amount to about £II yearly, derived from

through Dymock to Much Marcle, in Herefordshire, 2 Consols, and from land left bv Mrs. Elizabeth Pyndar.

miles west from Dymock station Dn the Gloucester, Led- Stonehouse, 3 mansion of the roth century, and formerly

bury and Woreester branch Qf the Great Western rail- the manor house, was rebuilt in 1883, when nearly all the

way, 6 south-south-west from Ledbury, 4~ north-north. fine oak carving, exhibiting the crown and initio.l! or

west from Newent and I2! west-north-west from Glou- James I. was removed by the late Earl Beauchamp to

cester, in the Forest of Dean division of the county, Botloe Madresfield Court, Worcestershire; the only ,portion of

hundred, Newent union, petty sessional division and the old house now remaining' is the kitchen ceiling; the

county court district, rural deanery of North Forest, and building is now Qccupied by Mr. William H()pkins Pullen,

archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The church of famer. Earl Ileauchamp is lord of the manor and chief

St. Mary is an edifice of stone in the Norman style, con· landowner. The soil is a stiff red clay and loam, and

sisting of chancel, nave, ·south porch, and a western tower applied nearly in equal portions to arable and pasture, and

with plain parapet containing 3 bells: the chancel arch planted with fruit trees, bu~ at such a distance from each
and vaulting, the walls of chancel and nave, and the splays other as not to interfere with the growth of the various

of various windows, are covered with frescoes, discovered 'crops. The soil, being deep, is well adapted to the oak,

on the restDration of the church in 1872; those in the elm, apple and pear, which are found here in great

chancel probably date from about the year II30; others in luxuriance. The orchards are very productive of fruit for

the nave and south aisle are of the 13th and 15th cen- cider and perry; subsoil, clay and gravel. Bricks are

turies, and there are blue letter texts on the west wall made here. The area is 1,400 acres; rateable value,

of the nave of ,the I'5th or early 16th century: there is £1,605; the population in 1891 was 272.
a ma~ble monument to the Pyndar family, dating from
1721, and a small stained east window to Mrs. Drummond, Letter Box cleared at 6.30 p.m. week days only. Letters
through Gloucester arrive at 8.30 a.m. The nearest
d. 18],6: there are 120 sittings. The register dates from money order &; telegraph office is at Dymock, 2 miles
distant
the year 1637. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value
National School (mixed), buEt in 1866, for 75 children;
£14°, inc:uding 6 acres of glebe, with residence, in the average attendance, 45; Miss Lilian Carpenter, mistress
gift of Earl Beauchamp, and held since 1886 by the Rev.

Edward Denny M.A. of Pembroke College, Oxford. The

chapel of ease, built by the late Earl Beauchamp, contains Carrier.-Mason, to Ledbury, on tues.; tD Ross, thurs.;

a fine picture of the "Crucifixion," and has sittings fol' returning same day

Denny Rev. Edward M.A. Vicarage Honeyfield James Charles, farmer, Palmer Mary Ann Hill (Mrs.), farmer,

Archer Thomas, farmer, l1'he Folly Bridge's farm Kempley court

Ilrooke A~bert, farmer, Moor house J ames Richard, builder, Brooklands Palmer John, farmer, Bullock's end

Ilrooke Isaac, farmer, Prior's court Jones Reuben, builder &; contractor, Philips Richard, hurdle maker

Burgum Arthur, farmr. Matthew's frm Kempley green Pullen Wm.Hopkins,frmr.Stone house

Clinton JaS'. horse breaker, Upper ho Jones Samuel, farmer, Print house Smith William, farmer, Green farm

Dyer William, farmer '& brick maker, J ones W'illiam, farmer, Powell's end Tandy Henry, farmer, fruit grower 1&

Lower house Jones William, shoe maker &; shopkpr cider & perry maker, Seycells. See

Edwards Jas. foreman at brick works Muson Sarah (Mrs. ), farmer &; car- adve~
French George, shopkeeper rier, Brick house

XE:MP SFORD is a parish and village on the river an eastern bell cot containing one bell: there are sittings

Thames, which here separates the county from Wiltshire, for 120 persons. The Rev. Robert Podmore Clark, of St.

3! miles south from Fairford terminal station of the East Aidan'~, has been curate in charge since 1894. 'l'here is a

Gloucestershire branch of the Great Western railway, 10 Catholic chapel at Horcott, dedicated to St. Thomas of

north from Swindon and 10 south-east from Cirencester, Canterbury, with 'Sittings for 100 persons, and an at·

in the Eastern division of the county, hundred of Bright- tached cemetery and presbytery. John Faulkner esq.

wells Barrow, Fairford petty sessional division, Oiren- who is lord of the manor, the vicar, Thomas Arkell esq.

~ester union and eounty court district, rural and Charles and John Rickards esqrs. are the principal

deanery of Fairford, arohdeaconry of Cirencester landowners. The soil is light sandy; subsoil, clay, sand-

and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. Mary stone and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats and

the Virgin is an edifice of stone in the Norman and Per- barley. The area is 4,936 acres; rateable value, £3,958;

pendicular .styles, consisting of chancel with south aisle, the population in 1891 was 790.

lofty nave, and a remarkably fine central tower with pin- DUNFIELD, I mile north-west, HOROOTT, 3 miles
nacles, containing a clock and 6 bells: the ehurch, which
is richly adorned with ·stained windows, was partially ;re- north, near the river Coin, and WHELFORD, I! miles
stored and a chancel aisle added in 1858, and the restora-
tion has since been completed during the periods 1885-7 north, on the river CoIn, are hamlets.
and 1'889-91, at a total cost of £2,560: there are about 400 Parish O:erk, Henry Percy ,St. John.
sittings. An aere of land, the gift ()f the trustees of the Chapelry Derk of St. Anne's, Frederick Gosling.
Faulkner estate, has been added to the churchyard and
inclosed with a' wall and railing, put up at the expense Post i& T. O. & Express Delivery Office.-Miss Eliza-
of the late .John Hampson Janes esq. The register dates beth Tytherleigh, SUb-postmistress. Letters arrive from
from the year 1578. The living is a vicarage, with the Fairford S.O.at 7.45 a.m.; dispatched at 6.10 p.m.
chapelry of Whelford annexed, yearly value from 510 acres Postal orders are issued here, but not paid. The nearest
of glebe £340, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of money order office is at Castle Eaton
Gloucester, and held since 1880 by the Rev. Maurice
William Ferdinand St. John B.D. of Durham University, Wall Letter Box, Whelford, cleared 6,4° p.m.; on sun-
days, 11.40 a.m.; at Horcott, cleared at 7.10 p.m.;
sundays, 12.10 p. m

SOHOOLS.

Tesidentiary canon of Gloucester and rural dean of Fair- National (mixed), with master's residence, for nB chil·

ford. St. Anne's chapel of ease, at Whelford, II miles dren; average attendance, 75; & endowed by the late

north, was erected in 1864 from designs by the late J. E. Marquess <JIf Bath with £10 yearly; William GibboD,

Street esq. R.A. and consists of apsidal chancel, nave and master; Mrs. Kllite Gibbon, mistress

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. KINGSWOOD. 221

School (mixed), Whelfard, built, with residence for mis- CARRIER.

tress, in 1875, for 60 chhdren; average attendance. Thomas Stroud, to Cirencester, mono &; fri.; to High.

8o; Mrs. Annie Ja,ne Chilvers, mistress worth, wed.; to Swindon station, sat

KEMiPSFORD. Hathaway John Henry, shopkeeper Day Charles &; William, plasterers

Battersby William, Kempsford manor Hewer Thomas, farmer, Dudgrove Dunn John, farmer

Chambers Major Reginald Gordon, Rigging John, blacksmith Edmonds Edwd. Nash, miller (water);

Pentre house Higgs Philip, tailor farmer, corn factor. hay &; straw

Faulkne·r John J.P. Benbow house Iles Austin Thomas, farmeT, Reevey merehant &; mealman,Whelford mill;

Rickards John. Furzey hill Keen Elizabeth (Miss), OOlbroideress &; at Cirencester

St. John Rev. MaUl-i~e William Fer- Lappington Charles, beer retailer Gosling Fredk. assistant overseer &

dinand RD. (vicar, canon of Glo'ster North William Westbury, George inn land surveyor

&; rural de,an), The Vicarage Parker Edwin, baker.& grocer Iles George, blacksmith

COMMERCIAL. Riekards John, farmeT & landowner, Poole Mary Ann (Mrs.), Queen's

Arkell William, farmer & breeder of Furzey hill Head P.R

short horn cattle &; Oxford down Stroud Thomas, carrier HORCOTT.

sheep, Manor farm Yates William, carpenter, builder &;

Bowley & Son., builders &; timber mers wheelwright English VeryRev.Monsignor(Catholic),

Bowley J onathan. farmer lIorcott Presbytery

Brooks J<'rederick, beer retailer WHELF ORD. Collett William, beer retaile-r

Chesterman James, farmer Arkell Thomas, Pope's court Hill Edmund, farmer, Horcott farm

Ooole Raymond, carpenter Olark Rev. Robert Podmore (curate in Hunt lIenry, stone mason, School ho

Couling Isaac, carpenter I charge) TIes RichaJ,'d Albert J.P. farmer
Couling Thomas, tailor
Bridges Robert, farm bailiff to Mr. Yells William, road surveyor

Daniel George Henry, groeer R. Pain.ter

KINIGSCOTE is a parish and village, on the road from White, of Kingsc()te. is distributed to the poor at Christ.

Tetbury to Wotton-under-Edge, Dursley and Berkeley, mas. Kingscote Park, the property of Col. Sir Roberb

4 miles south-west from Nailsworth terminal station of Nigel Fitzhardinge Kingscote, lord of the manor and chief

a. branch of the Midland railway, 5 north-west from Tet- landowner, is now the residence of John Anstruther

bury station on the branch of the Great Western railway Berners esq.: the mansion is a large and handsome build-

from Kemble Junction, ,0: east from Dursley, 22 south- ing of stone, in a we:I-wooded park of about 300 acres.

south-west from Cheltenham and 16 south from GIou- The soil is brash loam, subsoil, oolite. The chief crops

cester, in the Eastern division of the county, upper divi- are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 1,819 at!:res;

sion of Berkeley hundred, Tetburv union and petty ses- rateable value, {,I,479; the population in 1891 was 233.

sional division; Dursley county court district, rural deanery Under the provisions of the "Divided Parishes Act.

of Dursley, and archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. 1882," part of Wotton-under-Edge has been transferred to

Some springs, feeders of the Avon, rise in this parish. Kingscote, and by Local Government Board Order 14750,

The church of St. John the Evangelist is an ancient build-. March 25, 1883. a detached part of Newington Bagbath,

ing of stone, in the Early English style, consisting of known as Old Leaze, was transferred to Kingscote.

chancel, nave of two bays', north transept, south poreh Parish Clerk, Timothy Leonard.

and a tower containing 2 bells: there are 270 sittings. Post, M. O. &;~. 0 .• T. M. 0., .
The register dates from the year 1651. The living is a Express Delivery, Parcel
chapelry, attached to the reotory of Newington Ilagpath, Post &; Annmty &; Insuranc~ Office.-Thomas Bruton.
yearly value £350, in the gif.t of Col. Sir R. N. F. Kings- sub-postmaster. Le~ters arl'lve through Wotton-under-
Edge, at 8 a.m.; dispatched at 5.20 p.m. &; sundays
cote K.C.B. and held since 1872 by the Rev. Man Kings.

cote Cornwall M.A. of Trinity ~llege, Cambridge, who 1.1 a.m .
resides at Ashcroft. Wotton-under-Edge. There is a Pohce StatlOn, George Wakefield, constable

reading room, established in the year 1880 and supported The children of this parish attend the school at Newing-

by subscriptions. The interest of £100, left by Mr. John ton Ilagpath

Berners John Anstruther, Kingscote pk Elliott Edwin. road surveyor to Tet- Palfrey Charles lIenry. carpenter

Gist Major Francis J.P. The Cottage bury highway board Peter James, land steward &; farm

COMMERCIAL. Hobbs Elias, Hunter's Hall inn bailiff to Sir R. N. F. Kingscote

Bmton Thomas, shopkeepeT,Post office Kingscote Coursing Club (E. Hobbs, K.C.B

Butler Goorge, blacksmith sec.), Hunter's hall Reading Room (Samuel Wat~n, sec)

Butt Thomas, farmer, Ilinley Kingscote Estate Office (James Peter, Richings William, gardener to Major

Chappell James, boot maker steward) F. Gist J.P

Daniel Thomas, farmr. Hazlecote farm Lending Library (Rev. A. K. Cornwall Wathen Samuel, head gardener to J.

Elderkin 'Henry, gamekeeper to J. A. M.A. sec.), School house A. Berne'l's esq

Berners esq Leonard Timothy, stone mason

KINGSWOOD, near Bristol, on the London r~ad, 4 tuck esq. of Keynsham, is lord of the manor. The prin-
miles east from Bristol and 11 east from Warmley station cipal :andowners are Mrs. Hunter, of London, Mrs. Stone
on the Midland railway, is an ecclesiastical parish formed and Messrs. Goorge, Philip and ,Sydney Fussell. The soil
is [oamy; subsoil, Pennant swne and cool. The chief
March 29th, 1825, from the parish of Bitton, Gloucester- crops are wheat, barley, oats and roots. There are also
shire, in the Southern division of that county, Langley many market gardens. The population of the ecclesias-
upper hundred, Keynsham union, Ilristol county court tical parish in 1891 was 7,885, including 82 in the reforma-
district, Lawford's Gate petty sessional division, rural
deanery of Bitton, and archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. tory, and of the urban district 9,II4; rateable value of the
The parish is lighted by electricity by the Western
Counties Electric Light; and Power Syndicate Limited. latter, £25,453.
Sexton, Henry Garland.
It was governed by a Local B~ard, formed in 1890, but
under the provisions of the" Local Government Act, 1894" Post, M. O. & T. 0., T. M. 0., S. R, Express Delivery~
Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office.-Sidney
(56 i& 57 Vict. c. 73), it is now under the control of an Henry Verrier, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive at 6.23
Urban District Council, of 15 members, divided int() 3 &; II a.m. & 3 &; 6 p.m. Ilox closes at 9.55 &; 12.55 a.m.
wards, and including Oldland. The church of the Holy & 4.45, 7.55 & 10·40 p.m.; sunday, 4·45 &; 10.40 p.m.
Trinity is a building of stone in the Early English style, Money orders are granted and paid from 8 a.m. till
consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a 8 p.m
western tower, 90 feet in height, containing a clock and
2 bells: there are 520 sittings, all of which are free. The Post Office, Warmley lIill.-Isaac C. TIes. sub-postmaster.
register dates fr'Om the year 1823. The living is a vicar- Letters through Bristol
B()x cleared 9.40 a.m. & 12.15, 4.25 &; 7.30 p.m. week
age, gross yearly value £313, with residence, in the gift days only. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
Warmley, I mile distant. is the nearest money order &;-
of the Bishop of Ilristol, and held since 1896 by the Rev. telegraph office
Henry Edward Dandy M.A. of St. John's College. Cam-
bridge. Here are Wesleyan, United Methodist, Congre- Wall Letter Box, Kingswood road, cleared at 9.30 a.m.

gational, Primitive Methwist and Moravian chapels. The & 12.30, 4. IS & 7.30 p.m.; Ranham Road Letter Bo~
inh3lbitants are chiefly employed in shoemaking and in the
collieries. There are branches here of Stuckey's Banking cleared at 9.30 a.m. &; 12.4°, 4.30 &; 7.40 p.m.; lIopeJ"

Co. Lim. and Lloyd's Ilank Limited. Kingswood Re. will Hill Letter Box cleared at 8 a.m. &; 12.20 &; -4 p.m. ;

forma-tory for the reception af juvenile offenders was certi- High street cleared: at 9·45 a.m. &; 12.15, t~ &; 7·35
p. m. week da) j ~n.y
fied October 4th. 18:54, it was greatly improved in 1891,

and will now hold 120 boys. Frederiek Edward Whit-

222 KI~GSWOOD. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

URBAN DISTRICT OOUNCIL. PUBLIO OFFICERS.

Council offiC€s, KingswQod Hill. Medical Officer, No. 4 District, Keynsham Union, Richard
W. Brimacombe, Kingswood; & Public Vaccinator, No.
Meetings aTe 'held at 6 p.m. every alternate wednesday, &; 6 District, Barlon Regis Union, Charles J. Perrott
the works committee on monday preceding board meet-
ing, & from time to time as business requires; the Registrars {)f Births &; Deaths, Keynsham Union, Bitton
finance committee meet monthly &; when called together SUb-district, Joseph B. BaTton; deputy, Edward Hath.
way; Oldland Sub·district, William Till, Downend;
MEMBERS. deputy, John Greening, Downend

Chairman, William Dnniel Strange, Kingswood Hill. Registrar of Marriages for Gloucestershire, part of Keyn.
Vice-Chairman, Theophilus James Fitzmaurice. sham Union• .Alfred Ladd, Kingswood Hill

Hanham Ward. Relieving Officer, No. 2 DistTict, Warmley out-relief
Union, Joseph B. Barton, Kingswood
tJohn Anstey tAlfred Isaac Evans *Arthur Painter
Sanitary Inspector for Gloucestershire, part of Warmley
Oldland Ward. out-relief Union, Charles C. Cross, Mangotsfield

tWo D. Strange tTheophilus Jas. Fitzmaurice SCHOOLS.
tGeorge Britton *Samuel Burchill
tJ. C. Border *Philip Robert Betty A School Board of 7 members, called the Kingswood 4\
tJoseph Coates *Isaac Pow
tJohn Newman, jun Oldland School Board, was formed in 1889; Alfred
Ladd, Kingswood, clerk to the board
Mangotsfie1d Ward. School Attendance Officer, John Greening, Downend
Board, High street, built in 1892, fOT 264 boys &:; 250
t William. Wilshire :George Gage *William Brain girls &; 310 infants; average attendance, 274 boys, 21I
girls & 244 infants; Andrew Ellery, master; Miss M.
Marked thus t retire in April, 1898. E. Kitchen, mistress; & Miss Harriet Hirons, infants'
mistress
Marked thus : retire in April, 1899. BOllll'd, iMoravian road (infants), for 163 children; aver-
Marked thus * retire in April, 1900. age attendance, 146; Mrs. Sarah Ann Shipp, mistress
Wesleyan (mixed), built in 1850, for 600 children; aver·
OFFICERS. age attendance, 369 boys 0& girls, 198 infants; Edward
J ames Davis, master; Mrs. Davis, mistress
Clerk, Percy Baldwin, 29 Clare street, Bristol Kingswood Refolfmatory, for 120 boys, George Whitwe11,
Treasurer, H. T. Coles, Keynsham supt.; William Verity, schoolmaster
Medical Officer of Health, Charles John Perrott L.R.C.P.
CONVEYANCE.
& S.I. Richmond place
Surveyor &:; Sanitary Inspector, David Henry William Bristol Tramways &; Carriage Co. Limited; electric cars
from Old Market street, Bristol, every 12 minutes from
Powell, Brook house, Warmley
Collector, Edwin Short, Hanham 7.48 a.m. to II p.m. & to Bristol from 7.13 a.m. to

County Police Station, Warmley Hill, Harry Ricketts, 10.49 p.m
inspector; William Shaw & J ames Vaughan, sl.'rgeants,
&; 9 constables .

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Pope William Border John, shopkeepr. Hanham road

Bel~her Rev. James (Congregational) Pow William, Myrtle house Brain Aaron, carpenter

Bolwell Frank, South street Pratt Edwin Woodall, Prospect house Brain Daniel, beer retailer

Bridges Arthur J. High street Pullin Robert Brain George-, furniture broker

Brimacombe Richard William Reed John Brain Gilbert, carpenter

Brimacombe Titus WaIter Sheppard William, Elgin house Brain William, grindery dealer, Hope.

Brown Rev. Samuel (Wesleyan) Silverthorn William, Warmley hill well hill

Brown Misses, Norwood house Staddon Benjamin Brain William, shopkeeper

Bryant Joseph, The Orchard Stone Misses Bridges Alfred, painter 1& glazier &;

Cook William F Taylor James, Warmley hill brick maker

Crates FTederick, Hanham road Thompson Mrs Brimacombe Richard William M.R.C.S.

Crates Joseph, The Lindens Wetton John William, Hanham road Eng., L.R.C.P.Lond. surgeon &

Crates Georgoe . Whiteombe Frederick, Rose-bery house medical officer, Warmley out-relief

Dandy Rev. Hy. Edward M.A. (vicar) Whitwell George union

Davies ~ydney, Belle vue Wilcox Rev. Joseph (Omgregational) Bristol Mercury (In.Herbert Williams,

Douglas Edwin, Hanham lane Williams Francis mgr.), district office, Regent street

Douglas William, 'Haooam lane Wiltshire Alexander, Warmley hill Bristol Tramways &; Carriage Co. Lim.

EUery Andrew Wiltshire Samuel, Newton place Depot

Fifoot Thomas, Bank house Young James William Bristol Sidne.y, draper

Flook Alfred John, 12 Belgave terrrace COMMERCIAL. Britton Charles, greengrocer

Frith It1rederick Henry AIDos .Alfred, mason Britton George, boot maker

Fry James Samuel Amos Andrew, jun. builder Britton Geo. Hy. professor of music

Furber Henry, Walm1ey hill Andrews Oliver, dairy Britton Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper,

FusseJ.l George J.P. Hill side Androews Samuel Frnderick, see Water- Wood lane

Fussell Philip J.P. Fair vierw works Co Britton Samuel, butcher

Gledstone John. Fillwood house Angerson. Ellen (Mrs.), dress maker Britton Samuel Frank, private school

Grace George Henry, Richmond place Anstey Henry, grocer Brown E. P. & J. L. (MiSS9Si), ladies'

Grant George Ha;rman, 3 Newton pI Ashley Ruscombe W. & Sons, boot school, Norwood house

Gre.gory Miss, Myrtl~ hou.s.e factory Brown Georgina (Mliss), shopkeeper

Barris Benjamin, Downend road Attwell Brothers, bakers Bryan E. J. &:; Co. boot manufacturers

Harris George BaldwinPercy,solicitor &:; commissioner Bryant George, grocer

HendeTson William, Regent street for oaths & clerk to ullban district Bryant Isaac, beer retaileT

Bendy Samuel, High street council, CQuncil offices, Kingswood; Burchell JameS', butcher

Howes MrS'. The Poplars & at 23 Clare street, Bristol Burchell Samuel, butcher

Hull Rev. RusseR (Moravian) Bamford Edward James, ironmonger Burchell William (Mrs.), cowkeepet'

Iles Henry Barton Joseph B. relieving officer No. Burchill &; Co. boot & shoe makeTs
2 district et registrar of births &; Burgess William James, shopkeeper
TIes Joseph, Rockville

Jefferies Mrs deaths, Bitton sub-district, Wa.rmley Bumham Thomas, Flower Pot P.B.

Jones Rev. John Hugh (Wesleyan) out-relief union Warmley hill

Jones Robert Batt &:; Phillips, boiler mas.& ironfndrs Candy Albert Tom. dairy

Ladd Alfred, Kingswood park Batt Edwin, engineer, see Batt & Clease William, boot maker

Lane Lewis Phillips Clifton &; Coates, solicitors

Leuty Rev. John Edwin (Primitive Batten Clement,shopkeeper,Hanham rd Cloutman William, surveyor

Methodist), 2 Newton plaoo Batten Wa1ter John, dentist Coe, Church &:; Mfi.cpharson, boot &;

Mac'kay John Bees, Green 0& Co. wholesale boot & shoe manufacturers

Maggs Frederick, EllesmeTe villa shoe manufacturers Colley George, stay maker

Monks John, The Hollies Beese Samuel, beer retlr. Walmley hill Cook George, boot manufacturet'

Moon Albert Francis Betty Robert, baker Cordy Charles Henry, grocer

Parker John, 4 Cl~remont place Bidgood Edward, hay dealer Counsell Robert, haulier

Parker Thomas, Downend road Blake John, coffee rooms Cowles George, saddler

Peacock A.aron, The Laurels R01dwell & Co. drapers Cox -& Co. boot manufacturers

Peacock Arthur Bolton Samuel, carpenter Cox Ohas. Chick, boot &; shoe manu-

Peacock Luke &nd Samuel, carpenter facturer, see Puddy 0& Oox

DIRE(''TORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. . 223

KINGSWOOD.

Cox Mary .Ann (Ml"s.), shopkeeper Gregory James (exors. of), iron &; Loughman Cornelius Henry, shopkpr

Crates George &; CQ. wholesale boot brass founder &; engineer &; brick Lovell Alfred, shopkpr. Hanham lane

manufa.cturers manufacturer Lovell Samuel, beer retailer

Crates &; Parker, wholesale &; export Guard John, coal dealer Mackay John, architect &; surveyor

boot &; shoe manufacturers Gully Sarah( Mrs.), dress ma. Hanhm. I'd Manners Charles, shopkeeper

Cumberland William Bentinck, solicitor Hale Albert, boot manufacturer, see Martin Leonard Barnard, accountant

Dart Philip, refreshment rooms Jenkins &; Hale May William S. tailor

Daunton Mice (Mrs.), fruiterer Hale Julia (Mrs.), shpkpr. Hanham rd ~layberry Florence (Miss), shopkeepr

Davis &; Co. boot &; shoe manufactrs Hallaran John, news agent Melhnish George, but~her

Davis Ann (Mrs.), coal dealer Hanham Harry, butcher &; confectionr MilsQn Thomas, grindery dealer,

Davi~ Clura. (Miss), professor of music Hann Charles, fishmonger Downend road

Davis Edmun.d., butcher Harris &; Fry, wholesale boot manu- Monk Robert &; Son, boot manu-

Davis George, farmer facturers I&; cigar importers facturers, Hanham lane

Davis Graham, butcher Harris James, grocer Moon Albert Francis &; Co. boot &;

Davis Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Harri.s James Chas. loan off. South st shoe manufacturers

Church road Harris Richard, cab proprietor Moss Frank, chemist

Davis Joseph, butcher Harvey Elizabeth (Miss), confectioner Nelson James &; Sons Lim. butchers

Davis Leonard, cattle dealer Haskins J ames, grocer Nettle Albert, painter, Hanham road

Davis Robert, butcher Henderson William M.R.C.S.Eng., Newman Samuel, painter

Davis -Samuel, butcher L.R.C.P.Lond. surgeon, Regent st NioholsQn Florence (Miss), dress

Davis William, butcher Hendy Lucretia Elanch(Mrs.), bIer ret maker, Hill street

Dean Daniel Pullin, maltster &; corn dlr Hendy Samuel, jun. grocer Olds Edward, butcher

Dix Bessie (Miss), dress maker, Han- Hobbs Mary Jane (Mrs.), butcher Olds George, butcher

ham road Hodge Frederick, hair dresser Ollis Henry Craddock, beer retailer

Douglas Bros. boot &; shoe machinery Hook Thos. beer ret. &; shopkeeper Palmer John, shopkeeper, Hanham rd

manufacturers Hounsell Eenjamin John Stone,grocer Palmer John, teacher of music, Han-

English &; American Machinery Co. &; provision dealer ham road

Limited, sole sewers- &; stitchers to Howe William Henry, ironmonger Parker Thomlbs, boot &; shoe maker,

the trade Howes William, Trotman, auctioneer see Crates &; Parker

Field Henry, oil &; colour dealer Hulbert, Jefferies &; Co. boot factory Parker William, grocer

Fifott Thomas, manager to Lloyds Jles Henry &; Sons, boot &; shoe mfr.s Parry L. W. &; Co. drapers

Bank Limited TIes Courtenay, draper, Hill street Peacock Arthur &; Luke, wholesale

Fitzmaurice Theo. James, clothier lIes Elizabeth (Mrs.), leather dealer boot manufacturers, Kingswood hI

Flook Henry James, grocer Iles lsaa.c C. draper, Pos·t office, Peacock Aaron, boot &; shoe manufr

Flook Samuel, 'butch.er Warmley Hill Peacock Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper.

:Ford Sophia (Miss) &; Co. boot l& lIes Sydney W. leather salesman Warmley hiLl

grindery salesmen lrwin Ohristopher George, saddler Perrott Charles John L.R.C.P. &;

Ford Frederick, shopkeeper Jackson Aaron JlQsiah, machinist L.R.C.S.I. surgeon, public vaccina-

Fordham Cha!!. 'CM'etkr.of Liberal club Jackson George, provision dealer tor No. 6 district, Barton Regis

Fox 8eth &; Co. boot manufacturers Jackson Hester(Mrs.), shpkpr.&;beer rtlr union &; medical officer of health to

Francombe George Frederick, refresh- J arrett baac, hair dresser the Kingswood urban district coun·

ment rooms Jay Eros. who. boot &; .shoe manufrs cil, see Grace & Perrott

Frankcom Joseph Smith, shopkeeper Jay CaJeb, manufacturer of boiler Phillips- John, engineer, see Batt &;

Frankcom Mary (Mrs.), greengrocer .& anti-incrustation fluid,Kingswood hI Phillips

beer retailer Jefferies George, shopkpr. Hanham rd Phipps Samuel Robert, beer retailer

Frith F. H. mgr. to '8tuckey's :Bank Jefferies Hbt.Ernest.carrier,Clmrch I'd PillingerGeorge,shplqlr.Black Horse I'd

Fry Brothers, engineeTs, Hanhnm rd Jefferies Matilda (Mrs.), linen draper Pillinger John, shopkeeper

Fry Abraham, watch maker Jefferies Phyllis (Mrs.),refrshmnt.rms Pillinger Louisa (Mrs.), confectioner

Fry Albert, shopkeeper, Hanham road Jefferies Thomas, cab proprietor ,& Plenty Philip, boot maker

Fry George, boot ma. see Hams .& FIl"J contractor for the mails· between Pow &; Co. boot &; shoe manufacturers

Fry George, grocer Bristol &; Kingswood Pow George, market gardener

Frv Jas. Samuel, commercial traveller Jefferies Thomas, butcher Pow lsaac, boot &; shoe manufacturer

Fry Jos'eph, beer retailer Jefferi.s Frederick Lionel, butcher Powell Samuel, painter, South street

Fry ,samuel, je;weller, Hanham lane Jefferis Hester (Miss), butcher Pratt Edwin W. &; Co. who. boot mfrs

Fry Sidney, shopkpr. :Moravian road Jenkins &; Hale, boot makers Pratten Frederick, butcher

Fry William, watch maker Jenkins Esther (Mrs.), shopkeeper, P.rewett Frank, carpenter

Fudge & Williams, boot manufacturers Moravian road Public Benefit Boot Co. Lim.boot dealr

Fudge Job, carpenter Jenkins George, shopkeeper Puddy .& OJx, boot &; shQe manufactrs

Fmoness Ernest WaIter. chemist JQhnson &; Smith, boot makers PuJin Thomas, wheelwright

Fussell Abraham .& Sons, wholesale Jones John Reginald, boot maker Reed John William, plumber

boot manufacturers J ullion Frederick H. auctioneer iRicketts Harry, inspector of county

FU3Slell Henry, horse dealer Keys William, hay &; straw dealler police, Warmley hill

Galpin J ames, King's A':rms P.H King George, shopkeeper Robbins Hannah (Mrs.), beer retailer,

Gardner George, grocer Kingswood Family & Commercial Hotel Moravian road

Gardiner Burnham &; Co. timber mer- (Michael Clune, proprietor; Miss E. RGberts In. shoeing smith,Hanham rd

chants &; saw mills Lane, man~eress) lWbins George, shopkpr. Hanham rd

Garland Henry, painter Kingswood Liberal Club (John Whit· Robinson J. &; Co. boot &; ·shoe manu·

Gav Benjnmin, boot .& shoe maker, combe, sec) facturers' engineers

Warmley hill Kingswood &; Parkfield Collieries Co. Robinson John. refreshment rooms

Gay John George, boot.&; shoe maker, Limited (John Henshaw, ,gee) Rogers Robert, builder, South street

Hanham road. Kingswood Reformatory (Geo. Whit- Rogers Robert, wheelwright

Gav Samuel, butcher &; shopkeeper, well, supt.; William Verity, school- Rossiter JQseph Henry, boot maker

Warmley hill master) Rudge Wm. shopkpr. Hopewell hill

Gel'rish William, shopkeeper, Re!OI'1l'· Lacey John, shopkeeper Saunders Edwin, 'boot maker, Down-

atory road Lacey Mary Ann (Mrso), grocer end road

Gerry Thomas, hosier Ladd Alfred, registrar IQf marriages Savery Brothers &; Williams, boot &;

Glass Thomas, pork butch&' for Gloucestershire part of Keyn- shoe manufacturers

Godfrey John, boot factory sham union &; clerk to the Kings- Scadding Alfred, shopkeeper

Golding Edwin, boot .&; shoe maker wood &; Oldham school board, col- Shipp Chii'rles> William, printer

Golding Tom Clarenoe, engineer to lector of poor rates for Kingswood Short J ames, greengrocer

boot trades, Hanham road &; Siston &; assistant overseer SilverthQrn Louisa (Miss), dress makr

Grace .&; iPerrott. surgeons, Rich- La. Trobe &; Weston, architects Silverthorn William, boot manufac-

mond place La.wrence WiHiams &; Watts,solicitors; turer, see Wilt&hire &; Silverthorn·

Grace George Henry L.R.C.S.I., &; at Shannon court, Bristol Simmons Alfred, watch mkr. High ltt

L.S.A.Lond. (firm, Grace &; Perrott), Lewis Frederick, haulier Singer Manufacturing Co. (Thomas

surgeon, Richmond place Lewton Ridhard, watch maker Layton, manager), I High street

Grant George &; Co. boot factory Linthorn Waiter H. tailor &; out- Smith John, shopkeeper, High street

Green George, boot maker, see fitter, Regent street Smith William, nurseryman

Bees, Green &; Co Lloyds Bank Limited (branch) (Thos. StaddQn Benj. who. boot manufactr

Green Isaac, stationer Fifoot, manager); hours 10 to 3; Stinchcombe George, draper
Green John Henry, hatter
sat. 10 to I; draw on head office, Stone Albert Brentnall, draper .t

Gregory George, draper, Hanham rd Lombard street, London E C milliner

224: KINGSWOOD. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. . [ KELLY'S

Stone Dinah (Miss), shopkeeper Water Works Co. (Samuel F. An- Wilcox Lizzie (Mis-s), ladies' school

Strange William Daniel, gasfitter, drews, sec) Williams Alfred (Mrs.), butcher

sanitary engineer &; deputy regis- Waters Thomas, frmr. Grimsby frm Williams Charles, shopkeeper

trar of marriages for Keynsham Webb Elizabeth &; Son, grocers Williams William, boot &; shoe maker,

union, KingswoDd hill Weight Esther (Ml"S.), dress maker, see Savery Brothers &; Williams

Stuckey's Banking -Co. Limited (F. Ropewell hill Williams William, shopkeeper, Black

H. Frith, manager); hours 10 Western Counties Electric Light &. Horse road

to 3, sat. 10 to I; draw on Robarts, Power Syndicate Lim. (The) (brnch) Williamson &; Co. boot manufacturers,

Lubbock &; Co. London E C Western Daily Press (district office) Honey hill

Style Albert, beer retailer (Frank W. Riggins, manager) Wilmot Thos. shopkpr. Warmley hill

Thomas John, shopkeeper &; beer Wetton J. W. &; Co. boot &; shoe Wiltshire&Silverthorn, boot&shoe mfrs

retailer, Hopewell hill manufacturers, Hanham road Wiltshire Samuel, builder

Tippett George, grindery salesman Wheeler Hy. Geo. plumber &; gasfittr Wyatt George, hair dres·ser

Tough WillIam Edmund, shopkeeper, 'White Henry, sign writer, Hanham I'd Young &; Howes (in conjunction with

Warmley hill Whitwell George, supt. of Kingswood Nichols, Matthews &; Co.), auctnrs

Unionist Club (Alfred Amos, sec) Reformatory Young Men's Christjan .A!sso<:iation

Verrier Rhoda (Mrs.), draper Wilcox Florence (Miss),tchr. of music (W. H. Lasbury, 'hon. sec)

Verrier Sidney Henry, tailor &; post off

K INGSWOOD (near Wotton- unnedaer rB-rEidsgte~),, called and Tetbury, was re-established here in 1179 and colonised
to distinguish it from Kingswood, parish from Tintem; only the 15th century gate-house and; a
II. 80 I

is a

and village, 2 miles east from Charfield staton on the small fragment, turned into tenements, now remain.

Bristol and Birmingham section of the Midland railway, Major-General Robert Hale, of Alderley, is lord of the

I mile south-west from Wotton-under-Edge, 7 south manor. The principal landowners are Sir Charles Daniel

from Dursley and 19 north-east from Bristol, in the Mid Cave bart. of Stoneleigh House, Clifton Park, Bristol, tha

division of the county, Berkeley hundTed, Dursley union Rev. William Winstone Curtis-Hayward M.A. of Corn-

and county court district, Wotton-under-Edge petty ses- wall gardens, London SW, Francis Tagart esq. F.L.S.

sional division, rural deanery of Dursley, and arch- of Old Sneed Park, Stoke Bishop, Mrs. Long, Mrs. Heath,

deaconry and/ diocese of Gloucester. Kingswood was of Kingswood House, Wotton-under-Edge, Edward C.

fO'l'merly in Wilts, but by th~ Acts 2 and 3 Wm. IV. cap. Austin esq. Mrs. Gregory, the trustees of the late George

64, and 7 8!ld 8 Vict. cap. 61, it was transferred to Long esq. and Oharles Witts esq. The soil is clay; sub-

Gloucestershll'e. The church of St. Mary the Virgin, soil, clay. The land is principally pasture. The area ill

erected in 1723, is a building of stone in the Early 2,350 acres; rateable value, £5,166; the population iD

English style, consisting of chancel, nave, north 1891 was 938.

transept, organ chamber and vestry, west porch, Verger and Sexton, Samuel Grimes.

and a weste~ .turret conta~g a clock and 8 b~lls: Post &. M. O. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
~h:e fare sIttmgs for 400 . pers~n~. ~he regtster
g~aosss rom the year 1600. T~e hvm~ IS a x:ectory, John Leviours, sub-postmaster. Letters through
yearlr value £180, Wlft~ reSIdence, m the Wotton-under-Edge are delivered at 7.30 &; 10 a.m.;
gI~t .of the t~thepayers, and held smce 1896 by the .Rev. dispatched at 4.30 &. 6 p.m. T'he nearest telegraph
William Brailsford RA. of Queens' College, CambrIdge. office is at Wotton-under-Edge I mile distant

'
Here is a Congregational chapel. There are several A School Board of 5 members was .formed May 3, 18go;

woollen cloth, silk and elastic, and pin factories here. E. O. Lloyd,Wotton-under-Edge, IS clerk to the board;

Messrs. Tubbs, Lewis &; Co. are owners of the Abbey, Matthew Rose, attendance officer

Langford and New mills, affording employment to 600 Board School (mixed &; infants), erected in 1892 &; en-

hands. The curfew is regularly rung here every night at larged in 1896, for 200 children; avera«e attendance,

eight o'clock. A Cistercian Abbey was founded here in 1158 170; .A.rthur Thornton, master; Mrs. Sarah Ellen

by W. de Berkeley, and after translations to Rodmarton Thornton, mistress

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Dearn Saml. boot ma. &; assist. ()versr Roach J ames, farmer, Trench

Brails-ford Rev. Wm., B.A. Rectory Durn Arthur Henry, beer retailer Roberts Dan. C. frmr. Daylhouse farm

Chapman Mrs Ford William Jenkins, dairy farmer, Rogers Wm. farmer, Mounty's farm

Croome Mrs Upper Barns farm Sargeant Wm. Nathnl.&; Geo. hauliers

Griffiths John, Penn house Hart Mary Ann Augusta &; Mary Simpson Thomas, shopkeeper

Harries Rev. Wm. In. (Congregatnl) (Misses), bakers Terrett Brothers, millwrights &; me-

Hunt Benjamin Hart Saml.&. Son, carpntrs. &; joiners chanical engineers & repairers, all

Milman Frank, The Fil'ls Hawker Albert, dairy frmr. Folly frm kinds of circular -sawing done to

Park Mrs Hillman Francis, farmer, Bunsall frm order

Roach Mrs. Fairview Jones Thomas, beer retailer Terrett Henry, beer retailer

Stoner Miss, Alma cottage Lambert Chas. &; Sons, pin manufrs Tilley Esther (Mrs.), New inn

Thornton Arthur, Brewery house Long Fras. Grenville,drpr.&; boot ma Tubbs, Lewis &; Co. elastic goods

Vincent Mrs. Chipping house Long Sarah Sims (Mrs.), beer retailer manufacturers, Albbey, Langford &

Winter Mrs. Tyndale house &; shopkeeper New mills

COMMERCIAL. Lovell Jahn Thos. builder & contracb Wall Leonard &; Frank, butchers

All~n Frank, boot maker LoveU Rufus, farmer, Chesnuts Wall Edwin, grocer &; trap owner

Bal'ber John, farmer, Upper Dyehouse Meredith Hannah (Miss) &; Ernest, Weeks Joseph, farmer, Grange farm

Barber John Hobb~, farmer, Cherry- farmers, Haroldfield farm Werrett John, monumental mason

rock farm Milman Hunt &; 00. ~oollen cloth &; buildel'

Barber Rebecca (Mrs.), grocer manufacturei's, Nind mills Werrett Sarah (Mrs.), grocer

Chappell John, grist miller (water), Musty Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper 1Vilcox Arthur, farmer, Highwood

corn, floar &; meal factor, Walk mill Organ Paulina (Miss) &; James, far- Wilcox Herbt. frmr. Cherryrock frm

Oharles Alfred Hy. Dog &; Badger P.H mers, Nind farm Wilcox John, farmer, HiUsley road

Cox George, baker Read Thomas, Plume of Feathers P.H WilcoxJsph.dairy frmr.Neat'hwood frm

Cox William Henry, saddler Riching'S Wiluam, butcher Williams Sara Jane (Miss), dairy

Daniell Thomas, farmer, Trench farm Riddiford Mary(Mrs .),frmr.Low.Barns farmer, Watsome farm

LANCAUT is a very small parish, pleasantly seated on I annexed, with that of Alvington, to the rectory of
a small circular peninsula of the eastern bank of, and Woolastone, joint gross yearly value £419, inclu<ting 200
formed by, the river Wye, which here divides the county acres of glebe, with house, in the gift of Sir W. H.
from Monmouthshire, 2 miles north-by-east from Chep- Marling bart. and held since 1859 by the Rev. William
stow station on the South Wales section of the Great Somerset LL.B. -of Magdalene College, Cambridge, who
Western railway, in the Forest of Dean division of the resides at Woolastone. Henry Francis Morgan esq. of
county, hundred of Westbury, union and county court dis- Tidenham House, is lord of the manor and principal land-
trict of Chepstow, petty -sessional division of Lydney,' owner. The soil is light gravelly; subsoil, limestone.
rural deanery of South Forest, and archdeaconry and The chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is 202
diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. James, a small acres; rateable value, £194; the population in 1891 was 4.
but ancient building, is now, and has for a long time been, - 'Wall Letter Box cleared at 6 p.m. Letters received
in ruins. The inhabitants attend Tidenham church. through Chepstow, which is the nearest telegraph office,
The register has aJways been incorporated with that of arrive at 7 a.m.; the neflrest money order office is at

Woolastone. The living is a chapelry, yearly value £39, Tidenham, about I! miles distant

Parker Henry, farmer

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. LECHLADE 225

LARKSTOKE, a hamlet of llmington (Warwickshire), wars. The hamlet consists of two farms, called Lower

is 4 miles nort'h-east from Chipping Campden station on and Upper Stoke. C. H. Corbett esq. is owner of the

the Chipping Norton and Evesham branch of the Great former, and the trustees of the late P. H. Howard esq. of

Western railway, and 5 north-west from Shipston-on- Corby Castle, Cumberland, are owneTS of the latter. The

Stout. in the Eastern division of the county, upper ddiivni-- soil is rich loam; subsoil, clay. The crops are barley,
sion of Kiitsgate hundred, Campden petty sessional wheat and roots. The area is 476 acres; rateable value,

sion and Shipston-on-Stour union and county court dis- £601; the population in 1891 was 113'

trict. In a field called the" Town" there is still standing Letters from Shipston-on-Stour, through llmington,

an ancient font, supposed to have belonged to a chapel which is also the nearest money order office. The

which existed here before the hamlet was attached to nearest telegraph office is at Mickleton, about 3 miles

IImington, an arrangement said to have been made after distant

this place had been destroyed during one of the early, The children of this place attend the school at llmington

Berry Robert, farmer, Upper Stoke I Wilson John E. farmer, Lower Stoke

LASBOROUGH is a. parish for ecclesiastical pur- Order in Council dated November IIth, 1868, joint net

poses, but for civil purposes forms part of the parish of yearly value £351, including 78 acres of glebe, with
Weston Birt; it is situated in a valley or "bottom," nea.r residence, in the gift of Capt. George Lindsay Holford

the Bath and Cheltenham road, 6 miles south from C.I.E., J.P. and held since 1859 by the Rev. David Kit-
Nailsworth terminal station of a branch of the Midland cat M.A. of Trinity College, Oxford, who resides at

railway from Stonehouse and 5 west from Tetbury Wesron Birt. Lasborough was a. Roman settlement,

station, on the branch of the Great Western railway and in the parish is a tumulus. Captain George Lind.
from Kemble Junction, in the Eastern division of the say Holford G.I.E. of Weston Birt House, is lord of the
county, Longtree hundred, Tetbury union and petty manor and sole landowner. Lasborough Park is in the

:sessional division, Malmesbury county court district, parish of Newington Bagpath. The soil is a light

rural deanery of Dursley and archdeaconry and diocese brash; subsoil, oolite. The chief crops are wheat, bar-
of Gloucester. The church of St. Mary, rebuilt in 1861 ley and oats. The area, including Weston Birt, is 1,658

by the patron, after designs by Mr. L. Vulliamy, is an acres; rateable value and population is included with
edifice of stone in the Early English style, consisting Weston Birt.
1)f chancel, nave, south porch, vestry and a western Sexton, George Williams.
turret containing 2 bells: the tenor bell was presented Letters received through Wotton-under-Edge arrive at 9
by Mr. G. Thomas, a former churchwarden, and the a.m. Kingscote, 2 miles distant, is the nearest post.
font by the Rev. D. Kitcat M.A. rector: there are sit- money order & telegraph office. Newington Bagpath
tings for 120 persons. The separate register dates from is the nearest Wall Letter Box, cleared at 4.15 p.m.
the year 1827; earlier entries are included in the regis- week days only
ters of Weston Birt and other neighbouring parishes. The children of this parish attend the schools at Newing-

'The living is a rectory, annexed to Weston Birt by an ron Bagpath &; Weston Birt

VoIlett Geo.farm bailiff to Capt. G. L.Holford,Bowldown I Comely Walter, farmer, Lasborough farm

LASSINGTON, a parish adjoining Highnam, is 3 yearly value. This parish has a share in Oox's (Badg-
miles north-west from Gloucester, in the Northern divi-
sion of the county, Dudsrone and King's Barton hundred, worth) charity, which varies from £1 IS. to £1 lIS. 6d.
Gloucester union, county court district and petty ses- yearly, and is distributed in money by the rector to the
sional division, and in the rural deanery, archdeaconry poor. In this parish there is an oak tree of great size
and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. Oswald called" The Lassington Oak," and also a very large pear
is an ancient building of stone, consisting of chancel,
nave, south porch and a. low western rower containing tree. Sir William Francis George Guise bart. D.L. of
one bell, and was restored in 1875 at a cost of £810:
the nave and porch are Norman, the chancel Early Eng- Elmore Court, is lord of the manor and chief landowner.
The soil in general is gravelly; subsoil, clay; ahout
lish: there are sittings for 100 persons. The register two-thirds are in pasture and the residue is rich land,
dates from the year 1662. The living is a rectory, Det lying on the banks of the Leadon. The area is 524
acres; rateable value, £775; the population in 1891
yearly value £49, including 7 acres of glebe, with resi- was 57.
Letters through Gloucester, via Highnam, arrive by
dence, in the gift of Sir W. F. G. Guise bart. for ~wo
turns and the Bishop of Gloucester, who has every third messenger at 7 a.m.; dispatched from Highnam at
presentation, and held since 1883 by the Rev. Arthur 6.25 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office
Rogers Winnington-Ingram. Here are charities of £23 is at Gloucester, 3 miles distant
The children of this place attend the school at Highnam

Winningron-Ingram Rev.Arth. RogeTs,I Crump Martin.frmr.Lassington Ct.frmlRayer Mbert, farmer, Maidenhall farm

Rectory Ponting Thomas, farmeT, Astmans

LECHLADE is a parish and market town at the con_ church was restored in 1882-8 at a cost of about £1,814,
under the direction of Mr. F. Waller. architect, of Glou-
lluence of the river Leach with the Thames, which is cester, when the old pews and western gallery were
navigable up to St. Jo-hn's bridge for vessels not ex- removed and the whole interior re-seated and re-floored
ceeding 80 tons burthen, and has a station half-a-mile and the various monumental slabs re-set: a stained win-
north from the rown on the East Gloucestershire branch dow was inserted in the south aisle in 1882 by Mrs.
of the Great Western railway, 6 miles north-west from Hudd, in memory of the families of Edmonds and Gear-
Faringdon. 22 south-east from Cheltenham, 20 south- ing; there is another in the south aisle to George Mil-
il&st from Gloucester and 85 from London, in the Eastern ward esq. late of Lechlade Manor: the chancel has been
division of the county, hundred of Brightwells Barrow, inclosed with screens of carved oak at a cost of £300 by
Fairford petty sessional division, Faringdon Berks union Mrs. Robbins, in m~mory of her husband, G. A: Robbins
and county court district, rural deanery of Fairford, esq. late of aay Hill House: a new organ costmg £300
archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. has also been placed in the church: there are sittings
for 500 persons. The register dates from the Jear 1686.
St. John's Bridge of two arches, one crossing the The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £450, with
proper and the other a backwater connected with the residence, in the gift of Emmanuel College, Cambridge,
lock, spans the river a little more than half-a-mile from and held since 1879 by the Rev. Alfred Clementson M.A.
the town at a point where the counties of Gloucester, and late fellow of that college. Lawrence Bathurst esq.
Berks, Wilts and Oxford all adjoin; this is said to be by his will, dated 16th September, 1670, re-endowed the
the second srone bridge that was built over the Thames, vicarage with the whole of the recrorial tithes. Here are
London bridge being the first; it is a quaint structure, Baptist and Wesleyan chapels. A monthly market and
its centre pier resting on a small island: St. John's lock auction sale, by Messrs. M. C. Innocent and Son, is held
is the nearest ro the source of the Thames of the 38
locks on that river. The Trout inn here is a favourite

resort for boating parties and anglers. for sheep and cattle the last Tuesday in each month, and

The Thames and Severn canal intersects the parish. an annual fair is held on the 9th of September. The
'The town is supplied with water by the Rural Sanitary charities amount to £100 yearly, of which £80 is derived
Authority from a deep well in the oolite, and is pumped from Government £21 per Cents. and the remainder from
up by wind power into a large tower. The church of allotment ground and cottages; one half the income is

St. Lawrence is a handsome edifice of stone in the Per- given in rewards to the National school children and the
other to the Lechlade Provident Club, except in the case
pendicular style, erected towards the end of the 15th of certain special charities which were not altered by th&
century. as is supposed, by Conrad Ney, then 'Vicar, Charity Commissioners. Clay Hill House, the property
-and the inhabitants; it consists of chancel, nave, aisles, and residence of WaIter Fox Tosswill esq. J.P. is pleas-
north porch and an embattled western tower with pin-
antly situated at the end of a park studded with lofty
nacles and spire containing a clock and 5 bells: the

GLOU. 15

226 LECHLADE. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

elms. Lechlade Manor House, at the east end of the Parcel Post & Annuity & Insurance Office (Sub-Office.
town, the residence of Henry Wallis Prior-Wandesforde
esq. RA., J.P. is a noble mansion in the Elizabethan Letters should have S.O. Gloucestershire added).-
style, erected in 1873. H. W. Prior-Wandesforde esq.
who is lord of the manor, Waiter Fox Tosswill esg. J.P. James Mitchell, postmaster. Letters through Swindon
New College, Oxford, Thomas Arkell esg. of Sherborne
House, Charles Bolden esg.. of Preston Bisset, Bucks, arrive at 4.50 a.m. & through Oxford at 1.15 p.m.;
and Edward Ha~l esg. of Horwich House, Whaley Bridge,
are the principal landowners. The soil is loam; subsoil, dispatched through Oxford at 10 a.m. & through
gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats.
The area is 3,785 acres; rateable value, £6,702; the Swindon at 8.25 p.m. The letter box closes ID
population in 1891 was 1,266 civil, and 1,240 ecc~esias­ minutes before each dispatch. Messengers leave for
tical. all the neighbouring villages at 6 a.m. & return in

Parish Clerk, John Harris. time for the evening dispatch at 8. Office open from
Sexton, Alfred George.
7 a.m. in summer & 7.30 a.m. in winter to 8 p.m.
GREAT LEMHILL FARM, now included in the parish On sundays the office closes at 10 a.m. The night
of Lechlade. was formerly a detached portion of axon,
but, by the Acts 2 and 3 Wm. IV. cap. 64, 7 and 8 Vie. mail is conveyed by cart to Swindon
cap. 61, it was annexed to the Eastern division of Glou- Wall Letter Box, Railway tavern, cleared at 7.50 p.m.
cestershire, and is in Hampton ihundred, Cirencester
union and county court district, 2 miles north from Lech. week days only
National School (mixed), built in 1874, for 200 child.
lsde.
ren; average attendance, 130 boys & girls & 84 in.
LITTLE LEMHILL comprises a. farm-house and build- fants; Samuel Davis, master; Miss Margaret Ellen
ings, in the parish of Lechlade, about 1 mile north-west
from Lechlade. Rust, infants' mistress
Railway Station, Jonathan Honey, station master
Post. M. 0, & T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery, Conveyance from the New Inn hotel attends at the

station when ordered & meets down trains. The Mar·
ket 'bus leaves the New Inn hotel on monday at 1

p.m. for Cirencester, returning at 5 p.m
Carrier to Cirencester.-Charles Stevens, mono & to

Swindon, fri
Police Station, Samuel Thomas Neville. sergeant in

charge, & 1 constable

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. • Davis Geo. .Albert, chemist, Market pI Lewis Thos. L~vi, farmer, Downington

Arkell Thomas, Sherborne house Davis William Howard, corn miller Lloyds Bank Limited. (County of Glou.

Beak Goorge, Sherbo~ne streert (steam &; water), Lechlade mill 'ooster Bank agency); attendance on

Olementson Rev. Alfred. M.A. Vicarage Edwards Albert, Railway tavern thurs.from 12 till 3 ; draw on London

Cole The Misses, Burford street Eldridge Jas. Edward, grocer & agent office, 72 Lombard street EO

Hawker The Misses, Burford street for W. & A. Gilbey Limited, wine March Joseph Ogdin M.R.C.S.Eng.,

Hay Fred.erick, The Hollie.s &; spirit merchants L.R.C.P.Lond. medical officer &

Has Albert William, Burford house Evans Thomas Charles, coffee tavern, public vaccinator, Lechlade district,

Innocent Bentley Frank, Burford street Burford strellt Faringdon union,& certifying factory

Innocent MJatthew CatliIli, Buriord st Frampton Jacob, beer retailer surgeon, St. John's house

Kilby F1"ed.erick, Sherborne street Geach William, farmer, The Leaze Mitchell J as.ironmonger & postmaster

Lane William, Sherborne street Gearing Thomas, baker, Market place Moulden William, shoe maker, High st

McKittrick Rev. Wm. James (Baptist) Gearing William, baker & grocer Packer James, farmer, Thornhill

Marsh Joseph Ogdin, St. John's George Alfred, glazier & painter Pinnock Thomas, cooper '

Moore Rev.Donald A.B.,T.C.D.(curate) Gerring Sarah (Mrs.), The Swan P.H Pinnock Wm. cattle dealer, Fox farm

Pearce Mrs. Yew Tree house Gills Joseph, pork butcher, High st Rawlings In. beer retailr.& blacksmith

Prior-Wandesforde Henry Wallis J.P. Hall Wllliam Noah, draper &; outfitter Richens Jaue (Mrs.), New Inn family

Lochlade Manor house Hardy rrhos. de Lisle, solicitor &; com- &; commercial hotel & posting house

Richens Henry missioner for oaths; attends tues- & agent for Great Western Railway

Slatter Thomas, Downington day &; friday; & at iFairford Ryman Charles, haulier, Sherborne st

Street Frederick, Downington Harris John, jeweller & parish clllil'k Ryman Gool'ge, beer retailer, High st

Tosswill Waiter Fox J.P. Clayhill ho Hawkins George Jas. baker &; grocer Ryman Wm. beer retailr. Sherborne sll

Walker Miss Hayden Elizabeth (Mu.), beer retailer Sadler George, saddler &; oilman

Walker Mrs. Priory mill Hicks George J. pleasure boats for Shilton Albel't, farmer, Downington

White Miss hire, Lechlade wharf Sparkes James, gardener

COMMERCIAL. Hicks. Matthew, coal, corn, salll &; Spiers Alfred, The Crown P.IE

Arkell Daniel, farmer, Butler's court general merchant &maltster; depots, Stevens Chas. boor retailer & carrier

Arkell Thos. yeoman, Sherborne house J.,eIchlade wharf & Lechlade station Ste'Vens Robert, Lion inn

Aston Thomas, watch maker, High st Hicks Matthew, jun. butcher Stevens Wm. Thomas, baker, High st

bford Mary (Miss), draper, High sb Hiett John, farmer, High street Shroot Frederick, assistant ov~seer,

Beak Gerald George, farmer, Little Higgs Alice & Elsie (Misses), dress Downington

Lemhill farm makers, High street Stroud Charles Hugh, grocer &c. see

Bowley Joseph, builder & contractor Higgs Brothers, tailors, High street Hay & Stroud

Bowyer Dnl.Trout inn,St.John's bridge Honey Jonathan, station master Swainson Richard Edward, stationer,

Brooks Frederick, carriage builder Hoskins John, farmer, Clay Hill farm. Burford street

Cadel Randel, plasterer & tiler Hoy & Stroud, grocers Thomas Samb (Mrs.), dress maker

Capital & Counties Bank Limited(sub- lIes Albert Wm.wine & spirit merchant Tite William, draper, Market place

branch) (Matthew Catlin Innocent, Innocoot Matthew O. ,& Son, auction- Tombs Hester (Mrs.), shopkeeper, St.

agent); draw on head office, 39 eel'S, valuers & land agts.Burford. at John's street

Threadneedle street, London E C Jaggard Arthur, furniture dealer Tovey Edward, seedsman & corn mer

Carter George· & Son, stone masons Jaggard Arthur, jnn. carpenter, Sh6ll'- Tovey William, beer retailer

Clack George, boot &; shoe maker borne house Wakedield Charles,corn dlr. Downingtn

Clack George, glass dealer Jones Charles, boor retailer, Clayhill Walker John, fa:rmer, Great Lemhill

Constable William, baker Jones John GHes, baker Walklett Isaac, carpenter

Co-operative Store's Limited (JoM Kinch Wm. Thos. farmer, Green farm Warner William, general dealer

Harris, sec) King William George. market gardenr Wheeler In. draper & grocer, High st
County of Gloucester Bank, now Lloyds Knapp et Co. machinists
Wheeler William Rabert, farrier &c

Bank Limited Lalor Alfred David M.R.C.V.S. veteri- Willis Stephen, mason

Cowley John, boot & shoe maker nary surgeon, Downington house Woodward Joseph, carpenter

LECKHAMPTON is a parish and village, with Il in the south aisle is a brass with effigies to William Nor-

station about half a. mile north from the village, on the wood esq. ob. 1598, Elizabeth (Lygon) his wife, nine

Cheltenham and Bourton branch of the Great Western sons and two daughters, with six Latin elegiac verses:
railway, and is about 2 miles south from Cheltenham, in the church are two recumbent effigies of stone, colour-
in the Northern division of the county, hundred, union ed, representing Sir John Gifford and his lady, c. 1330;
petty sessional division and county court district of Chel- the male figure is cross-legged: there is also an effigy
tenham, rural deanery of Oheltenham and diocese of Glou- of an ecclesiastic: eight of the windows are stained, and
cester. A large portion of this parish. is included in the there are various handsome mural tablets: there are sit-
borough of Oheltenham: there is a tramway leading tings for 500 persons: on the north side of the c1lUrch-

from the qnarry, for the conveyance of stone to the foot yard are two recumbent stone effigies much dilapidated,

of the hill. The church 'Of St. Peter is an edifice of stone, one of which is said to represent the last lineal descend-
principally in the Early English style, consisting of chan- ant of Sir Francis Drake. The register of burials dates
• cel, nave of six bays, aisles, north porch and a central from the year 1682; baptisms, 17°9; marriages, 1719.
tower, with spire, containing 6 bells, one re-cast in 1866: The living is a rectory, with residence, yearly value from

DIRE(JTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. LOWER tEMINGTON. 227

170 acres of glebe and fees £350, with residence, in the 18g1 was 3,363, of which over 2,553 are within the borough
gift of Mrs. Neviles Wyatt, and held since 1884 by the limits of Cheltenham.
Rev. Reginald Edward Trye M.A. of University College,
Oxford, who is non-resident; the Rev. William Clifford Parish Clerk and Sexton, Neighbour Pearman.
Aston M.A. of Christ Ohurch, Oxford, has been curate in
Post & M. O. 0., S. R k Annuity &; Insurance Office.-
charge since 1895, and is also sinecure rector of Beeston, Miss Lucy Pearman, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive
Norfolk. The Parish HmI, erected in 1896-7, is a build- from Cheltenham; delivered at 7 a.m. &; 3.30 p.m.;
ing of stone, used for church purposes, entertainments d" d &; 6
Ispatche at 10.15 a.m. ·35 p.m. Telegraph
&c. Leckhampton Court, the property and seat of John office at Moorend, Clleltenham, 1 mile distant
Hargreaves esq. who is lord of the manor and principal
landowner, is an ancient mansion ()f stone of the 16th Wall Letter Box, Leckhampton hill, cleared at' IQ a.m.
century, commanding an extensive view over the vale. &; 6.20 p.m. week days only &; Pilley lane, cleared at
The soil is part clayey and part sandy loam; subsoil,
gravelly and stony and in some parts clay. The chief 10.10 a.m. &; 6.30 p.m
crops are wheat and barley. The area. of the parish is
1,900 acres; rateable value, £20,323; the population in National School (mixed), built about 1830, for "I50 child.

ren; average attendance, I17; there is a residence for

the master; Barnard George Thompson, master; Miss
Florence M. Bort'on, mistress

l'R1VATE RESIDENTS. Walker Robert, Firs BirakEll Leckhampton Hill Quarries (John

Allen Miss, Cliff villa Webb Harold, Hilltop Weaver, agent)

Aston Rev. William Clifford M.A. Witts Geo. Backhouse J.P. Hill house Poorman Arth. farmr.Collum End frm

(curate in charge), The Rectory Pearman N6ighbour, registr8lr of births

Barnard Major Robert Cary, Bartlow COMMERCIAL. & deaths for Charlton Kings sub-dis-

Barnett Dominico, Cliff cottage Ballinger Mary (Mrs.), laundre,ss trict, Cheltenham union; & parish

Bousfield Miss, Ashmeade lodge Hicks Ann (Mrs.), farmer, Church frm clerk, Quarry croft

Caudle Frederick Hicks Frederick, farmer, Leckhamp- ShephelJ.'d Henry, farmer, Cliff cottage

Dimmer George, Cotteswold ton farm Smith Lionel, farmer, Broadlands fnrt

Fisher Edwin, Undercliff Jordan Henry & Co. coal me.rchants; Stanbridge John, farmer

Hargreaves John, Leckhampton court whanres, Leckhampton &; Oharlton Ursell William, jun. market gardener

Marshall Charles, Oraigside (:ottage King's G. W. Rly. s-tations; central Weaver Phillip, f8lrmer, Warden. hill

Murrell Edward, Rockholme offices, 12 Promenade, Cheltenham

Sharpe William, Ferncliff Pearman Lucy (Miss), shopkeeper & (For other residents, see Che.ltenham.)

Taunton In. Rd. Cromwell, ASlhmeade postmistress, Post office

LEIGH is a parish, intersected by the old road leading in 1887. Charities of about £30 yearly value, derived

from Gloucester t(} Tewkesbury, 5' miles north from Glou- from land, are devoted to church purposes, and a sum of

cester, d south from Tewkesbury and 5. north-west £5 is distributed to the poor. The Dean and Chapter of
from Cheltenham; it is in the Northern division of the Westminster hold the manorial rights, and the landownen

county, lower division of the hundred of Deerhurst, are Col. William Alex. Hill D.L., J.P. of Tovil House,

union, petty sessional division and county court district Maidstone, Thomas Holland esq. and John Page csq.

of Tewkesbury, rural deanery of Winchcomb and arch- The soil is rich clay; subsoil, clay, marl and limestone;

deaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The meadows of there is a large proportion of pasture land. The chief crops

this parish, through which the canal from the Severn are wheat, beans and roots. The area is 1,4°8 acres;

to Coombe Hill runs, are subject to frequent inundations. rateable value, £3,217; the population in 1891 was 337.

The church, now called St. Catherine's, is an t>difice
of stone, in the Perpendicular style, and consists of chan- EVINGTON is a hamlet in t.he lower division of West-

eel, nave, sm.all south transept, south porch and an em- minster hundred.

battled western tower containing 5 bells and a clock: Parish Clerk, William Watts.

there are several very ancient mural tablets: the Qast Post, Telegraph &; Express Delivery Office. Coombe Hill.

window is stained, and there is also a stained window in Mrs. Annie Jackson, sub-postmistress. Letters

the south transept: the church was restored in 1885, at through Cheltenham arrive at 8.15 a.m.; dispatched

the cost ()f £1,000: there are sittings for 152 persons. at 5.35 p.m. week days only. TOWllsend Place, Cbel-

The register dates from the year 1569. The living is a tenham, is the nearest money order office

vicarage, net yearly value £223, including 125 acres of Letter Box, Evington, cleared at 5.20 p.m.week days only

glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chan(:ellor, National School (mixed), built, in 1862, with residence

and held since 1897 by the Rev. Arthur Skidmore Lister for mistress, for 60 children; average attendance, 33;

M.A. of Keble College, Oxford. The MisBion church at Mrs. D. Thomas, mistress

Oombe Hill, erected about 1890, is a building of wood, Carrier. Green, passes through from Tewkesbury to

and will seat go persons; 'hervices are held alternate sun- Gloucester, wed. &; sat. returning same days &; from

days at 6.30 p.m. The Wesleyan chapel here was built Tewkesbury to Cheltenham, thurs

LEIGH. Bullock Henry, farmer Margrett Ann (Mrs.), Crown inn,

Lister Rev. Arthur Skidmore M.A. Clifford William, Swan inn,Coombe hill CoOombe hill

Viearage Corbett George, farmer . Newman Charles, blacksmith
Chandler Sidney, farmer, Leigh end Court ~ohn, farmer, Staplin~s Roberts Thomas, farme'l"

Troughton Albt. C.farmer,Leigh court Earl Huam, farmer, see S'mlth &; Earl Smith & Earl, farmers,Walton grange

EVINGTON Finch Amelia (Mrs.), farmer Stubbs Frederick William, blacksmith
. Fin~h Rosa.nnah (Mrs.), farIlleJI" Taylor Thomas, carpenter

Hoad James, Evington villa Hancock James, farmer Tomlinson John, farmer

Roward Joseph, Coombe bank Hancock RichaTd, farmer WaJtham Alfred Oakey, farmer, Leigh

Kevern William, Evington cottage Hodgkins Gertrude H. (Miss), private Villa farm

COHMERCIAL. school, CoOombe hill Waston Silas, farmer

Bevan John, assistant overseer James John, farmer Weston James, farmer

Bishop William Henry, farmer JonM Henry. wheelwright, Coombe hill Yarnold Joseph, frmr.Brick House frm

Brown John, farmer Moore Ann tMrs.), butter dealer

LOWER LEMINGTON is a parish, on the Warwick- Rev. Augustin Williams, of St. DofavTido'dsenChoallemO~'ew, hLoarme--
peter, surrogate, and also rector
shire border, 2 miles north-east from Moreton-in-the-
Marsh station on the Oxford and Worcester branch of sides at 21 Bruce street, Northampton; the Rev. WiJIinm
the Great Western railway, and 5 south-by-west frc.m
Hartley Moody RA. of Durham University has been
Shipston-on-Stour, in the Eastern division of the county,
upper division of the hundred of Tewkesbury, Shipston- curate in charge since 1896, and resides at Todenham.
on-Stour union and county court district, petty lessional
division of Moreton-in-the-Marsh, rural deanery of Camp- There is a charity derived from land devised by Lady

den, archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Glou- Fane, in the year 1761, yielding about £16 yearly. from

cester. The church (name unkn(}wn) is a sman but which an accumulated fund has been formed for the Te-
ancient building of stone, in the Early English and Per-
pendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, g"outh porch lief of the poOor as occasion requires; there ia dso a snm

and a turret containing one bell: on the floor "WIthin the of £4 yearly derived from £100, bequeathed in 1662 by
communion rails is a brass to Charles and Peter GTeviU,
Dr. William Juxon, archbish(}p of Canterbury. Algernon
c. 1636: there are 80 sittings. The register .:lates from
the year 1685. The living is a vicarage, gross yearly Bertram Freeman-Mitford esq. O.B., D.L., J.P. of Bats-

value £50, with 30 acres of glebe, in the gift of .A. B. ford Park is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The

Freeman-Mitford esq. C.B. and held since 1889 by the soil is a mixture, chiefly of clay and gravel; !lubsoil, clay

and oolite. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and

roots. The area is 856 acres; rateable value, £692;

the population in 1891 was 75.

Parish Clerk, Joseph Hoare.

GLOD. 15*

228 LOWER LEMINGTON. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Letters received through Moreton-in-the-Marsh arrive The children of this place attend the school at Moreton.

at 9.30 a.m. Moreton-in-the-Marsh, 2 miles distant, is in-the-Marsh

also the nearest money order & telegraph office

Kendrick J ohn,farmer, Oldborough frm I Lidsey William, farmer I WheelM' David, farmer

LITTLETON-ON-SEVERN is a parish, on the chapel. Robert C. Cann-Lippincott esq. of Over Court,
navigable river Severn, 3 miles west from Thornbury Almondsbury, who is lord of the manor, Mrs. ·Ward,
terminal station of a branch of the Midland railway, !lnd Nicholas Ward esq. and- Daniel Collins esq. are the prin-
!2 north from Bristol, in the Southern division of the cipal landowners. The soil is principally marl; subsoil,
county, Langley and Swineshead hundred, Thornbury clay. The chief crops are wheat, potatoes, but most

union, petty sessional division and county court district, of the land is in pasture. The area is 933 acres of land,S
rural deanery of Stapleton and archdeaconry and diocese of water, 16] of tidal water, and 928 of foreshore; rate-
of Bristol. The church of St. Mary-de-Malmsbury, re- able value, £1,92 4; the population in 1891 was 196.

built in 1878 at a cost of about £1,900, is an edifice of Post Office. Mrs. [Eliza Simmonds, sub-postmistress.
stone in the Early English and later styles, consisting of Letters arrive from Thornbury R.S.O. Gloucestershire,
chancel, nave, north transept, south aisle, south porch at 8.30 a.m.; dispatched at 4. 10 p.m. No sunday ser.
vice. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
and a south-western gabled tower containing 2 bells: the Thornbury, 4 miles distant, is the nearest money order
ancient font is Norman: there are 180 sittings. The re- & telegraph office
gister dates from the year 1692. The living is a rectory,
net yearly value £100, including 24 acres of glebe, with National School (mixed), built in 1858, for 44 children;
average attendance, 40; Miss Margaret Eaton, mistrss
residence, in the gift of R. C. Cann-Lippincott esq. and

held since 1897 by the Rev. Bedford Hartnel1 M.A. of

St. \John's College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan Carrier to Bristol. In. Sam!. Gough, tues. thurs. & sat

Hartnell Rev. Bedford M.A. Rectory Jones Hannah (Miss), farmer Simmonds Henry Augustus, farmer

Collins Alfred, farmer Keen Charles, farmer Sta.fford Mary (Mrs.), shopkoope.r

Collins Daniel, Ye<lman Mills John, farmer Taylor Joseph, farmer & beer retailer

Durnell Enoch,foreman to Messrs.P.G. Simmonds Daniel, builder & groce'l" Taylor Joseph, jun. farmer

& H. Wintle Stafford Henry, farmer &; a.ssistant Wintle Percy George &; Hamilton,

Gough John Samuel, carrier overreer, Rock house brick, tile-, pipe & pottery works

WEST LITTLETON is a parish and village, on the value of £2 2S. yearly, arising from one-third of the net

Cotswold Hills, and on the Wiltshire border, 7 miles dividends of £210, £2£ per Cent. Consolidated Annuities,

south-east from Yate station on the Bristol and Birming- left by Elizabeth Francon, about 1805, and applied to

ham section of the Midland railway, 6 south-east from the purchase of clothes, distributed on St. Thomas' day
Chipping Sodbury and 9 north from Bath, in the to poor men and women of West LittletoII: the remain-
Southern division of the county, Grumbalds Ash hundred, ing two thirds are disbursed at Marshfield in like manner.

Chipping Sodbury union and county court district, Sod- In this parish is an ancient camp. The Duke of Beaufort
bury petty sessional division, rural deanery of Bitton and K.G., P.C. is lord of the manor, and George William

archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. The church of St. Blathwayt esq. of Dyrham Park, Mr. Charles Baldwin,
James, rebuilt in 1855, is a small edifice of stone in the Mr. T. Hillier and Mrs. E. S. Osb(}rne, are chief land-
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel and nave, south owners. The soil is stone brash; subsoil, clay and rock.
porch and a pyramidal bell cote at the junction of the The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. The parish

nave and chancel, transferred from the old building and contains five farmhouses and 1,009 acres of land; rate-

containing one bell: there are 150 sittings. The early able value, £994; the population in 1891 was 100.
register is incorporated with that of To~marton, which Sexton, Henry Strange.
dates from the year 1679; the separate regIster dates from
181 3 only. The living is a chapelry annexed to the ree- Letter Box cleared. at 6.50 g.m.. week days only. Let-
tory of Tormarton, yearly value from tithe rent-charge ters through Chlppenham arrlve at 6;50 a.Ill;. The
£600, including 97 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Duke neare~t m0!1ey order &; telegraph office IS at Marshfie1d,

of :Beaufort K.G., P.C. and held since 1883 by tIll' Rev. I! miles dIstant

Richard Brent Neville M.A. of Trinity College, ll11blin, The children of this place attend the National school at
who resides at Tormarton. There are charities of the Marshfield

:Baldwin Frederick, frmr. Church frm Gullock J ames, farmer Osborne Eleanor Sarah (Mrs.) &; Wm.
farmers
Blake George, farmer, Home farm Jones Thomas, carpenter &c

Gent Henry, farmer

LONG:BOROUGH is a village and parish, 3 miles There are charities of £6 10S. yearly valne, besides about

south-west from Moreton-in-the-Marsh station on the £24 derived from 18 'acres of land, called" the fuel allot-

Oxford and Worcester branch of the Great Western rail- ment," which is distributed in kind. This place was a

way, 9 south-west from Shipston-on-Stour and 28 north- Roman settlement. Banks Fee, the residence of Mrs.

east from Gloucester, in the Eastern division of the Godman, was purchased in 1865 from the Earl of Coven-

county, upper division of the hundred of Kiftsgate, try; it stands on a height which commands an extensive

union, petty sessional division and county court district view, aud is surrounded by the beautiful scenery of the

of Stow-on-the-Wold, rural deanery of Stow, archdea- Cotswold Hills. Lord Leigh, wh() is lord of the manor,

conry of Cirencester and diocese of Gloucester. The James Tertius Dugdale esq. of Sezincot House, and trulI-

church of St. James is a building of stone in the Perpen- tees of the late E. T. Godman esq. are the principal

dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, transepts, south landowners. The soil is clay and oolite; subsoil, oolite.

porch and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and roots. The

containing- 5 bells, re-hung, and 'One re-cast in 1896, at a area is 3,°36 acres; rateable value, £3,085; the papula-

cost ()f about £100: in the south transept is a tomb, tion in 1891 was 552.

with the recumbent figure of a knight wearing a coro- By Local Government Board Order, 14,636, ~ar. 25,
neted helmet; and handsome marble monument to William
Leigh, ob. 1635; under a richly carved canopy, supported 1883, a detached part of Condicote, known as West Hor-
sendown, was transferred to Longborough.
by four marble pillars, lie the effigies of William Leigh Sexton, Thomas Green.
(in armour), his wife and three children: there are also

three canopied niches with pedestals for statues and Bome Post Office. Mrs. Bernard W. Dolphin, sub·postmistress.

fragments of ancient stained glass: the porch doorway is Letters through Moreton-in-the-Marsh, arrive at 7
Norman: in 1893 the chancel was restored at a cost of a.m. & 2.15 p.m.; dispatched at II a.m. &; 6 p.m. ;

about [,770: there are 250 sittings. The register, includ- sundays, arrive at 8.45 a.m. & dispatched at 10 a.m.

ing' Sezincote, dates from the year 1676. The living is a Postal orders are issued here, but not paid. Moreton-

vicarage, with the rectory of Sezincote annexed, joint in-the-Marsh, 3 miles distant, is the nearest moLey

gross yearly value £250, with residence, in the gift of order & telegraph office

Lord Leigh and James T. Dugdale esq. and held since Parish School (mixed), built in 1875, for 150 children;

1887 by the Rev. John Westeott Stoneman B.A.. of the average attendance, 96; John Fornear, master; :Mrs.

University of London. Here is a Congregational chapel. Fornear, mistress

Godman Mrs. Banks Fee Arkell William, farmer, Manor farm Dolphin Bernard W. (Mrs.), shop-

:Meadow.;; Miss Bishop Joseph, blacksmith keeper, Post office

Phipps William Boulton William, shopkeeper Green Thomas, carpenter

Stoneman Rev. John Westcott RA. Charles Beresford Mayne, commercial Kilby John, farmer

Vicarage traveller, Ganboro' (letters through Matt!hews Ernest W. frmr. Frogmore

COMMERCIAL. Stow-on-the-Wold S.O) Newman Ann Elizh.(Mrs.), beer retlr

Arthurs Thomas, hurdle maker Davis Herbert, farmer, Banks farm Preston Charles, beer retailer

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. LONGHOPE. 2:19

Phipp~ Francis Louis, shoeing & Smith George, grocer Todd Richard, farm bailiff to Mr. W.
general smith Stokes John, farmer H. Longford, Luckley farm

Scrivens Alfred G. tailor Waters William, shopkeeper Wheeler David, frmr. Maidenhill frm

LONGFORD, a township and village, was constituted owner. The soil is a blackish mould on a bed of gravel,
s parish in March, 1885, by Local Government Board Order
16,525, under the provisions of the "Divided Parishell and used for pasture and arable, in equal proportions.
Acts, 1876 and 1882," from the civil parishes of 'Barn-
wood, Twigworth, Wootton St. Mary, St. Catherine, St. The area of the former is 460 acres and of the latter
oMldarypadreishLoodfe LaonndgfBoardrtoSnt.StC. aMthaerryi,neG;loiutceissteirn,tearnsdectthede
428; combined rateable value, £3,600; the population
by the road leading to Tewkesbury, and is 1 mile north
from Gloucester, in the Northern division of the county, in 1891 was 521.
Dudstone and King's Barton hundred, Gloucester union,
county court district and petty sessional division. For P t Offi M E T ' II b .
os ce.- rs. mma lve s, su -postmIstress. Let-
ecclesiastical purposes this parish is attached to the ters through Gloucester, arrive at 7.15 a.m. & 4p.m.;
district of Twigworth. The manor, with all its privileges dispatched at 6,45 & 8,45 p.m. except sunday. Postal

and appurtenances, was given to the see of Gloucester orders are issued here, but not paid. Gloucester is
by King Henry VIII. and is still held by the
Bishop of Gloucester; Mrs. Herbert is the chief land- the nearest money order & telegraph office, ~ miles
distant

The children of this place attend school at Twigworth

Carriers to Gloucester.-Phillips, passing through, from
Tewkesbury, wed. & sat.; Clifford, from .Apperley, on
sat.; returning same day

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Selous Mrs'. Longford house Kearsey Charles, appraiser, 2 West-

Baylis Charles, Longford court Swann Mrs. 3 Westfield terrace field terrace

Bodman .Arthur, Longford lodge Tovey George, Sandhul"st cottage Major James, coal merchant

Clarke Robert .Arthur H Turner J. Edward J.P. The Limes Parker William Joseph, builder

Downs Miss Poulton Wm. (Mrs.),frmr.Pleasure frm

Drew Wm. Tyndall, The Redlands COMMERCIAL. Roberts George, market gardener,

Gammidge William, Greville house Burmingham Harold, market gardener Kingsholm gardens

Gransmore Joseph, NiJ:on villa, Sand- Coates Eliza (Mrs.),Queen'sHead P.H Roberts Sidney Raymond, market

hurst road Critchley John, farmer gardener, Sandhurst road •
Hall Mrs
Drake L. (Mrs.), ladies' school, West- Sivell John Samuel, Manor farm

Hanman Charles Frederick,Frog ~a.stle field house ~tafford Geo. William, market gardnr

Herbert Ml"s. 6 Westfield terrace Enstone Edmund, haulier & beer re- Tandy Frank, brick & tile manufac-

Hodges Mrs. 4 Westfield terrace tailer, Sandhurst road tur~r. Sandhur-st road

Jones Chas. .A.llan, Longford house Goscombe Wm.dairy,Sandhurst road Taylor George, farmer

Livings Lewis, Lawn villa Her'bert Jas. commercial trav. The Cot Venn William, market gardener

Niblet Ml'Is. Elm lodge Hocke:I James, blacksmith Vine,s Peter, farmer, Plock Court frm

Organ Mrs. I Westfield terrace Jeynes William, brick maker Watts Edwin, Jolly Waterman P.H

Parry Mrs. Longford villa Jones H.obert Henry, New inn Wintle James, brick maker

LONGHOPE is a village and parish, on the high road some magnificent views, is in this parish; the greater
from Gloucester to Micheldean and Coleford, with 8 part of it has been inclosed, but 4 acres on the summit
station on the Hereford, Ross and Gloucester ,section of have been retained for the use of the public and vested
the Great Western railway, three quarters of a mile south in the churchwardens. In 1887, in order to secure the
from the village, and is 6 miles north from Newnham, 9 site, one acre of this ground 'Was planted with over 2,000
west from Gloucester and 115 from London, in the Forest trees, as a memorial of the Queen's Jubilee. The soil
of Dean division of the county, hundred of the Duchy of is clay and loam; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are
Lancaster, union of Westbury-on-Severn, Newnham wheat and roots. The area is 2,987 acres; rateable
county court district and petty sessional division, rural value, £4,843; the population in r891 was 972.
deanery of North Forest and archdeaconry and diocese
of Gloucester. The church of .All Saints is an ancient Parish Clerk, Henry Crease.
cruciform edifice of stone in the Early English style,
consisting of chancel, nave, transepts, south porch and Post & M. O. 0., S. B. & Annuity &; Insurance Office
an embattled western tower, with finials, containing 5
bells: the stained east window, erected in 1861, is 8 (Railway Sub-Office). Letters should have R.S.O.
memorial to the Rev. Vernon George Guise, a former Gloucestershire added.-Charles Hampton, sub-post-
vicar, d. 10 March, r861: a new organ was erected in master. Letters arrive at 6,40 a.m. & 4.ro p.m.; dig-
1893: the church was restored in 1870, at a cost of patched at 10.25 a.m. & 6.30 & 9 p.m.; on sundays
letters arrive at 7 a.m.; dispatched at IQ a.m. Tele-
£400, and has 350 sittings. The register dates from the graph office at Micheldean for delivery, 3 miles dis-
year 1742.. The living is a rectory, gross yearly value tanto Telegrams are transmitted from the Railway
£300, including :ao acres of glebe, with residence, in the
gift of J. C. Sharpe esq. of the Manor House, Longhope, station, but not received there
and held since 1897 by the Rev. George Barr M.A. of Wall Letter Boxes :-Upper End, cleared at 6 p.m. week

St. John's College, Cambridge. Here is a Baptist chapel. days only; Glass House Hill, cleared at 5.30 p.m.;
The charities, vested in twelve trustees and the vicar Dursley Cross, cleared at 5,40 p.m.; Church, cleared
and churchwardens, are of £130 yearly value, derived at 6.10 p.m.; Little London, cleared at 6.15 p.m. week
from land left by different benefactors; this amount is
equally divided among the church, schools and poor. days only
There are also several other charities vested in the church- SCHOOLS.
wardens and by them distributed. Inglis Jones esq. is
lord of the manor, and John Charles Sharpe esq. of National (mixed), built in 1829, for 85 children; average
Byfleet, Surrey, is the principal landowner. Yartledon attendance, 53; Ebenezer Brown, master
Hill, commonly called "May Hill," which rises to a
height of 973 feet above the sea level and commands British (mixed), built in 1846 & enlarged in 1893, for
142 children; average attendance, 89; & partly sup-
ported by an endowment of £50 from Goff's charity;
Arthur Robert Large, master

Railway Station, James Townsend, station master
Carriers to Gloucester.-William Bluett & Chas. Cottrell,

both from Micheldean, pass through wed. & s",t

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Bailinger William Bullock, fruiterer & den rake handles, scythe sneads

Barr Rev. George M.A. Rectory haulier, Little London &c. Steam saw miHs

Briggs Thomas, Springfield house Bennett Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer, Constance Lucy(Mrs.),frmr.The Steps

Carter Christopher Harts barn Cons tance Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer,

Constance Miss, Hill house Birch John, farmer, The Rock Church farm

Constance The Misses,Summerpole ho Bradley Frederick, butcher Constance Wm. farmer, Court farm

Cook Miss Bradley Waiter, Prudential agent Cox George, farmer, Suttridge cot

Greenus Harry Bradley William, frmr. Little London Crease Hy. shopkpr. & parish clerk

Hill Misses, Coglap house Bradley William, jun. grocer & baker, Davis Thomas, wheelwright

Lansdown Miss, Bower cottage Little Londou Dawes James, haulier

MichaeImore Thomas J. Upper end Browning Alfred, carpenter, May hill Dobbs Maris (Mrs.), farmer, Hin-

Priestley Miss, Perwardine villa Bucher Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper der's farm

Rudge Nathaniel Butler Edwin, farmer Dobbos Sarah (Mrs.), ladies' sc-hool,

Sharpe John Charles, Manor house Carter Christopher, farmer Upper end

Stephenson Mrs. Blenheim house Compton George, beer ret. Upper end Drew Henry (Mrs.), farmer, Holly

Thorneloe Francis, Walbrook house Constance James & Sons, general Bush hill

COMMERCIAL. brush wood turners &; manufac- Field Frederick Charles, builder

.A.lwen James, miller (water) .\ farmer, turers of prong stems, hay rakes, Field Elizh. (Mrs.), frmr. Cross farm

Parish mills mop, broom, paddle, hoe, & gar- Fowler John, grocer, Little London

230 LONGHOPE. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

Godwin Elizabeth (Mrs.), Plough inn Hawkins Thos. Nathnl. frmr.Hope brk Penwarden Wm. grocer, drpr. &; fannr

Haile John, beer retailer, Upper end James Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper Stephens Daniel, miller (steam),

Haile William, shopkeeper &; farmer Kersey Richard, farmer Dursley Cross mills

Hale Hubert, Yew Tree inn King Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper Sterrey Charles, farmer &; rate

Hall Francis John &; Son, carpenters Knight Jas. fruiterer, Little London collector, Marshes

&; wheelwrights Lea Wm. Benj. farmer, Brook farm Watkins Wm. farmer, Royal Spring

Hampton Charles, grocer, Post office Marshall Frederick, baker Williams WaIter, plumber &; decorator

Hampton Henry, frmr. Nuppin farm Ne1mes Thomas, farmer, May hill Wintle Robt. frmr. Upper Box bush

Harper WaIter, blaclusmith Palmer Julia &; Son, farmers Wintle William, farmer, Little Illake-

Hartland William, farmer, Bilbut Parry John, farmer, Blakemore farm more farm

Herbert John, agent to the Wes:eyan Pearce Samuel, farmer, May hill Wintle William, farmer, Upper end

&; General Assurance Society Pensom Thos. Cross inn, Dursley crss

LONGNEY is a parish and village, on the river Severn, alluvial; subsoil, blue lias. The crops are wheat and
beans; also apples, pears and plums are grown in great
3 miles north-west from Haresfield station on the Bristol quantities, and the dairy produce is considerable. The
and Birmingham section of the Midland railway, and
area. is 1,558 acres of land, I of water, 95 of tidal water
nearly 7 south-west from Gloucester, in the Northern and 71 of foreshore; rateable value, £2,635; the popu-
division of the county, upper division of Whitstone hun- lation in 1891 was 344 civil, and 317 ecclesiastical.
dred, Wheatenhurst union, Gloucester county court dis-
trict, petty sessional division of Whitminster, and in the By Local Government Board {)rder 15,259, March 24,
rural deanery, archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. 1884, detached parts of Standish, known as Cribb and
The church of St. Lawrence is an ancient building of Laperditch, were transferred to Longney for civil pur-
stone, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, poses.

nave, south porch and an embattled tower on the Parish Clerk, Reuben Gardner.
south side, containing 8 bells and a clock; the chan- Post Office.-Thomas Wm. Bick, sub-postmaster. Let-

cel and nave are Early English and the tower Perpen- ters received through Gloucester, by messenger, at 9.5
dicular: the church was thorougWy restored and partly a.m. Box cleared at 4.15 p.m. on week days only.
rebuilt in 1873, at a cost of £1,300, and has 150 sittings. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid. The
The register dates from the year 1660. The living is a nearest money order office is at Saul, &; telegraph
vicarage, gross yearly value £130, including 6 acres of office at Hardwick, 3 miles distant
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor,
and held since 1865 by the Rev. Edward Richard Nussey National School (mixed), built in 1865 &; enlarged in 1896,
B.A. of Oriel College, Oxford. Here is do Congregational
chapel. The charities are of about £24 yearly value. for 89 children; average attendance, 71; there is a
house for the master; Charles Cook. master
The trustees of Smith's charity are lords of the manor Carriers to Gloucester. John Knight, mono thurs. &;
and chief landowners. The soil is part clay and part
sat.; Herbert Knight, man. wed. &; sat.; Smith, man.
wed. & sat

Nussey !Rev. Edward Richatd B.A. Dowding Wm. Sims, farmer, Hillfield Longney Martha {Mrs. ),farmer,Down-

Vicarage Ellis Alfred, jun. frmr. Yew Tree frm ing farm

Pegler Demetrius Bevan, Arbours Ellis Alfd. sen. frmr. Castle End farm Mathews Daniel, beer retailer

COMMERCIAL. Ellis WaIter, farmer, Manor farm Meadows WaIter, butcher

Bick Thos. Wm. shopkpr. Post office Hawkins Susanna (Ml's.), farmer, Parton Thomas, farm bailiff to

Blakemore Lewis, builder Church End farm William Henry Butt esq. Hill farm

Boyce Sidney, blacksmi1fu Knight John, haulier &; carrier Vimpany Rd. frmr. Bridgemacott frm

Browning Daniel, jun. farmer &; Long Richard William, farmer Weyman Augusta. (Mrs.), farmer I&;

salmon fisher, Waterend farm Longney Albert, farmer, Lynch beer retailer

Bullock Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Longney EH, farmer, Bellamy's farm

LYDEROOK is a village and ecclesiastical parish, lord of the manor. The principal landowners are Richard

formed April 20, 1852, from the parishes of English Thomas esq. Charles Edward Machen esq. of Bicknor

Bicknor, Newland, Ruardean and the townships of East Court, and Lieut.-Q)l. Francis Baynham Vaughan, of

and West Dean; it is pleasantly seated on the river Wye Courtfield, Ross. The soil is light sandy; subsoil, clay,

and on the road from Q)leford to Ross, and hai two sandstone and limestone. The chief crops are wheat,

stations en the Severn and Wye and Severn Bridge rail- bat:ley and roots. The population in 1891 was 2,637.

way, 'one at each end of the village, called respectively Parish Clerk, Charles Black.

the Upper and Lower !..ydbrook stations, here is "also Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,

the Lydbrook Junction station of the Great Western rail- Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office, Lower Lyd-

way with the Severn and Wye and Severn Bridge rail- brook. Thomas William Townsend, sub-postmaster.

way, 8 miles east from Monmouth, 4 north-by-east from Letters are delivered from Ross at 7.35 & 9 a.m. &;

Coleford, 8 north-west from Newnham and 6 from Ross; 2.30 p.m.; dispatched at 3.45 &; 8.10 p.m

it is in the Forest of Dean division of the county, hundred Letter Boxes: Upper Lydbrook, cleared at 3.30 &; 6.25

of Saint Bpiavels, county court districts of Newnham and p.m.; sundays, 10.40 a.m. Joys Green, cleared at

Monmouth, unions of Monmouth, Westbury-on-Severn 6 p.m

and Ross, petty sessional divisions of Coleford and Newn- Police Station, George Hayward, constable in charge

ham, rural deanery of South Forest and archdeaconry and SOHOOLS.

diocese of Gloucester. The church of the Holy Jesus,

erected in 1851, is a building of stone, in the Decorated Board, Joys Green, under the Forest of Dean United

style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of five bays, District school board (mixed), built, with master's

aisles, south porch and a western tower containing I residence, in 1882, for 277 children; average attend-

bell: there are sittings for 460 persons. The register ance, 200 mixed & 80 infants; John Davies, master;

dates from the year 1852. The living is a vicarage, net William Owen, assistant master; Miss Caroline Gar-

yearl! value £262, in the alternate gift of the Crown and diner, infants' mistress .

the Bishop of Gloucester, and held since 1866 by the National (mixed &; infants), enlarged in 1872, for 262

Rev. Henry Thomas Hoitt M.A. of Pembroke College, children; average attendance, 132 mixed &; 86 infants;

Oxford. There is a Wesleyan chapel, built in 186'1-; a Charles Thomas Bishop, master

Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1828 and rebuilt in R.A.IIJWA"Y STATIONS.
1852, with Sunday schools attached; a Baptist chapel,

built in 1868 at a cost of £700; and a Congregational 'Upper &; Lower Lydbrook, Albert J. T. Chandler, station

chapel, built in 188'4 and enlarged in 1888. Here are master

coal, iron, tin and chemical works. The Crown is Lydbrook Junction

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. COMMERCIAL. Damsell Brothers, grocers &; corn

ChelI Misses Bartlett Ellen (Mrs.), news agent merchants, drapers i& gen. ironmgl'8

Damsell Frederic, Lower Lydbrook Bennett John, quarry owner Davies Wm. cab proprietor &; butcher

Damsell Geo. Spearing, Low.Lydbrook Bennett William, grocer &c. Joys grn Davies William Llewellyn, farmer,

Fletcher Henry Studd J.P Bevan Thom3ls, shpkpr. Up. Lydbrook Water Cross farm

Harris Rowland, Worrall hill Brain James, beer retailer, Hawsley Edwards ehas. butcher, Up. Lydbrook

Hoitt Rev. Hy. Thos. M.A. (vicar) Burdock Thomas, miller (water &; Edwards Hannah (Mrs.), beer retailer,

Jacob Rev. John W. (Primitive Meth) steam), Waterloo mill Lower Lydbrook

Joynes Joseph John, Brookdale house Carpenter Wm.shpkpr. Low.Lydbrook Fletcher Henry Studd, \Surgeon

Latham Rev. Arthur William(Baptist) Cooper Oliver, butcher Hale William, haulier, Joys green

Lewis Oliver, Hillside house Cooper Thomas, beer retailer Harper John, grocer &; general itores,

Linde Theodor M.D. Lydbrook house Cooper William, Bell inn &; haulier Upper Lydbrook

Thomas Hubert Spence, High view Crates William,shopkpr. Up.Lydbrook Hunt Charles, bookseller

-

DIRECTORY. ] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. LYDNEY• 231

.Tones Agnes (Miss), teacher of piano- Little John Edwin, beer retailer Tamplin Esther (Mrs.), shopkeeper

forte & dress maker, ladies' own Lower Lydbrook Oo-operative &; In- Thomas [Richard & 'Co. Lim. tinplate

material made up, Lower Lydbrook dustrial Society Limited (Samuel manufacturers & colliery proprie.

Jones Alfd. Jas. beer ret.Up.Lydbrook Drew, manager), Lower Lydbrook tors; bead office, Lydney

Jones Edward Thomas, carpenter, Lusty Giles, shoe maker, grocer & Townsend Thomas William, news

Lower 'Lydbrook provision dealer, Upper Lydbrook agent & fancy stationer, Post office

Jones Jane (Mrs.), Sawyers' Arms Lydbrook Ohemical ,Co. (Thomas New- Upper Lydbrook 'Co-operative Society

P.H. Lower Lydbrook comen, proprietor) Limited (John Green, manager),

Jones Leonard, New inn, Low.Lydbrk Lydbrook Store Co.(Jn.Burgum,mngr) . Upper Lydbrook

Jones Wm. beer ret. Up. Lydbrook Neat Charles, shopkeeper Walford Rd. coal dlr. Low. Lydbrook

Lewis Mary Ann (MI's.), shopkeeper, Partridge John,grocer,Upper Lydbrook Ward Hannah (Mrs. ), ladies' out-

Upper Lydbrook Phelps Ann (Mrs.), grocer &; draper, fitter, Upper Lydbrook

Lems Stephen Butt, beer retailer, Upper Lydbrook Wheatstone In. beer ret. Vention la

Upper Lydbrook Phelps Ellen (Mrs.), Anchor hotel; Williams Edmund, grocer & baker,

Linde Theodor M.D., C.M.Edin. sur- good accommodation for cyclists i& Lower Lydbrook

geon, Lydbrook house tourists Young Louisa Maria Bateman (Miss),

Little Edwin &; Son, millers (steam &; Preest Jsph. butcher, Up. Lydbrook tailoress &; dress maker; fit &: style

water) &; corn merchants Smart Thomas Leonard, beer retailer, guaranteed

LittleHerbt.wheelwright&;carriage bldr Upper Lydbrook

LYDNEY, with the Tithing of Aylburton.

LYDKEY is a parish and town, on the high road from the remains of tesselated pavement·s and hypocaUlits,
Gloucester to Chepstow and Swansea, 9 miles north-east together with a large number of coins, broken pottery,
from Chepstow, 123 from London by road and 134 by and implements of various kinds have been discovered:
rail, and 20 south-west from Gloucester, in the Forest {)f the &tation included also a temple, dedicated to a deity
Dean division of the county, head of a petty 'Sessional called "Nodens" or "Nordons." Lydney Park is the
division, in Bledisloe hundred, Chepstow union and seat of Charles Bathurst esq. B.A., J.P.; the mansion is
~ounty court district, rural deanery of South Forest, a picturesque building of stone in the Elizabethan style,
and archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. There is a
station here on the Severn and Wye railway which joins erected in 1875, from the designs of Mr. O. H. Howell,
the Great Western. railway (South Wales division) at
Lydney Junction, llnd is connected with the short length architect, of Lancaster place, London; the park is 120
acres in extent. Charles Bathurst esq. who is lord of tha
of the Severn Bridge railway which joins the Gloucester manor, Thomas Breadstone Croome esq. and Mrs. Edward
and Birmingham ~ection of the Midland railway at
Owen Jones are chief landowners. The soil is various, in
Berkeley road, from which a canal one mile in length some places light sandy and in others principally mad
and clay, on the ironstone formation; subsoil, sandstone
extends to the harbour known as Lydney Creek, the port and ironstone. The stratifications in the neighbourhood
of Gloucester; the width of the outer harbour gates is 34 of Lydney are the out-croppings of the Forest lower coal
feet, and within vessels of 500 tons find berth. The measures, after which are the sandstone rock, ironstone
ehurch (If St. Mary is a large edifice of stone in the Early and partial formations of the new red sandstone. The
English style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of chief crops are wheat, barley, beans and oaJ;s; steam
machinery for ploughing and reaping has been in use
five bays, aisles, north and south porches and an embattled for some years. The area of the parish is 5,157 acres of
western tower, with spire, containing w clock and 6 bells: land, 28 of water, 596 of tidal water and 1,197 of fore-
there are several stained windows, the east window being shore; rateable value, £22,100; the population in I891
was township, 2.944; parish, 3,632.
a memorial to .Toseph Cookson esq. late of Clifton: an
Qrgan was placed in 1;869, at a cost of £280: the spire AYLBURTON is a tithing in the parish of Lydney, and
lies on the high road, I mile south-by-west. The church
was blown down and rebuilt in 1896 at a cost of about
of St. Mary was removed from its former site on the hill
£1,000: the church has been restored and re-pewed, and
above and re-erected, nearly without alteration, in 1857,
affords 450 sittings. The register of baptisms and burials at the sole expense of the late Charles Bathurst esg.
dates from the year 1678; marriages from 1648; the with the exception of £25, given by the lessee of the
:register of Aylburton is incorporated with this. The great tithes, and consists of chancel, nave of two bays,
living is a vicarage, with the tithing of Aylburton an-
nexed, yearly value £530, with residence, in the gift of south aisle, south porch and a western tower containing
one bell: there are 200 sittings. The Rev. Ernel3t Lim-
the Dean and Ohapter of Hereford, and held since 1893
by the Rev. John Charles Eldridge Besant M.A. of Christ bert Daniels B.A. of Durham University, has been curate
Church, Oxford. The Baptist chapel was erected in 1836 in charge since 1896. Here is a large and ancient cross,
and has 350 sittings. The Wesleyan chapel will seat 250 similar in character to that at Lydney. Willowby's
charity, of about £20 yearly value, il3 in part for church
persons. 'The Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1869, purposes, but chiefly for distribution: there..aT6 also four
has sittings for 400 persons. The Town Hall, erected in
1889, by a limited company, on a site facing the CrOlll, almshouses. O. Bathurst esq. who is lord of the manor,
given by C. Bathurst esq. from designs by Mr. W. H.
8eth-Smith, at a cost of £2,000, is a building of stone, and Mrs. Willoughby .Tones are the chief landowners.
comprising a hall 93 feet by 40 feet with raised stage, The area is 1,886 acres of land, 4 of water, 254 of tidal
dressing rooms, cloak rooms &c. The Lydney Institute water and 726 of foreshore; rateable value, £3,964; the
find School of Art and Science, recognised by the County population in 1891 was 688.
Council as a centre for the instruction of elementary
school teachers of the Forest of Dean and surrounding Lydney Parish Clerk, Henry PowelI.

district, is conducted at the Town Hall; attached is a Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,

library of upwards of 1,000 volumes and a reading-room. Parcel Post, &; Annuity &; Insurance Office. John
The vicini,ty of Lydney, forming part of the estate of Shaw, postmaster. Letters from London &; all parts
Oharles Bathurst esq. is rich in mineral produce, more
especially in iron mines. Richard Thomas and Co. arrive at 1.45 a.m. &; are delivered at 7; dispatched at
Limited, have large tinplate works near the station,
9.25 &; 10.25 p.m.; box closes at 9. Letters with an
giving employment to upwards of 500 hands. A cattle extra. stamp may be posted till 9.10 p.m. Day mail
market is held here on the first Tuesday in every month from London at 10.30 a.m.; second day mail from
at the Feathers Hotel. Fairs are held on May 4th and London at 3 p.m.; .London letters can be posted 1
November 8th, and a general wool and stock fair on 25th p.m. &; with extra stamp 1.15 a.m. North mail arrives
June. There is a charity of [,100, left by a former vicar at 6 a.m. j letters delivered at 7 a.m.; box closes at

and invested in Consols, the interest to be distributed to 6,3° p.m. First arrival of the mail from 'Coleford at
the poor yearly. Lydney and Aylburton Cottage Hos-
pital, opened in 1882, has two sick wards for males and 7.6 p.m.; second arrival 9.25 p.m. Telegraph office
females and one for children; there are 7 beds; the open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m
Post Office, Newerne.-John Rowe Smale, sub-post.
ordinary income is £180. The 'ancient cross, at the top master. Letters are posted here till 6.45 p.m
of Church street, wail restored in 1878, in memory of the
Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,
late Rev. W. H. Bathurst, of Lydney Park, by his child-
Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office, Lydney
ren. In 1892 a. park of about 17 acres, tastefully laid Docks. John George Harrison, sub-postmaster. Let-
out and planted with shrubs and evergreens, was pre-
ters arrive at 8 a.m. &; 4 p.m.; dispatched at 6 et
sented to the town by Charles Bathurst esq. in com.
memoration of the coming of age of his son Charles. 7 p.m
Lydney is by some writers supposed to have been the J,>ost Office, Aylburton.-Tom Wood, sub-postmaster.

Roman station "Abona" and there are evidences of its Letters arrive from Lydney at 6.50 a.m.; dispatched
at 5.45 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, b~$
undoubted occupation by the Romans: in Lydney Park, paid. :Kearest money order &; telegraph office ~s at
Lydney, 2 miles distant

232 LYDNEY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

Wall Letter Box, near the bridge, Neweme, cleaNd PUBLIO OP'FlCERS.
6,55 p.m
ASlistant Overseers, WiTIiam Charles Williams, Aylands
COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR LYDNEY PETTY lodge, Lydney &; Thomas Garland, Aylburton
SESSIONAL DIVISION.
Inland Revenue Officer, Ernest Fellow.
Bathurst Charles esq. RA. Lydney park, Lydney Medical Officer &; Public Vaccinator, Lydney District.
Bathurst Charles, jun. esq. Lydney park, Lydney
Cook Surgeon-General Henry M.D., F.G.S., F.B.Met.S., Chepstow Union. Tyler Pleydel Carter L.B.C.P.Lond.,
M.R.C.S.Eng. Moorlands
F.R.G.S. Priors Mesne, Lydney
Harrison Albert William esq. Raglan house, Lydney PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services.
Jenkins Richard Palmer esq. Beachley lodge, nr. Chepstow
Keeling George William esq. 10 Lansdown terrace, Chel- St. Mary's ChuNh, Lydney, Bev. John Charles Eldridgt
Besant M.A. vicar; Rev. Ernest L. Daniels, curate;
tenham II a.m. &; 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7 p.m
Marling C<ll. Waiter Bentley, Olanna, Alvington, Lydney
Morgan Henry Francis esq. Tidenham ho. nr. Chepstow St. Mary's Church, Aylburton; 11 a.m. &; 6.30 p.m.;
Seys Godfrey esq. Wirewoods green, Chepstow fri. 7 p.m
Thomas Richard Beaumont esq. Dennel hill, Chepstow
Baptist, Rev. Edwin Davies; 10.45 a.m. &; 6 p.m.; we<f.
Uerk to the Magistrates, FothergiU Evans, Chepstow 7.30 p.m
Petty Sessions are held at the New Police Station last
Primitive Methodist, Rev. John Knipa; 10.45 a.m. &
wednesday in every month at II.30 a.m. The follow- 6 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m
ing places are included in the division :-Aylburton,
.Alvington, Beachley, Lydney, Woolastone, Tidenham, Wesleyan, Rev. John Hannah; IO.30 a.m. &; 6 p.m.;
Lancaut & Hewelsfield mono 7.30 p.m

LYDNEY RURAL DISTRIar OOUNOIL. SQHOOLS•

Meets at Chepstow on saturdays every other month at Church (mixed), erected, with masier's residence, in 1866',
12.30 noon. at a cost of £2,000, on a site given by the late Rev.

Clerk, Fothergill Evans, Chapstow W. H. Bathurs-t, of Lydney Park. &; enlarged in 1892;
Treasurer, Charles William Loftus Digby, London &; it will hold 140 boys, 140 girls & II9 infants; averag&
attendance, 120 boys, 135 girls &; 107 infants; John
Provincial Bank, Chepstow Wild, master; Miss Mary A. Trigg, mistress; Misll A.
:Medical Officer of Health, Francis Thomas Bond :M.D.• E. Hall, infants' mistress
Aylburton (mixed), built, with mistresses' residence, in
F.-O.S. 3 Beaufort buildings. Gloucester I86g, for 160 children; average attendance, 1°4; Miss
Inspector of Nuisances, William Williams, Chepstow Brica, mistress
Primrose Hill, Lydney (mixed &; infants), built in 187~
PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS. & enlarged in 1886, for 160 children; average attend-
ance, 140; Miss M. A. Childs, mistress

Assembly Rooms, Newerne, John Frank Burton Smith. CONVEYANCE.
lessee
Sevem &; Wye Railway (G. W. &; Mid. Joint Railway},
County Polic& Station, Hubert ,Seabright, sergeant in
charge, &; :I constables 'John J. Petrie, traffic manager •

Custom House, Lawrence Cox, officer Lydney Junction Station, Ernest Birt, station master
Harbour Office, Lydney harbour, Samuel Kingsoote Lewis,
Lydney Town Station, Wm. Alfred Taylor, station master
harbour master
Lydney 0& Aylburton Cottage Hospital, L. R Trotter M.D., Great Western Railway, Harry Rochford Fletcher, station

A. G. Lawrence M.D., T. P. Garter L.B.O.P.Lond. W. master
C. Halpin L.R.'O.P.E. W. P. Kennedy B.A., :M.D., P. T.
Lunn M.R.C.S.Eng., L.R.C.P.Lond. P. Buchanan M.R, OARRIERS.
C.M., J. Shaw Carleton L.R.C.P.Irel. &; E. R King.
medical officers; G. T. V. Keeling, hon. sec.; Miss Lydney Carrying Co. (Jones &; Son), steamers ply be-
King, ma-tron tween Lydney & Bristol, returning, loading at Lydney
on mondays & thursdays, for delivery in Bristol on
Stamp Office, Post offioe, John Shaw, distrib.tor tues. &; !ri. discharging at Lydney on wed. &; sat. for

Ooleford, Oinderford, Lydbrook. Parkend &c

LYDNEY.

PRIVA'I'J!l RESIDENTS. Gamble John, High street KnipeRev.John (Primitive Methodist).

Barnard John Fisher, !High street Gollop Charles James, Oakfield Spring cottage, Albert streoet

Bathurst Ohas. RA., J.P. Lydney pk Gallop Miss, High street Lamb Mrs. High street

Bathurst Ohas. jun. J.P. Lydney pk Gosling Frank S. High street Lauder J ames, Lydney Old park

Besant Rev. John Chas. Eldridge M.A Giraham Mrs. Stanforo road Lones Edward, Bucklands

Vicarage Hannah Re.v. John (Wesleyan), Park rd Lones John, Bucklands

Butt George, High street Harrison Albert Wm. J.P. Raglan ho M.errett Mrs. Park road

CampbeU Sir Jas. bart. J.P. Redhill Hockaday Frank Step, Highbury Price Charles, The Park

Carter TyIer Pleydell, Moorlands Howells Howard, Oxford street Smith Georga, Victoria. road

Cotton William, High street Imm Henry, High street Smith Thomas Art,hur Hams, High-

Courteen Rabert, New91'Ile J ones William, The Moorlands field villa

Davies Rev. Edwin (Baptist) Keeling Geo. Tremaine, Tuthill house WilliamSl William Chas. Aylands lodge

Davies John, Primrose hill Keeling Misses, Tuthill house Willesford Mrs. Highfield house

Dewdney Misses, Altborpe house Kennedy William Player RA., M.D.

Fletcher :Mrs. Begent street High street

COMMERCIAL. Brown Charles John, shopkeeper, Nawerne

Alton alOft Brewery Co. Limited (G. A. Gwilliam, man- Butter Robt. gamekeeper to C. Bathurst esq. LeechpooI
ager), brewers, maltsters &; mineral water manufacturers Butt George, school attendance officer, High street
Oamm David, Severn View inn, &; coal mer. Primrose hill
,Anglo-Bavarian Beer Stores (Frank C. Gosling, manager). Camm John, beer retailer, Albart street
High street
Capital &; Counties Bank Limited (branch) (Frank ..t.
Arnold Perrett &; Co. Limited, brewers &; wine &; spirit
Fream, manager); dra.w on head office, 39 Thread:'
merchants; office &; stores, N ewerne needle street, London E 0
Assembly Rooms (John Frank B. Smith, lessee). Newerne Oarter Tyler Pleydell L.R.C.P.Lond., :M.R.O.S.Eng. Bur-
geon & medical officer &; puNic vaccinator, Lydney dis-
Barnard Bros. hop merchants &; maltsters trict, Chepstow union. Moorlands
Chapman Charles, insurance agent, Primrose hill
Barnard Albert Edward, fancy Tepository. Newerne
Barnard Samuel Fisher. Feathers hotel Clark Arthur E. grocer, Primrose hill
Bartlett Samuel Henrv. plumber & ilainter Clark Benjamin, grocer, Newerne
Bath Benjamin, well -sinker, AIlastone Cotton Richard, draper &; grocer, High street
Beach Charlotte (Mrs.), confectioner, Newerne
Oustom House (Lawrence Cox, principal COBst officerJ,
Baylis Richard, shopkeeper, Primrose hill
Beard Albert Edward, grocer, High street Cookson's terrace
Davies Emma (Mrs.), Fleece inn, Newerne
Bernard, Edwards &; Brown, shippers, Lydney burn Davies John, builders' &; general merchant &; colliery agent,

Berthon Harold Warwick, solicitor. High street Town station. See adver,tisement
Bettington Harriet &; :Mary (Misses), dress mas. Neweme Davies Thomas D. shoe maker, :Maple hill
Bettington William, builder &; shopkeeper Davis Martin, butcher, Newerne
Bevan Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, Stanford road Denby Johnson & Jacob, farmers, Dairy farm
Birt Harford &; Son, tailors &; outfitters, Neweme
Bowen Thomas, insurance agent, Tutnalls

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. LYDNEY. 233

Dean Forest Coal Co. coal factors (Jose-ph Knight. agent). Lydney Mutual Improvement Society (navid Jones .&

Cookson's terrace Frank J. Lowes. secs)

Dewdney K. &; A. (Misses'. ladies' day &; boarding school. Lydney Observer (Thomas Cole Gwilliam. proprietor &;

Althorpe house publisher; published friday). Newerne

Dodgin Charles William. ship builder & ship chandler. Lydney Town Hall Co. Lim. (Josiah S. Watts, hon. sec)

Lydney dock Meadows Peter, farmer, Warren farm

Dowle George, insurance agent, Tutnalls Merrick Oswald Osman Pasha, boot maker, High .treet

Eastman's Limited, butchers, Newerne Merrick Samuel Hewlett, saddler &; harness maker

Edwards Bernard. coal factor, Caokson's terrace Morse Charles, carpenter. High street

Ensor Benjamin, shoe maker, High street Morse Thomas. farmer. Blackrock farm

Evans Richard. shoe maker, Albert street Murray William, hair dresser, Newerne

Fear Frank, butcher, Newerne National Telephone Co. Lim. call office, P(}8t office, High si

Fellows Ernest. inland revenue officer Nelmes Albert, Bridge inn. Newerne

Finoh Frederick, baker, Newerne Nelmes James, beer retailer, Newerne

Franklin John Thomas, Severn Bridge hotel, Purton Nicholls John, quarry (lwner. Newerne

Fream Frank A. manager Capital &; Counties Bank Lim. North Central Wagon Co. Limited (Henry .A.1len, in

&; treasurer to the rural distriot council, High street charge), G .W. Railway yard

Freeman Esau. outdoor supt. Severn & Wye Joint Rail- Northcott Philip, farmer, Nurneshill farm

way Co Park lEnd Deep Navigation Collieries Limited (F. S.

Gardiner Aleck, carpenter. Victoria road Hockaday, sec)

Garton Charles &; Co. brewers (Ernest B. Oooper. agent); Park Iron Ore Co. Limited (Dand Morgan. manager),

stores, Newerne Bream road

Gloucester Railway Carriage &; Wagon Co. Lim. G. W. Paul Frank, brewer &; beer retailer. High street

Railway yard (Jesse Virgo. in charge) Petrie J<lhn J. traffic manager of the Severn & Wye Joini

Gosling Eliza (Mrs.), grocer, High street Railway 'Co

Green William, photographer. Oxford street Phillips George, blacksmith

Griffiths John, supt. Prudential Assurance 00. Limited, Pinnegar Richard. grooer, Queen street

Moorlands Pinnegar William. shopkeeper. Allaston

Griffiths Thomas, builder, Tutnalls Pope Alfred. tailor. &; tax collector. Bath place

Grimes John, master mariner, Newerne Powell John Henry. coal &; general merchant. haulier,

Gwilliam Thomas Cole, printer &; publisher of the" Lydney trap proprietor, quarry owner & <smith. Albert street

Observer," Newerne Powell Joseph, jun. blacksmith, Newerne

Haddock Sedona (Mrs.), grocer. Newerne Powell ,sarah Elizabeth (Mrs.), draper

Haile Elisha, farmer, Purton manor Powell William John, pork butcher, .A.llaston

Harris George James. stationer &; news agent Powell Trevor, coal factor, Cookson's terrace

Harris Henry (Mrs.), shopkeeper, The Cross Princess Royal Colliery '00. Limited (John Henry Fewins,

Harrison Albert William, land agent, surveyor &; valuer, sec.), colliery proprietors, Lydney basin

& agent for Northern Fire Assurance Co. Raglan house Protheroe Thomas, farmer, .Soil well

Harrison John George. shopkeeper, &; post office, Lydney Ridler Kate (Miss), Railway hotel. 'Cookson's terrace

basin Rosen Nathan, clothier, High s-treet

Harward George. gas manager, Gas house Rowles Hel"bert John, beer seller, Bream road

Hathaway Elizabeth Edith (Miss). professor of music. Saunders Henry, dairyman, Bream road

High street Saunders James. haulier. Tutnalls

Hathaway Frederick Henry, pharmaceutical chemist. re- Saunders John, seedsman. Bath place

gistered dentist. &; agent for W. &; A. Gilbey Limited. Severn &; Wye Joint Railway 'Company (G. W. &; Mid.)

wine &; spirit merchants (J. C. Inglis. engineer; Thomas Arthur Harris Smith,

Holford George, boarding house, High street acc<luntant; John J. Petrie. traffic manager; Samuel

Holford Thomas. shopkeeper Kingscote Lewis. harbour master)

Hooper James Lewis. draper & outfitter, Newerne Sha,w John. postmaster 0& -stamp distributor

Hopkins William. farmer, Plummer's farm Smale John Rowe, grocer &; draper. Post office. Newerne

Howell James, builder, Highlands villa. Smallwood Frederick, haulier

Howells Howard, arQst, Oxford street Smith Felix William, farmer, Crump fa.rm

Howells Oliver. plumber, glazier &; gll.sfitter Smith George, coal factor, Cookson's terraee

James Edwin (Mrs.), farmer. Hurst farm Smith John Frank Burton. -Swan commercial & posting

James George. Royal Albert inn. Newerne house. Newerne

James Henry, beer retailer, The Gross Smith William James. butcher, The Cross

Jone. Edwin &; Son, coal, oil, slate &; general merchants, Speeoh House Collieries 'Co. Limited (The) (George Dark,

Lydney basin manager)

Jones William J<lhn &; Agnes Eleanor (Mrs.), shopkeepers, Standard Wagon Co. Limited (Wm. Bullock. in charge),

Churchfield G. W. Railway yard

Jones Edwin. farmer. Rodley farm Stephens John, saddler, Newerne

Jones Fanny (Mrs.), dairy, Vine Tree house Stock Samuel. fishmonger, Newerne

Kennedy William Player RA.• M.D.• B.Ch.Dublin. sur. Sully &; Co. coal factors (James .shepherd. agent), Lydney

goon. High street basin

Kerwood Oharles, boot maker, Newerne Tapp Brothers, general ironmongers, Newerne

Kimberley John. boarding house, Stanford road Taylor Thomas. saddler &; harness maker; &; at Coleford..

King Edwin. farmer, Hill farm See advertisement

Lauder James, estate agent to C. Bathurst esq Taylor WaIter, farmer, Wards

Ledbetter Thomas Smith. ladies' &; gent's boot &; shoe Thomas Frank Washbourn, beer retailer. Newerne

manufacturer Thomas Richard &; Co. Limited (Richard Beaumont

Lewis Samuel Kingscote. harbour master. Lydney harbour Thomas, managing director), tinplate manufacturers &

Liddington Joseph, farmer, Red Hill farm colliery proprietors; &:; at Lydbrook

Liberal Club (Arthur E. Olark, sec.). Newerne Tuck Samuel Powe1l, farm bailiff to A. W. Harrison esCl.

Lock William, grocer, High street Holms farm

Long George Augustus. wheelwright. Newerne Turner Henry Prosser. chemist ,& druggist. Newerne

Long Henry. farmer. Duffield farm Veale Charles Thomas. watch maker, Newerne

Lydney Coal Co. (Frank C. Gosling, manager) Watts Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer, Coldstream house

Lydney Brass Band (C. B. Smale. bandmaster) Watts Josiah, ironmonger

Lydney ICarrying Co. (Jones & S<ln), shippers, Lydney dock Watts William Stephens, grocer &; draper, N ewerne

Lydney Coffee Tavern 00. Limited (Charles Prosser. lVeedon Richard, coal factor. Lydney basin

lessee), Newerne Wellington, Jones &; 00. color manufacturers
Lydney Co-operative Society Limited (William Charles I West Albert, farmer. Cliff farm

Williams, chairman; Richard Tudor• .sec.; William I Williams Frederick, farmer, Nass House farm
I Williams Thomas. farmer. Allaston conrt
Darter, manager), Newerne

Lydney AI; Orump Meadows Colliery Co. Limited (Charles Williams William Charles, assistant overseer. collootor of
I rates, &; insurance agent, Aylands lodge
Munday, jun. manager). Lydney docks

LYdney Gas Co. Limited (G. W. Keeling. sec.; George Wiltshire John. draper &; cl<lthier. High street .

lIarward. manager) Wintour George, farmer, Elm farm

Lydney Institute 0& School of Art &; Science (Col. W. Wood Charles, farmer, Purlieu farm

B. Marling. president; Josiah.s. Watts. hon. sec.), Wood William, hair dresser &; tobacconist, High street

. Town hall Wooles Annie (Mrs.), beer retailer. Newerne

Lydney Orchestral Society (A. F. Batty. BOO) Wooles George Lewis. tiler &; plasterer, Tutna.1la

234 LYDNEY. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

AYLBURTON.

l'BIVATE RESIDENTS. Cope George, carpenter W. P. K~edy B.A., M.D.; P. T.
LunnM.R.C.S.Eng.,L.R.C.P.Lond.;
Cook Surgeon-General Henry M.D., Cross David, shoe maker

F.G.S., F.R.M.S., F.R.G.S., J.P. Garland Hannah (Mrs.),frmr.Park frm P. Buchanan M.B., C.M.; J. Shaw

Priors Mesne Gal'land Thomas, assistant ov.eerseer, Carleton L.R.C.P.lrel. & E. B. King,

Daniels Rev. Ernest Limbert B.A. surveyor to the rural district coun- medicail officers; T. V. Keeling, hon.

(curate in charge), Kingston house cil, & insurance agent sec.; Miss King, matron)

Ford Samuel, Rockwood Garland William, farmer, Tump farm Matthews Samuel, farmer, Stockwell la

Gilham Richard Godwin Thomas, miller (water) Parker John,plumber & house decoTatr

Jones Chas. Frank Pedley, The Warren Haddock Tom, beer retailer Phelps William, colt breaker

Lawson George Jam.es, Chapel hill Harris Thomas, mason, The Common Powell James, Travellers' Rest P.B.

Meredith John, Rangemoor house Hopkins J ames, beer retailer & blacksmith

Nugent Henry W. Aylburton lodge Bopkins John, farmer, Vine hall Pughsley Edith May (Miss), ,tealCher

Pengelly Rev. In. Wotton, Sandford ho Liot Victox', head gardener to C. of music & organist of St. Mary

Rosser Misses, Parsonage Bathurst esq Robins Sarah Ann (Mrs.), gTocer

COMMERCIAL. Lydney & Aylburton Cottage Hospital Robins William, grocer & provision

Ballinger Edward, farmer, Lodge farm (L. B. Trotter M.D.; A. G. Law- dealer, baker & confectioner

Birks William Charles, George inn rence M.D.; T. P. Carter L.R.C.P. Rymer James, farmer, Cross

Cook Richard, shopkeeper· Lond.; W. C. Haplin L.R.C.P.I.; Wood Tom, grocer, Post office

MAISEMORE is a village and parish. bounded on deacon Wheeler in 1676. and chargeable on land in
the east by the navigable river Severn and on the west Bridgnorth. for a sermon, to be preached on New Year's
by the Gloucester, Ledbury and Worcester branch of day. Maisemore Park is the seat of Sir Thomas Robin-
the Great 'Western railway, which runs over the track son J.P.; the mansion stands on an elevation command-
of the late Hereford and Gloucester canal, and is 2 miles ing a fine prospect over the Severn. Charles Hubert
north-west from Gloucester. in the Northern division Hastings Parry esq. is lord of the manor. The prin-
of the county, Dudstone and King's Barton hundred, cipal landowners are John Ford Sevier esq. and the
Gloucester union, county court district and petty ses- Ecclesiastical Commissioners. The soil varies with the
sional division, and in the rural deanery, archdea.conry situation; on the banks of the Severn it is a red loamy
and diocese of Gloucester. A branch of the river Severn clay. but on the higher parts" gravH The chief crops
is here crossed by a bridge of two arches, rebuilt on are wheat, beans, roots and barley. The area is 2,0'24
the restoration of peace after the siege of Gloucester. acres of land, 23 of water anr] 40 of tidal water; rate-
'l'.he church of St. Giles is a building of stone. in the able value, £4,787; the population in 1891 was 440.
Early English style. consisting of chancel. nave of four

bays, north aisle, south porch and an embattled western OVERTON, I! miles north-west, on the road from

tower containing 6 bells: in the north aisle are memorial Gloucester to Ledbury, was a Roman settlement.

windows to the Rev. G. Harmer, late vicar, erected by Parish Oerk, David Jones.

the parishioners, and to the late John Ford Sevier esq. Post Office.-Miss Edith Hooper. sub-postmistress. Let-
erected by his family: in the nave and north aisle are ters arrive from Gloucester at 6.30 a.m.; dispatched
monuments to Francis 'Wheeler, of Maysemore, ob. 1680. at 6,45 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not
Antony Pembruge, ob. I6g6, and William Pembruge. paid. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
ob. 1738: the chancel arch is Norman: the pulpit. a at Gloucester, 3 miles distant
splendid specimen of carved oak, bears the date 1636: ""Yall Letter Box, near the Bridge. cleared at 6.45 p.m.
an organ was erected by iSubscription ID 1'881: the chan- week days only

eel was restored in 1844 by Dr. Monk, then Bishop oil National School (mixed). built, with residence for a school.
Gloucester and Bristol: the entire structure was restored mistress, in 1859, for 85 children; average attendance,
in 1869, when a north aisle was added, and the interior 65; Leah Alice Gardner, mistress
fitted with low open seats and the gallery removed, at Carriers to Gloucester, returning same day.-Shaw.
a cost of about £1,500: there are 300 sittings. The from Pendock & Redmarley, mono wed. & sat.; Bailey,
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a vicar- from Pendock, mono wed. & sat.; Davis, from Ashle-
age, net yearly value '£284, including 69 acres of glebe, worth & Hartpury. mono wed. & sat.; Turner. from
with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Gloucester, Ashleworth, mono wed. & sat.; Willis, from Redmar-
and held since 1878 by the Rev. Charles Edward Dighton ley & Eldersfield, weri. & sat.; Watkins, from Staun-
}.LA. of Trinity College. Dublin, and J.P. for the county ton, mono wed. & sat.; Harris, from Turley & Has-
of Gloucester. There is a charity of £3 yearly. which field, mono wed. & sat.; Hardman. from Bromsgl'Ove,
ill distributed in bread. and a sum of £2 10S. left by Arch- wed. & sat

Amery !Rev. Edmund Verdon M.A. Bishop George. beer retailer Morris Thomas, farmer, Maisemore et

Spring hill Burford George, horse dealer Newman Stephen. basket maker I;;

Barnes Thomas, Le Chateau Clark Joseph, blacksmith osier dealer

Dighton Rev. Charles Edward M.A., Cole James, bricklayer Poole Jesse, blacksmith

J.P. (surrogate). Vicarage Coleman Maria (Mrs.), farmer, Rec- Poole Samuel. blacksmith

Robinson Sir Thos. J.P. Maisemr. pk tory farm Price Arthur, shoe maker

Taylor Rev. Oharles Parbutt (curate), Dent Henry, horse dealer Roberbs Henry, farmer, Bridge farm

Severnside Etheridge Benj. carpntr. & plough ms Stephens John, coal ~ hay merchant

Wadley Mrs. Severnside Herridge Edward, farmer. Overton Stephens WaIter, hay merchant I;;

Wadley Mrs. Windon house Hooper Edith (Miss). shopkeeper, ass~tant ove~seer

COMMERCIAL. Post office Sturgeon WaIter, White Hart P.R

Bellamy Arthur Edward. farmer, J ones George, The Ship inn Wicks William, builder & contractor

Persh farm

XAISEY HAMPTON is a parish and village. on held since 1896 by the Rev. John Mullings Aldridge B.A.

the Wiltshire border and on the old road £rom London of Trinity Oollege. Dublin. Here is .8 Baptist chapel•

• to Cirencester, and is 2 miles west from Fairford There are charities of £9 yearly value. The trustees

terminal station of the East Gloucestershire branch of of the late Rev. William Kynaston Mott M.A. of Wall.

the Great Western railway, 61 east from Cirencester and Lichfield, who are lords of the manor. the rector, and

4 north-by-east from Oricklade, in the Eastern division trustees 0.£ the late Mr. Edmund Stephens are the prin-

of the county, hundred of Crowthorne, Fairford petty cipal landowners. The soil is light. some gra.velly; sub-

sessional division, Cirencester union and county court SOIl, clay, gravel and stone. The chief crops are wheat,

district, rural deanery of Fairford, archdeaconry of Ciren- oats and barley. The area is 1.963 acres; rateable value.
cester and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. £ 1,825; the popu18ltion in 1891 was 324.
Mary is an ancient cruciform edifice ofl stone in the Sexton, William Humphries.

Norman style. consisting of chancel. nave, transepts, south Post Office.-William Humphries, sub-postmaster. Let-
porch and a central embattled tower containing 6 bells: ters arrive f1rom Fairford S.O. by messenger at 7.15
a.m. & dispatched at 6.30 p.m.; dispatched on sundays
,the church was completely restored in 1872, and the at 10.15 a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph

north transept rebuilt in 1874: the chancel retains a office is at Fairford, 2! miles distant
piscina and sedilia, and there is a hagioscope: a carved
National School (mixed), for about 60 children; average
lectern, dated 1623, with book chain, is still in use: there attendance, 50; Thomas William Leader. master
are sittings for 160 persons. The register dates from
the year 1570. The living is a rectory, net yearly value

£300, including over 357 acres of glebe, with residence, Carriers to Cirencester.-Stroud, from Kempsford. moD.

in the gift of John Mullings esq. of Cirencester. and &; fri.; John Hedges, from Maisey Hampton. moll.

nmECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. MARSBFIELD. 235

Aldridge Rev. In.Mullings B.A. Rectry Harris Alfred Frederick, grocer Humphries Wm. stone mason, Post off

Miller Mrs Hart William, butcher Lane 'Henry, farmer

COMMERCIAL. Hedges John, Masons' Arms P.B Lane William Jenner, farmer &; dealer

Angell Robt. carpenter & wheelwright Berbert Edward William, boot maker Miller Robert, cattle dealer

Bedwell William, carpenter Hobbs James Turner (county alder- Peare John George, blacksmith

Burgess John Lane, frmr. Hill house man). farmer. Manor farm; farm Stephens Edmund (exol'S. of late).

Edmunds Albert William, farm bailiff, pupils taken farmers, Hartwell farm

The Elms Howes 'Henry(Mrs.),frmr.South HI.fm

MANGOTSFIELD is a township and parish, with Cave bart. of Stoneleigh House. Olifton Park, is the prin-
a station on the Bristol and Birmingham section of the cipal landowner. The soil is sand and brash; subsoil,
Midland railway, and is 5 miles north-east from Bristol coal and Pennant stone. The south side of the parish
and n6 from London, in the Southern division of the borders on the coal district of KingswQod; the north,
county. Barton Regis hundred, Keynsham union, Law- towards Downend, produces Pennant stone; the remain-
ford's Gate petty sessional division, Bristol county court del' is agricultural. 'fhe area is 2.591 acres; rateable
district, and in the rural deanery of S'tapleton and arch- value, £22,820; the population in 1891 was 7,247; civil
deaconry and diocese of Bristol. The church of St. James and 1,555, ecclesiastical.
is a building of stone, in the Gothic style, consisting Parish Gerk. George Allway.
of chancel "With chantry, which retains a piscina, nave Post &; M. O. O. &; S. B. &; Annuity &; Insurance Office
of three bays, north aisle. south porch and an embattled (Railway Sub-Office. Letters should have Bristol
tower on the south side, with pinnacles and spire, and added).-Mrs. Elizabeth Powell, sub-postmistress. Let-
containing a clock anu 6 bells: the church was almost ters arrive at 6.30 a.m. &; 1.30 p.m.; dispatched at
entirely rebuilt in [850, lUld has 350 sittings. The regis- II.6 a.m. &; 6.50 &; 8.25 p.m. The telegraph office is
ter dates from the ,·ear ]578. The living is a vicarage, at the railway sttatioQll

net yearly value £199, including 13 acres of glebe, with National Schools (mixed), erected in 1875, &; enlarged to

residence. in the gift of the Peache trustees, and held hold about 400 children; average attendance, 284;
since 18HI by the Rev. George Alford M.A. of Queen's Edwin Easteott, master
College. OxfDrd. Here are Wesleyan. Congregational and Railway Station, Robert Jeiley, station master
Primitive Methodist chapels. The charities amount to Gloucestershire Poace Station, William Lane. constable
£35 per annum. Frederick Edward Whittuck esq. of in charge
Keynsham Hall, is lord of the manor. Sir Charles Daniel Carrier to BristoI.-William Crew, mono thurs. &; fri

Alford Rev. George M.A. Vicarage Dayis George, grocer Pendock Frank, farmer

Burchill Charles Eateil Mary Ann (Mrs.), Saluta- Powell Ann (Mrs.), grocer, Post office

Dunscombe Matthew William tion P.H Powell George, shopkeeper

Fisher George, Park view Ford Frederick, farmer Powell Samuel, grocer

Nichols Mrs. Bellvue Ford Samuel, farmer. Viney green Preddy Jo·hn, smith

Owen John, The Lawn Ford Samuel. jun. farmer Preddy Sydney, wheelwright

Smart Joseph, The Elms Ford WaIter, Beaufort Arms P.H. Punter iJames, shoe maker

COMMERCIAL. Folly building Read Alfred, florist

Alway Geo.fruiterer &; market gardnr Barding George, haulier, The Commn Reynolds Charles Henry Burcley.

Amesbury WaIter, beer retailer Hardwick Hartley, butcher Crown P.H

Andrews Henry, farmer Hemmings Eliza (Mrs.), grocer Robbins'Samuel Thomas, grocer

Ball Absalom, farmer Jones Rebecca (Mrs.), milliner Rockett William, farmer

Ball Lewis, a·s·sistant overseer King William, grocer Scott Alfred, colliery manager

Bennett Worthy. grooer <& baker Lock 'Charles, florist. Viney green Sheppard Stephen, shopkeeper

Bennion William, carpenter Nicholls Edward, ·butcher Standfast George, 'beer retailer

Bird William, farmer Nicholls Elizabeth (Mrs.), news agent Young Bessie (Mrs.), farmer. Rod-

Boulton Henry. shopkeeper Nicholls Frank Gilbert, ironmonger way Hill farm

Cross· Alfred, grocer NichoIls In. frmr. Mangotsfield cam Young Edward Mway, farmer. Rod-

Cryer Charles, farmer Palmer James, builder way Hill farm

Cryer Charles, jun. butcher Pendock Charles, farmer, Dibden

M:ARSHFIELD is a parish and market town. on the converted in 1886 from a building formerly a Unitarian
Cotswold Hills, and on the road from London to Bristol, chapel, is supplied with newspapers and periodicals, and
bounded on the east by Wiltshire, 5 miles north from occasionally used for lectures, entertainments &c.; it will
Box station on the Great Western railway, 8 north from
Bath, 12 east from Bristol, 9 south from Chipping Sod- seat about 200. In the village are three maltings. Fairs
bury, and 103 from London, in the Southern division of are held on May 24th and October 24th for horses, sheep
the county, upper division of Thornbury hundred, and cattle. Among the principal charities are eight
Chipping Sodbury union, Bath county court district, Sod- almshouses for widows and widowers, each of the resi-
bury petty sessional division, rural deanery of Bitton, dents having a separate cottage. and garden, and an
and archdeaconry and diocese of Bristol. The church of allowance of £ II yearly; these were left by Ellis and
St. Mary, erected about 1470, is a large edifice of stone in Nicholas Crispe in 1625, and endowed by them with a
the Perpendicular style, consistin~ of chancel, clerestoried rent-charge of £~8 13S. 4d. which is vested in the bailiff,
nave of eight bays, aisles, south porch, and a western feoffees, vicar and churchwardens of the parish, one of
tower with open parapet and crocketed pinnacles, con- whom is annually elected treasurer; the almshouses were
taining a clock and 6 bells: in the north aisle there re-
main some square-headed Decorated windows: the chan- further endowed by the Rev. Charles Parrot with £1,300,
cel retains sedilia, and, monuments to Thomas Feckenham, invested in Consols; there is also an allowance of £10
yearly to each of six other poor widows, not being
vicar. 17°4; Alworth Merewether M.D. 1791; John Mere- recipients of the above, derived from an estate at Iron
wether, of Chippenham. 1792, and to the Rev. Lancelot Acton, of the yearly value of £40, together with one
Michell LL.B. 1779: in the north aisle are memorials to moiety of £800, invested in New South Sea AnnuitieS',

the Powe1l family, 1797-1846, and to John Gostlett, 1692, left by Mrs. Dionysia Long in 1731; Sir Robert Gunning.
and Mary, his wife, 1698: in the south aisle are other knight, left £.5 yearly; and John Bearpacker, in 1715.
monuments to Jane, wife of John Hodges, 1696; Mark gave £100; Mrs. Elizabeth Francom, about 1805, gave
Harward and Mary, his wife, 1679; the Rev. Thomas £210, two-thirds of the net dividends arising from which
Willis, of Bletchley, 1789, and Catherine, his wife, 1823; are distributed in clothing on St. Thomas' day to poor
Rev. Isase William Webb Horlock, vicar of Box, Wilts, men and women of this place; the remaining third is
similarly disbursed at West Littleton: Nicholas Holister.
1829, and Ann, his wife, 1849; Samuel Briscoe, 1694, and in 1821, gave £200; Colonel Olney, in 1832, £220; Isaac
Rester, his wife, 1696: the church was restored in 1887 Tyler, in 1852, £100; and Benjamin Vyner, £100; the
interest arising from the above, amounting to about £28
at a cost of £565, and affords sittings for 550 persons. a year, is distributed in clothing, coals, blankets and
money to the poor of Marshfield, on St. Thomas' day
In 1894 the churchyard was enlarged by about a quarter (Dec. 21), by the vicar and four trustees appointed by the
Parish ,(JQuncil. under the "Local Government Act, 1894,"
of an acre of land, acquired by public subscription, at a to act in the place of the churchwardens and overseers.
The Rocks, anciently known as Southern Wood Castle, and
cost of £175. The/l'egister dates from the year 1559, now the property of Darcy E. Taylor esq. J.P. lS a fine
and is in excellent condition. The living is a vicarage, embattled mansion of the Jacobean period (c. 1610).
gross yearly value £"538, including 160 acres of glebe, beautifully situated on an eminence, about three miles
with residence, in the gift oQf New .college, Oxford, and south-east of the town, and commanding an extensive
held since r881 by th6 Rev. Edward Flennes Trotman prospect of the surrounding country; it is approached by
B.C.L. and formerly fellow of that college, and honorary
canon of Bristol. Here is a Congregational chapel with
200 sittings; Primitive Methodist, seating 100, and a

Baptist chapel, also with 100 sittings. The Teading r.oom.

236 MARSHFIELD. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

a noble avenue of t:rees, and the park and estate extend Registrar of Births & Deaths, Marshfield Sub-District,
over an area of 1,188 acres. Ashwicke Hall, the ancient
seat of the Webb family, and. subsequently belonging to Chipping Sodbury Union, John Baker Adams; deputy,
the family of Horlock, was purchased and :rebuilt in 1857 Miss Mary H. Adams
by John Orred esq. and is a fine example of a domestic Vaccination &; Sanitary Officer for Marshfield District of
mansion of the Edwardian period; at the west end is a the Chipping Sodhury Gnion, John Baker Adams
lofty octagonal tower; the park and estate, consisting of
1,050 acres, are now the property of Charles Henry Bram- PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services.
ley Firth esq. Charles Henry Bramley Firth esq. who is
St. Mary's Church, Rev. Edward Fiennes Trotman B.C.L.
lord of the manor, Darcy E. Taylor esq. and John E. vicar; 11 a.m. & 3 & 6 p.m. ; wed. 7 p.m

Holborow esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is Baptist, 11 a.m. & 5.30 p.m
stone brash; subsoil, clay and rock. The chief crops are Congregational, 11 a.m. &; 5.30 p.m
wheat, barley, oats and turnips. The area is 5,745 acres; Primitive Methodist, II a.m. & 5.30 p.m
rateable value, £7,928; and the population in 1891 was
1,350 • SCHOOLS.

BEEKS, 2 miles south; O.A.KFORD, 3! south; AY- Endowed National (mixed & infants), erected in 186r,
FORD, 2l south, and WESTON TOWN, half-a-mile west,
are hamlets. Near Beeks are some remains called with master's house, on the site of the old rectory farm
Druidical stones.
buildings, chiefly at the expense of New College, Ox-
Verger, Worthy Salmon.
Sexton, James Coles. ford; it will hold 150 children; average attendance, 96

Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery, boys & girls & 50 infants: this school has an endow-

Parcel Post & Annuity k Insurance Office.-Frank R. ment, bequeathed by Mrs. Dionysia Long, in 1731,
Garland, sub-postmaster. Letters are received through
Chippenham; delivery commences 7 a.m. & 4.30 p.m. ; arising from land in Frampton Cotterel parish, of the
sunday at 7 a.m.; dispatched at 10.40 a.m. & 7.45
p.m.; & on sundays at 7.45 p.m yearly value of £36, & one moiety of £800, invested in

Police Station, High street, Hobert Greenslade, sergeant, the New· South Sea Annuities, whereby the master's
& one constable
salary is partly met; John Harrington esq. left £6 to
PUBLIC OFFICERS.
the same school for similar purposes, & the Rev. Robert
Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, No. 5 District,
Chipping Sodbury Union, Harry Ward Clarke M.B. Kening gave £20 to the school, yielding £1 8s. 4d.
Bank house'
yearly, together with £120 for apprenticing Koenlestoofn,thme
Assistant Overseer, William Downs Hall scholars every fourth year; being rector of
Inland Revenue Officer, Patrick O'Brien
Somerset, he left a similar charity to the school of that

place. Thomas Sidwell, master; Mrs. Sidwell, !nis-

tress; Miss Nellie Dicker, infants' mistress

British (mixed), built in 1853. for 120 children; average

attendance, 65; William John Selden, master

CARRIERS TO

Bath-Billett, from 'King's Arms,' mono wed. & sat.;
England passes through from Nettleton wed. & sat

Bristol-Billett, from' King's Arms,' tues. & thurs
All carriers return the same day

(Marked thus * should be addressed Bevan Robert, farmer Gunning Elizabeth (Mrs.), Catherine

St. Catherine's, Bath.) Bevan William, grocer &; butcher Wheel P.H

PBIVATE BESIDENTS. Bigwood Thomas Arthur, insur. agnt Hall John & Henry, hay & straw dlrs

Beard Mrs Billett Sarah (Miss), King's Arms Hatherell Alfred, basket maker
Bedford Mrs P.H. &; carrier Hall William Downs, painter & decora-
Bevan Henry
Bodman Mrs Bishop John AIid. frmr. Hunter's hall tor & assistant overseer
Bodman WaIter Biunsdon John, corn dealer & baker Hicks Daniel, haulier
Bryan Thomas, sen Bodman & Co. drapers, grocers & Hicks Henry, haulier
Burcombe Misses
Clarke Harry Ward M.B. Bank ho provision merchants Hicks William, haulier
Clifford Mrs Bond Evan, coal dealer Hill Arthur, wakh maker
Davis William Bond George, coal dealer
Firth -Charles Henry Bramley, Ash- Bond Timothy, coal dealel Hinton J oseph, dairyman
'Brickell James, George P.H
wicke hall Britton Ernest, coal dealer Hinton Joseph, jun. confectioner
Garland Mrs Britton Mark, coal dealer Hol'brow John, baker
Gingell William Britton Robert, coal dealer Hooper James M.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon
Brown Frank, saddler &c Jones Maryanne (Mrs.), fancy dealer
Hooper J ames
Huff Miss Bryan Ebenezer Wm. grocer & draper Kitson & Trotman, solicitors; &
at Beaminster

Knight Thos.Wayte,maltster & frmr

J efferies MM *Bryan Edwin, farmer, Nailey Morgan Joseph & Charles, plasteren
Bryan John, butcher &; tailors

Long John Burcombe Alfred, mason Nowell Harry, farmer
Long Mr·g
Burcombe Susan (Miss), dress maker O''Brien Patrick, inland revenue officr

Stratford Benjamin Burcombe William, mason Orchard William, wheelwright
Taylor Darcy Edmd. J.P. The Rocks
Burgess E;izh. (Mrs.), earthenwre.dlr Osborne Fras. farmer, West End twn
Trotman Rev. Edward Fiennes B.C.L. Cawthorne William, head gamekeeper
(vicar, & hon. canon of Bristol), Osborne Henry, farmer, Castle farm
to Darcy E. Taylor esq
Vicarage Clarke Harry Ward M.B., B.S., Parker George, farmer
Pentland John, head gardener & bailiff
Wait Misses M.R.C.S.Eng. physician & surgeon
Woodward George to Charles Henry llramley Firth esq

Wright Miss & medical officer & public vaccina- Pullin Henry, farmer, Weir

tor No. 5 district Chipping Sod- Pullin John, plasterer

bury union, Bank house Pullin John Pritchard, Crown P.H

COMMERCIAL. Coles J ames, sexton Pullin Sarah (Mrs.), farmer

Cook Ambrose, carpenter & wheelwrt Pullin WaIter, farmer

Adams John Baker, registrar of births Cook John, farmer, Ashwicke grange Rawlings Charles. general dealer

&; deaths for Marshfield sub-dis- Cook J oseph, blacksmith Reading Room (Frank Shatford, sec.;

trict &; vaccination & sanitary of- Cook William, estate agent to Darcy James Blake, caretaker)

ficer for the MarsMield district of E. Taylor esq Ruddle George, haulier

the Chipping Sodbury union, & Coote Thomas, head gardener to Seviour William Henry, Angel inn

commis·sion agent . Darcy E. Taylor esq Shatford Frank, farmer, Home frm

Adams Mary H. (Miss), deputy regis- Davis William, farmer Smith Frederick O. head gamekeeper

trar of births & deaths for Marsh- Davis William, jun. Ne1son inn to Charles Henry llramley Firth esq

field sub-district FisB.lock Elvert, farmer Strange Arthur, frmr. West End twn

Adams Samuel, house decorator Fishlock J ames, shopkeeper Tavener George, potato dealer

*Amos Hy. markt. grdnr. Beck's mill Fis-block J onathan, butcher Taylor John & Sons, plumbers,

And:rew Charles, thatcher Eishlock Mark, baker &;c glaziers & painters

Andrews Isaac, coal &; potat{) dealer Fishlock Mark, jun. shopkeeper Thompson Robert, harness makei"

Barnes William, tailor Fishlock Thomas, coal dealer & farmr WaIters Moses, baker & grocer

Bateman Henry, baker & grocer Fry James Collings, farmer, Old field *Watts Daniel, farmer, Ayford farm

Beazer J ames, boot maker Garland Frank R. bookseller & *Watts George, farmer, Oakford farm

Bence Charles, farmer stationer. Post office White Charles, White Hart P.H

Bence J oseph, blacksmith Gingell Olare (Miss), milliner W'hittle John, farmer, Star house

Bence Thomas, pig killer Greenland John, farmer Wotton Edward, timber merchant

Bennett Wm.Thos. frmr. Downs Thrn Greenland Thos. frmr. Spring farm *W.right John, farmer, Beek's farm

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. MICHELDEAN. 231

LONG MARSTON, or Marston Sicca, a village and Close to the church is a house called "King's Lodge,"
parish, on the road from Campden to Stratford-on-Avon, where Charles II. slept one night while disguised as a
with a station on the Honeybourne and Stratford branch
(If the Great Western railway, is 6 miles south-west servant to Miss Jane Lane; it then belonged to Mr.

from Stratford-on-Avon, 8 north-east from Evesham, 28 Tomes, in whose family it still remains. Mrs. Carrow,
north-east from Gloucester, 6 north from Chipping- who is lady of the manor, W. J. Cook esq. and J. M.
CamplWn, and 101 from London, in the Eastern division Dixon esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is a
of the county, upper division of Kiftsgate hundred, heavy loam; subsoil, stiff clay. The chief crops are
Stratford-on-Avon union and county court district, wheat, beans and barley. The area is 1,505 acres; rate-
able value, £1,682; the population in 189x was 346.
Campden petty sessional division, rural deanery of Camp-
den, archdeaconry of Cirencester and diocese of Glou- Sexton, William Rogers.
cester. The church of St. James is a building of stone in
the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, naV'e, Post Office.-Thomas Payne, sub-postmaster. Letters
through Stratford-on-Avon arrive at 7.45 a.m.; dis-
north porch and a western tower containing 2 bells: it patched at 5.40 p.m. Postal orders are issued here,
was partly restored in 1869, when the interior was re- but not paid. The nearest money order office is at
seated and stalls placed in the chancel: there are 300 Pebworth & telegraph office at Welford-on-Avon, 3 miles
sittings. The register dates from the year 165I. The distant .
living is a rectory, net yearly value £120, including 280
Police Station, William Mead, sergeant, &; 2 constables
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Mrs. Carrow,
and held since 1880 by the Rev. Edward Holland Garrard. SCHOOLS.
A yearly sum of £100, arising from the rent of houses and
42 acres of land, is applied to educational purposes, and Grammar, founded & endowed by Mr. John Cooper, gent.
£6 IOS. is yearly distributed among the poor. The Rev.
John Loggins, of Swalcliffe, in the county of Oxford, and of this place, who, by will, dated 27th February, 1643,
some time rector of this parish, by his will, dated Nov. 20, gave a sum of £300 to establish a school for 22 poor
1726, gave £200, expended in the purchase of land at boys, viz. 6 from Marston Sicca, 2 from Nether Quinton,
Sibford, in the county of Oxford, the rent arising there- 2 from Over Quinton, 2 from Broad Marston, 4 from
from to be yearly divided between the parishes of Swal- Pebworth, 2 from Dorsington & 4 from We1ford; Rev.
cliffe, Sibford Ferris, Sibford Gower, Birdrope, Clifford Charles Alexander Hailey B.A. of Camb. Univ. master
Chambers, Quinton and Marston Sicc8, to be laid out in National (mixed), for 100 children; average attendance,
48; Miss Glover, mistress
bread on Sundays for such as come to church, for the
{letting out of apprentices and for clothing the indigent. CARRIER.
Charles Ayling, to Stratford, wed. & fri
Railway Station, John Harrison, station master

Carrow Capt. William Galton R.N. COMMERCIAL. Huckfield William, basket maker

King's lodge Dyde George Charles, shopkeeper Izod William, farmer

Garrard Rev. Edward Holland,Rectory Errington -, farmer Moseley Thomas, haulier

Hailey Rev. Charles Alexander B.A. Gould Francis, coal merchant &; frmr Neville George, shopkeeper

(head master), Grammar school Gould lGeorge & Joseph, farmers Payne Ann (Mrs.), Masons' Arms P.R

Middleton Col. William, The Grange Hodges Thomas Hopkins, farmer, Payne Thomas, builder

Court House farm Taylor John, blacksmith

MATSON is a small parish, a quarter of a mile south- had married the heiress of the Selwyns in 1730. The

east of the road between Glom:ester and Upton St. Hon. Robert Marsham Townshend, of Frognal, Kent, is

Leonard's, z! milM south-east from Gloucester, in the lord of the manor. The lat& Dr. G. A. Selwyn, metro-

Ncrthern division of the county, Dudstone and King·s politan of New Zealand, and subsequently bishop of Lich-

Barton hundred, Gloucester union, county court district field, who died nth April, 1878, was a member of the

and petty sessional division, and in the rural deanery, Selwyn family, of Matson. Matson was the head quarters

archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. In 1892 a por- of the Royal army during the siege of Gloucester in 1643,

fion of the parish of Upton St. Leonard's was added to and the manor house was occupied by King Charles and

this parish for ecclesiastical purposes only. The church his two elder sons. The manor house is occupied by the

of St. Katherine (so named in 1893) is' a building of stone Hon. Maria Elizabeth Rice. The soil is clayey; subsoil,

in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, clay. The land is near!y all in pasture. The area is 655

north porch and central turret containing one bell. The acres; rateable value, £2,321; the population of the civil

original church (the dedication of which was unknown) parish in 1891 was 120, and of the ecclesiastical parish in

was rebuilt in 1739, by Albinia, widow of Gen. Selwyn, 1891, 345.

formerly governor of Jamaica: the chancel was rebuilt in By Local Government Board Order 16,525, March 25,

1852, and the church restored in 1876, but in 1893-94 it 1885, detached parts' of the parishes of South Hamlet,

was entirely rebuilt at a cost of [1,650, including internal Tuffiey, Barton St. Mary, Wootton St., Mary and Upton

fittings, and now affords 200 sittings. The register dates St. Leonard were added to Matson, and under the provi-

from the year 1553. The living is a rectory, net yearly sions of the "Divided Parishes Act, 1882," a detached

value £240, including glebe (£220), wlith residence, in part of Matson has been transferred to Upton St. Leonard.

the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester, and held Robins Wood Hill quite separates' the east and west

since 1875 by the Rev. William Bazeley M.A. of Christ's sides of the parish.

'College, Cambridge. A sum of about £1 12S. 6d. yearly Sacristan James Matthews

derived from Cox's (Badgworth) charity, is devoted to ' •

tue provident fundS of the parish. The earliest mention Letters received through Gloucester at 7 a.m. The

of this place, under the name of "Mattesdon," is found nearest money order office is Painswick road, Gloucester

in the registers of St. Peter's Abbey, Gloucester: the (Upton St. Leonards parish) & telegraph office at Glou-

manor belonged in the IIth century to the De Mattesdons, cester, 2~ miles distant

"ho held it until 1457. Ralph De Mattesdon gave to the Wall Letter Box, Upton road, cleared at 9 a.m. & 6.25

monks of St. Peter the clmrch of Mattesdon, in the time p.m. week days; sundays, 9.40 a.m

of Abbot William (III3-II30): an ancient family named School (mixed), built in 1884 by the Hon. Misses Rice, &

Robins, who gave their name to :Matson Hill, were tenants now (1897) about to be enlarged for 84 children; aver-

under the abbey for many generations. The. present age attendance, 80; there is a residence for the mis-

manor house was built in 1594 by Sir Ambrose Wil- tress; Miss Eliza Hickes, mistress

loughby, a descendant of the lords of Parham, Eresby and Conveyance.-'Bus to Gloucester six times daily (saturday

Willoughby: it was sold to .Jasper Selwyn, of King Stan- one journey extra)

ley, in 1597: th6 Selwym. occupied it till tfue death of Carriers.-Hanks, from Painswick to Gloucester, every

George Augustus Selwyn, the celebrated wit, in I791; mono wed. &; sat.; Bruton, from Upton St. Leonards

it then passed into the Townshend family, one of whom every mono wed. & sat

(Marked thus * reside in the Stroud .. Gardner William, Hawthorns . Rice The Hon. Maria Elizh. Matson ho

road & letters should be addressed *Green George Ernest, Hillside Hill In. Tratman, frmr. Robins farm

Tuffiey, Gloucester.) *Johnstone James, Annandale Ind Sarah (Mrs.), frmr. Larkham frm

Bazeley Rev. William M.A. Rectory *Rice Rev. William Edmund (Bap- *WeekS' Henry Charles, Laurel Bank

*Croxford John Henry, Osric villa tist), Gonvena

MICRELDEAN, or Mitcheldean, sometimes called Severn, Wye and Severn Bridge railway, 6 north-west
Dean M&.gD8, if} a jparish and town on the Dean Forest frem Newnham, 6): south-east from Ross, II west from
road from Monmouth to Gloucester and on the Hereford- Gloucester and II6 from London, in the Forest of Dean
shire border, 2 miles south from Micheldean Road station, division of the county, hundred of St. Briavels, West-
and 2 north-west from Longhope ~ation, on the Hereford, bury-on-Severn union, Newnham county court district
Rcss and Gloucester branch of the Great Western rail- and petty sessional division, rural deanery of South Forest,
way, 4 miles north-east from Cinderford station on the
and archdeaconry and diocese of Gloucester. The town


238 MICHELDEAN. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [KELLY'S

i~ lighted with gas, and supplied with water by the and the Welsh mountains, a great part of the Vale of
Micheldean Waterworks Company Limited, from a reser- Gloucestershire and the river Severn, with Cheltenham
voir in the neighbourhood. The church of St. Michael is and 'other towns. The Wilderness, the property of Fredk.
an ancient building of stone in several styles, consisting Louis Lucas esq. is now let to the committee of Barnwood
of chancel, clerestoried nave of four bays, one south and Heuse Asylum, Gloucester. Maynard Willoughby Col-
chester-Wemyss esq. of Westbury Court, is lord of the
two north aisles, south porch and a western tower, with manor and the principal landowner. The soil is sandy
and loamy; subsoil, sandstone rock. The chief crops are
lofty spire, containing a. clock with chimes and 8 bells: wheat, roots and oats. The area is 620 acres; rateable
value, [2,4°0; the population in 1891 was 730.
there are four stained windoW's and several ancient
tablets: on a set of panels over the chancel arch are some Parish Olerk, Thomas Powell.

painting's of the time of Edward IV. (1461-83), represent- Post, M. O. & T. 0., T. M. 0., S. B., Express' Delivery,
ing "The Day of Judgment," and scenes from the life of Parcel Post &; Annuity & Insurance Office (Railway Sub-
Our Lord: the pulpit dates from the reign of Henry VII. : Office. Letters should have R.S;O. Gloucestershire
added. - Mrs. Eliza Maria. Silley, postmistress.
there is a brass to Thomas Baynham esg. ob. 1444, and Letters arrive by rail at 5 a.m.; north mail at II a.m.;
his two wives, Margery (Hodye) and Alice (Walwyn): dispatched to all parts at 6 & 8.10 p.m

the church was restored in 1853, at a cost of £5,000, PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS.
under the direction of Mr. Woodyer, architect, of Guild-
fcrd, and further improvements, including! the erection of Inland Revenue Office, The Woodlands, Fdk. White, officer
Police St,ation, Edward Bowly, acting sergeant
a. carved oak cha:J.cel screen, were effected in 1878 and Stamp Office, Mrs. Eliza Maria Silley, distributor
1891-3, at a total cost of over £1,500: there are oSittings
for 700 persons. 'Ihe register dates from the year 1680. PUBLIC OFFICERS..

The living is a rectory, net yearly value £ 120, including 4 Certifyin~ Factory Surgeon, John Robert William Abell
M.R.C.S.Eng. Forest lodge
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of M. W. Col.
chel;lter-Wemyss esq. and held 'since 1897 by the Rev. Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, No. 3 District, West-
Edward Percival Baker Weber. Here Bre Congregational bury-on-Severn Union, Niccol Frederick Searancke
and Bible Christian chapels. On the Gloucester road are L.R.a.p.Edin
the Wilderness Brick, Tile and Stone Quarry Works,
Free School, enlarged in 1871 & again in 1893; it is sup-
established here in 1882, by M. W. Colchester-Wemyss ported in part by the endowment, now amounting to
esq. and now carried on by a limited compaI).y; the hard £50 14S. & derived from Lane's -charity as mentioned
red stone found here is used for building and monu- above, &; will hold 180 children; average attendance,
123 boys &; girls & 45 infants; John Morse Morgan,
mental purposes. The charities, amounting to upwards master

of £UI yearly, are derived chiefly from land, houses and Carriers: to Gloucester.-Christopher CottreD &; William
funded money, left in 1808 by William and .Amy Lane, Blewitt, wed. & sat

and others', and are applied to the schools, churCh repairs,
apprenticing boys and the poor. Bradley Grove, the
residence of Miss Miller, on the Micheldean and Newent

road, and about one mile east from the town, is a mansion

of red ,sandstone with Bath stone dressings, in the Gothic

style, and commands' an extensive view of Herefordshire

Abell John Robert Wm. Forest lodge Chate Diana (Mrs.), boot dealer Micheldean Waterworks Co. Limited

Bigg!l Mrs. Stender!l cottage Chew Aleek R. commercial traveller (Thomas Whatley, see)

Chew Aleck R Colchester-WemY88 & Co. Llm. Newman George, Red Lion inn

Chew Arthur Savory brick &; tile makers &; quarry ownrs Palfrey Frederick, butcher &; farmer

Darlington Harry Cole Mary (Miss), ladies' school Parry Samuel, boot maker

Fryer Joseph Collie John a. dispensing &; agricul- Payne William, fishmonger

Jones Mrs. St. George's villa tural chemist Phelps James, Jovial Collier F.H

Miller Miss, Bradley grove Constance Sidney, boot dealer Phcenix Ooal 00. coal merchants •

Palmer William Cook Arthur, grocer &; draper . Powell David, mason

Ross R. R. H. Lockhart, Rose cottage Cook James, registered farrier &; Powell Thomas', mason &; parish clerk

Saunders Richard William Henry, general smith Price Albert George P. butcher

Portland house Oook John, cycle agent Price Rezin, carpenter

Searancke Niccol Frederick Cooper Emma. (Mrs.), shopkeeper Rudge John Charles, grocer &; wines

Weber Rev. Edward Percival Baker Cottrell Christopher, carrier &spirits

F.L.S. Rectory Crockett William, shopkeeper Saunders Richard William Henry,

Whatley Thomas Dawson Jsph. Richard, grocer &; drpr analytical chemist, Cement works

Wintle Francis, Forest house Dowding John, farmer, Dean common Searancke Niccol FredericIr L.R.C.P.

COMMERCIAL. Forest of Dean Portland Cement Co. Edin., M.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon, &

Abell John Robert William M.R.C.S. (The), lime .& cement manufactrs medical officer & public vaccina~or,

Eng., L.S.A. surgeon &; certifying Gagg John, farmer, Bradley farm No. 3 district, Westbury-on-Severn

factory surgeon, Forest lodge Gardner Henry, manager to brewery union

Baker George, wheelwright Good Eliza (Mrs.), shopkeeper Silley Eliza Maria. (Mrs.), stamp dis-

Baldwin Charles, boot &; shoe dealer Green Eliza (Mrs.), marine store dlr tributor, Post office

Barry Edward, watch maker Green J ames, tailor Smith George, saddler &; harnesi ma

Barry Edward Thomas, bailiff to Green Louisa Jane (Mrs.), draper &; Smiiih Geo. FraB. bkr. &; confectioner

Newnham county court dress maker Smith George James, timber dealer

Baynham Cornelius, George inn Hale William, butcher &; steam saw mills

Baynham George, White Horse I Harris George, poulterer &c Soutar James Greig M.B., C.M. Bur-

faInily &; commercial hotel; this Hatton Phineas, Greyhound P.H geon, The Wilderness

hotel is the most replete in the Humphreys Elizabeth Annie (Mrs.), Sparrow Alfred, bakr. &; provision dlr

neighbourhood; every accommoda- draper &; milliner Staley Owen, grocer, High street

tion at moderate charges, posting Hyett Sarah (Mrs.), greengrocer Virgo Joseph, boot maker

in all its branches Jacques Martha (Mrs.), shopkeeper Virgo William, hair dresser

Blewett Alexander, shopkeeper Little Robert, shopkeeper Whatley Thomas', solicitor & sec. to

Blewett William, carrier Little Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper Waterworks 00. Limited

Boughton John, haulier &; butcher Marfell Timothy, plumber & painter White Frederick George Albert, in-

Brace Thomas, gasfitter Mason Chas.Bennett,frmr. Court frm land revenue officer, The Woodlands

Brace Wm. proprietor of Gas Works Mason Lems, manager at brick t& Wilderness Private Asylum (James

Burgum Mary &. Frances (Misses), tile works Greig M.B., O.M. medical supt.;

earthenware dealers Micheldean Football Club (Lewis 00. Mrs. Kate Young, matron)

Capital & Counties Bank Lim. (sub- Mason, sec) Wintle Francis, maltster & brewer

branch); tues. &; fri. 11 to 3; draw Micheldean Reading Institute (Thos. Yearsley Edwin Evans, solicitor &

on head office, 39 Threadneedle st. Whatley, hon. sec) commissioner for oathS'

London E C

MICKLETON, a. village and parish on the road from rural deanery of Campden, archdeaconry of Cirencester
and diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. Lawrence
Campden to Stratford-on-Avon, is 3 miles north from is & building of stone in the Norman and later styles,

Cumpden, 3 east from Honeybourne and 3 south from consisting of large chancel, nave of three bays, aisles,

Long Marston stations on the Honeybourne and Stratford south porch and an embattled western tower, with oc-
tagonal spire 90 feeb high, and containing & clock and 8
branch of the Great Western railway, 32 north-east from
Gloucester and 7 west-by-north from Shipston-on-Stour, bells, the last two, completing the octave, being given by
in the Eastern division of the county, npper division of Jonathan Slater esq. in 1892: the reredos was presented
by Stephen Jarrett esq. in 1882: the east window is
the hundred of Kiftsgate, Shipston-on-Stour union and
county court district, Campden petty sessional division,

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. MIXCHINHAMPTON. 239

stained, and on the south side of the chancel is a memo- 1875 by Lady Steele-Graves, in memory of her husband,
rial window, erected in 1882 by the late Mrs. Maxwell Sir Maxwell Steele-Graves bart. and of his daughter, Mrs.

Hamilton, to her sister, Elizabeth Ann, eldest daughter Bowen-Graves. Mickleton Manor is the property of
and co-heir of the late John Graves esq. and wife of the Sidney Graves Hlamilton esq. J.P., M.A. fellow of Hertford

late Sir John Maxwell Steele-Graves bart.; she died in Cc-lIege, Oxford. Kiftsgate Court is now the residence of
1877: in the chancel is a stained window erected by Sidney Jc~eph Robert Heaven esq. and is situate on GlylIe hill,
Graves Hamilton esq M.A. ill memory of his mother, about half a mile from the village; it was' erected in

Mrs. Maxwell Hamilton, and anotl:).er of ancient stained 1887-9, and includeg the more recent portion of the old

glass, displaying the arms of the Fisher family, former mar-or house, dating from 1742, which has been removed

lords of the manor, and a memorial window to Capt. I from its former site: the manor house is now occupied by

Freeman, of Hidcote: there are several monuments to the Mrs. C. A. R. Hoare. Sidney Graves Hamilton esq. who

Fis?er and Graves families: the church was thoroughly is lord of the manor, the Earl of Harrowby and F. Charsley

restored in 1870, at a cost of £2,000, under the direction esq. of Bucks, are the principal landowners. The soil is

of Mr. Preedy, architect, and aga1ll since 1873 at a cost sandY' and rich loam, with a good portion of excellent

of £500, and affords 300 sittings. [n the churchyard is pasture land; subsoil, a stiff blue clay. The area of the

a very interesting crucifix of the 12th century, placed township is 2,528 acres; J'ateable value, £5,972; the
there by the late vicar. The register dates from the year population of the parish in 1891 was 600 civil, and 720

1539, but its earlier portion is stated to belong properly ecclesiastical.
to the parish of Aston-sub-Edge, the words" Aston Re-
gister I1 appearing on the outer cover, but has been partly CLOPTON, half a mile north, is' a hamlet; the area is
concealed bY' the indorsement, "Mlickleton Register," 584 acres; rateable value, £621; the population in 1891

writ·ten above it; the transfer is believed to have taken was 43·

place when for a long period the two parishes were served HIDCOTE BARTRAM, 11 miles south-east, is a hamlet;

by one clergyman. The living is a vicarage, gross yearly the area is 581 acres; rateable value, £738 ; the popula-
value £130, including 28! acres of glebe, Wiith residence, tion in 1891 was 77.
in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 1896 by
thu Rev. Augustus Mead Coxwell-RogerS' M.A. of St. Parish Clerk and Sexton, John Harper.

John's College, Oxford. The Rev. Richard Graves M.A. Post, M. O. &; T. 0., T. M. 0., S. R, Express' Delivery,
author of "T'he Spiritual Quixote," and a number of other Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office. Josiah Bay-
works, chiefly poetical, was born here, 4 May, 1715, being liss, sub-postmaster. Letters are received through

the second son of Richard Graves esq. a distinguished Moreton-in-the-Marsh; delivered at 9. IS a.m. &; 3.45
antiquary and genealogist; he was educated at Abingdon p.m.; sundays, 10.45 a.m.; dispatched at 10.30 B.m. &;

School, 1730-2, and Pembroke College, Oxford, and was 4 &; 5.5 p.m.; sundays, 9.30 B.m
rector of Claverton, Somerset, from 1748, where he died, Wall Letter Box cleared at 10.35 a.m. &; 3.45 &; 5.10 p.m

23 Nov. 1804. There is a Wesleyan chapel. Richard A School Board of 7 members was formed Dec. 13, 1871,
Porter, in 1513, left land, now worth about £80 a year, for the united district of Clopton, Hidcote Bartram &;

for the repairs of the church, the surplus to be appro- Mickleton; C. W. G. Westmacott, Blockley, clerk to

priated to the parish school.. At the in:closing of the fields the board &; attendance officer
in 1612, 33 acres of land, now producing about £50 yearly, Board School (mixed), for 150 children, enlarged in 1889
were laid out and presented by the landowners for the
benefit of the poor. In 1827 Miss Nanny Millard left the &; infants' rOGm added; average attendance, 120; J ames
interest of £300 to be distributed among the poor of the Pearse, master; ~Iiss Elizabeth Soley, mistress .
parish annually; there are a few other small charities. Carriers.-Charles Jarratt, to Stratford-on-Avon, tues. &

fri.; to EveSlham on man. William Kitchin, to Strat-

In the village is 110 handrome drinking fountain erected in ford-on-Avon, tues. &; fri.; to Evesham on mon

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Bayliss William, farmer Keen John, shoe maker

Baylis Josiah Bryan James, blacksmith Keyte Stephen (Mrs.), farmar, MickIe-
Cormell Mrs
Burnell William, studgroom to J. R. ton hills

Cotwell-RogeTS Rev. Augustus Mead He'3.ven esq Kitchen William, carrier

M.A. Vicarage Clark William, gamekeeper to J. R. LiSlsaman William, jun. steam joinery

Harrison Re;v. John William Crawford Heaven esq & moulding mills

Heaven Joseph Robert, Kiftsgate court Coldicott Charles, farmer, Wood farm Neal Lydia (Mrs.), cowkeeper

Hort Edward Collett Collett Charles, shoe maker PearseJas.schoolmaster &; assist.ovarsr

Hoare Mrs. C. A. R. M.lanQr house Cowley John, grocer Rimell John, farmer & income tax col-
Lissaman William, jun lector, Nineveh
Luckett Mrs nee Henry, farmer, Long lands
Roberts William, King'S! Arms
George Louisa (Mrs.), beer retailer

Phillips Mrs. Goldby cottage Grinnall Emmanuel, beer :retailer Sill Brothers, grocers
Taylor John, Campden lodge Hanwell Jame3, bead gardener w J.R. Smith Geo. J. Rimell, farm&,Attlepin

Wilmott Mrs. St. Lawrence house Heaven esq Smith William, farmer

Wright Oapt. W. Hidcote house Hemming SI. &; Co. grocers &; drapers TaylorJohn,market gardener &; grazier

COMMERCIAL. Horseman Wm. Hazlewood, Butchers' Taylor Thomas, shoe maker

Baldwyn Bernard, farmer, ffidcote. Arms P.R Tucker John, farmer, Hidcote

Bayliss John, grazier, Starvehall Hort Edward Collett, snxgeon Webb Abraham, farmer

Bayliss Josiah, stationer &; road sur- Jarratt Charles, shopkeeper &; carrie.r Webb Joseph, farmer

veyor, Post office Keen Edmund, frmr. Upper Clapton

MINCHINHAMPTON is a parish on the road from and his wife, c. l50o; to Edward Halyday, ob. l519, and
Cirencester to Gloucester, 1 mile south from Brimscombe Margery, his wife, with his merchants mark; to John
station on the Swindon, Stroud and Gloucester branch of Hampton, gent. ob. 1556, and his wife Elyn, engraved c.
the Great Western railway, and 2 miles north-east from 1510; the effigies are in shrouds, and there are figures of
Nailsworth terminal station of a. branch from Stonehouse nine children; there is also a brass half-effigy of a female,

junction on the Bristol and Birmingham section of the c. l530; and another to Dr. James Bradley, now affixed
Midland railway, 4 south-sonth-east from Stroud, 29 to the wall on the east side of the south transept, but
north·east from Bristol and 14 south-south-east from formerly on the tomb in the churchyard: there are
Gloucester, in the Mid division of the county, Long- modern brasses to Edward Sheppard, d. 1883, and

tree hundred, Stroud union and county court district, Joseph Bowstead, d. 1876: two new windows in the south
petty sessional division of Horsley, and in the rural transept were presented in 1889 by the Rev. Edward
deanery of Stonehouse and archdeaconry and diocese of Colnett Oldfield M.A. rector 1865-84: the church was
Gloucester. The Thames and Severn canal passes through restored in 1884 at a cost of £850, a new organ was
the parish. The township includes, for civil purposes, erected in 1887, and in 1889 the church was decorated:
the town divisions and the hamlets of Box, Littleworth, there are 600 sittings. The register dates from the year

Amberley, St. Loe, Hyde, Burleigh and part of Brims- 1555. The living is 110 rectory, net yearly value about
combe. By Order in Conncil, dated November loth, £380, including 40 acres of glebe, with residence, in the
1840, Amberley and Brimscombe were separated from gift of Major Henry George Ricardo RA. and held since

Minchinhampton for ecclesiastical purposes. The church 18g6 by the Rev. Edward Lonsdale Bryans M.A. of
of the Holy Trinity, partially rebuilt in 1842, is 110 cruci- Queen's College, Oxford. Here is a Baptist chapel, and
form edifice of stone, in the Early English and Decorated at Box a small iron mission chapel. The manufactnre
styles, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of four of woollen cloth, which is the staple trade of this place
bays, aisles, transepts, west porch and a central oct- and neighbonrhood, furnishes employment for a great
agonal tower, with embattled parapet, pinnacles and portion of the inhabitants,· and the numerous rivulets

truncated spire, and containing a clock and 6 bells: the which flow through render this parish peculiarly suitable

south transept was rebuilt in 1382 by St. JOM de la for the purpose. The charities amount to about £100
Mere and Maud, his wife: there are brasses to a civilian yearly, derived from money invested in Consols. and are

240 MINCHINHAMPTON. GLOUCESTERSHIRE. [ KELLY'S

distributed in clothing. Here are almshouses for a aged ters arrive through Stroud at 7.5 a.m. & 2.35 p.m.;
dispatched to London at 10.20 a.m. & 5· ro &; 7.45
women, built in 1840 by the Ricardo family, and sup-
ported by Mrs. Ricardo; each inmate receives half a p.m.; to Gloucester at same times as London; sun-

ton of coals annually. A prescribing dispensary was day, delivered at 7.5 a.m.; dispatched at 5 p.m
established here in IBIS; the average number of patients
during 1896 was about 150. On the west side of the Post Office, Box.-Henry Stockwell, sub-postmaster.
town is a large tract of common land, given to the parish Letters arrive through Stroud, via Minchinhampton,
at 8 a.m.; dispatched at 4.30 p.m. week days only.
in the reign of King Henry VIII. by Dame Mice Hamp- Postal orders are issued here, but not paid. Minchin-
hampton is the nearest money order & telegraph office
ton; it formerly extended over 1,000 acres, but has been
encroached upon from time to time, and now amounts Wall Box, at Longfords, cleared at 4.20 p.m.; sunday,
B.20 a.m
to little more than 500: it is also the site of a remark-
able camp or entrenchment, consisting of a great vallum, PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS.
County Police Station, West End, Albert Cooke, sergeant,
irregular in form, with ramparts of inferior height
&; I constable
branching from it; these earthworks, commencing at Minchinhampton Fire Brigade, established IB64; Henry
Littleworth, extend for nearly three miles to Woeful
Webb, captain, &; 10 men
Dane Bottom: a smaller common, skirting the brow of
Nailsworth Hill, meets this common at its eastern ex- PUBLIC OFFICERS.
tremity. The name" Woeful Dane Bottom" is believed Assistant Overseer, Collector of Assessed &; Income Tax

to indicate some decisive overthrow of the Danes, but &; Clerk to the Parish Council, William Arundell Jones,
Well hill
the precise date is not known. 'Box House is the resi- Medical Officer &; Public Vaccinator, No. 4 District,
dence of the Hon. Henry Arnold Lawrence; the Lammas, Stroud Union, Frank Fowler L.R.C.P.Lond. High et
of Charles Hobert Baynes esq.; Longfords, of Arthur Registrar of 'Births &; Deaths, Minchinhampton Sub-
district, Stroud Union, William Arundell Jones, Well
Twisden Playne esq. J.P.; and Gatcombe Park, of William hill; deputy. Charles WiIliam Jones

.A.1bert East esg. Major Henry George Ricardo R.A. SCHOOLS.

who is lord of the manor, Alfred Apperly esg. of Rod- National Endowed (boys, girls &; infants), situated
near the church &; built in 1868, at a cost of about
borough. and Arthur Twisden Playne esq. of Longfords, £2,000, for 157 boys &; 230 girls &; infants; average
are the chief landowner,s. The area is 4, 61 3 acres of attendance, lIO boys, lIO girls &; 80 infants; the en-
land and 24 of water; rateable value, £14,810; the dowment left by Mrs. Took & Mr., Henry King,
amounts to £72 yearly, out of which 14 boys & IS
population in 1891 was civil, 3,936; ecclesiastical, 1,866. girls are educated free; there is a residence for the
master; Arthur ,John WiIIiams, master; Miss Emma
LONGFORDS, 11 miles south; BURNT ASH, I mile Webb, girls' mistress; Miss Charlotte Jane Hamlet.
infants' mistresll
north-east; and 1iAMPTON FIELDS, I mile east, are OARRIERS.
. h' h'
p1aces t IS towns Ip. The Great Western Railway Company deliver daily
ill

mON MILLS, I mile south. Nailsworth is the nearest
money order and telegraph office to Iron Mills and Long-

fords.
Brimscombe, Burleigh and Hyde will be found under

the heading of Brimscombe.
Parish Clerk, James Simmonds.

Post, M. O. &; T. 0 .• T. M. 0., S. B., Express Delivery,
Parcel Post &; Annuity &; Insurance Office, Tetbury

street.-Mrs. EQlma Hillman, sub-postmistress. Let-

MINOHINRAMP'l'ON. Dean. Danl. chimney sweeper, King st Mlackay Benjamin, commercial trav.

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Dispensary (Frank Fowler L.R.O.P. Windmill lodge

Lond. & Basil Edmd.Church,surgns) Minchinhampton Golf Club (John T.
Baynes Charles Robert, The Lammas Doel Frank, hairdresser, West end Woolwright, sec.), Old Lodge inn

Brodie Robert, Park house Ellins Annie(Mrs.),dress ma.West end Mortimer Daniel, boot ma. Tetbury'st

Brvans Rev. Edward Lonsdale Ml.A. Eskins George, poulterer Newman Abraham, plasterer,West eni!

Rectory Edmun~, Well hill Essex Frederick, shoe maker, High st Newman Ellen (Mrs.),bakr. Tetbu:ry st
Church Basil Essex Perte'!", carpenter, TetbllTY street Newman Hy. David,boot ma.. West end

Denne Henry, The F1eld EXC'ell William farmer Ogden WiIliam James, linen draper &; •
East William Albert, Gatc~mbe park Fowler Frank L.R.O.p.Lond.,M.R.C.S. outfitter, The Cross
Ford Rev. Samu~l J. (Baptlst),Hlgh st Eng. surgeon & medical officer .& Onion Harriet Maria (Mrs.), stationer,
Forster Mrs. Tetbury street. public vaccinator, No. 4 district, West end
F~wler Frank L:R.C.P.L. Hlgoh street Stroud union, High street
OrpeThomas, confectioner, High smet
Gmgoell Mrs. Hi~ ~ouse, TeiJbu~y st Fll.il'leV Mary Ann (Mrs.), grcr.High st Piper Alfred Wm. grocer, West end
Hartlev Rev. Chnstlan (curate),Hlgh st Grant Charles, butche~, High street Playne Wm. &; Co. woollen manufactrs
Help Mrs. B~'s green .
Greeningo Mary (Mliss), Salutation P.B. Roberts George, sign writer, West end

Lochar{ll Garvm R. HerllUtage Tetbury street Selman Q-eorge, butcher, The Cross

::\Ietford Fran<:is Killigrew Seymour, HaJrIIlan John, carpenter Simmonds James, plumber

Holcombe house Barman Joseph. Crown hotel & farmer Simmonds Percy, harness ma. High st
~iblett Mrs. West end Harman Wllllam Alma, builder, Simpkins John, chemist &; druggist,

Palling Henrv Verney, :Windmill place contractor.&; undertaker, general High street

Perks John'Rartley, Wmac:res ironmonger, stone quarry own6ll" & Soper Julia (Mrs.), home for invalids,

Playne Arthur Twisden J.P. Longfords lime burner The Yews

Playne Edward. Springfield HarrisonPhilip,Trumpet P.H.West end Stockwell Henry, sub-postmaster

Playne Fitr.arthur Henry, Forwood Hillier Charles, Ram P.B Thompson James, draper & outfitter.

PresoottJ Rev. Isaac Philip M.A. The Hi:ron Wm. Ragged Cot P.H.BurntAsh High street

(kigne Hughes Fras. Chas. grocer, High street Vines William, Swan P.B. West end

Ricardo Mrs. Windmill house Hutchinson Ernst.fisbmonger,West end Webley Sarah Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper

Sarg-ent John Edward, The Cross Iddles Ohas. Hy. fa;rmer, Friday street Whiting Beni. &; Thos. coach builders

Smith William Henry, The Chestnuts Jefferies Augustus William, cabinet Whiting William, beer retailer, Well hl

Stafford John, Forwood house maker Tetburv street Workman Fredk. King's Head P.H

TumeV' Mrs. Ball's green Jones charles WUliam, coal &; builders' Young ATthur Wm. beer ret.West end

Webb MJiss, High cliff merchant, &; deputy registrar of Young Edwin, blacksmith, West end

COMMERCIAL births & deaths for Minchinhampton BOX.
Benjamin George A. gr~cer & a.gent sub-dist:ict, Stroud union, Wellhill;
for W. &; A. Gilbey Limited, wine &; at ]l\aIl~worth. Bower Arthur Perry, The Brae

&; spirit merchants, High street Jones ~y (:\fiss) , fancy draper, Lawrence Hon. Henry Arnold. Box ho

'Bennett In. Hy. blacksmith, Well hill Well hIll . .. Yeo Frands Gardiner

Boughton Edward WilIiam, Old Lodge Jones George, ce~ified bailiff under Baglin Hannah (Mrs.). grocer

inn &; head quarterS'Minehinhampton the" Law of Dlstress Amendmenl Chamberlain John, farmer

Golf club. The Common Act" Daniels Joseph, baker

Browning By. Ralph, White Hart P.B Jones Mary Ann (Miss), ironmonger Drinkwater Alexander, boot maker

Browning' Walter Jas. carpenter, Tet- '&c. West end Gardiner William, haulier

bury street Jones William Arundell, aceountant Grav GeOl"ge. haulier

Chamberlain Goo. farmer, Bnbblewe.1l &; registrar of births & deaths for Harrlson William, Box inn

"Church Basil Edmd. surgn. Well hill M:inchinhampton sub-district,Stroud Milford Henry, apartments
Close Georg~ Wm. baker, High street union, assessor & coI1er~or of income Mortimer In. beer retailer & butcher
'Cox Mary Jane (M:rs.),g'l'cr.West end tax, assistant oversee~ >& cle["k to Stockwell Henry, shopkeeper
parish council, Well hill
Daniels Phineas. tailor, West end Summers George-. beer retailer

DIRECTORY.] GLOUCESTERSHIRE. MISERDEN. 241

MINSTERWORTH, anciently called "Mortune," is Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan chapel. The charities
a parish and straggling village, intersected by the road are of about £40 yearly value. The principal industries
from Gloucester to Chepstow, and 'bounded on the south are farming, fishing (chiefly salmon) and eider making.
by the river Severn, and is I mile east from Oalde Street Mrs. Luey Evans is the principal landowner. The soil
station on the Gloucester and South Wales branch of is alluvial, and very productive, well adapted to the
growth of apples for cider. The chief crops are wheat,
the Great Western railway and 4l miles west from Glou- apples, plums, pears and pasture. The area is 1,823

cester, in the Northern division of the county, Westbury- acres of land, 2 of water, 69 of tidal water and 9 of fore
shore; rateable value, £4,237; the population in 1891
on-Severn union, Duchy of Lancaster,' Gloucester county
court district and petty sessional division, rural deanery was 4II, civil; 429, ecclesiastical.
Parish Clerk, Wintour Stephens.
of North Forest and archdeaoonry and diocese of Glou-
cester. The church of St. Peter, rebuilt in 1870, is an Post, Telegraph &; Express Delivery Office.-Mrs. Emma
edifice of stone in the Decorated style, from designs by Bennetts, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive from Glou-
:Mr. Henry Woodyer, architect, and consists of chancel, cester at 8.10 a.m.; dispatched, 5.15 p.m. The nearest
nave of four bays, north aisle, south porch and an em- money order office is at Lower Westgate st. Gloucester
battled western tower containing 6 bells: the east window
Wall Letter Box, near Vicarage, cleared at 5.25 p.m
and others are stained: in 1877 a new organ was erected National School (mixed), 'built in 1863 &; enlarged in
by subscription, and in 1884 both the exterior and in-
1894, for 120 children; average attendance, 59; Miss
teriot were decorated with sculptures at the expense of Florence Andrews, mistress; there is a house for the
Messrs. Ellis: there are 200 sittings. The register dates mistress
from the year 1633. The living is a vicarage, net yearly C.ARRIERS TO GLOUCESTER (returning same days)~-
value £225, including 28 acres of glebe, with residence, Thomas Butler, from Littledean, mono wed. &; sat.;
in the gift of the Bishop of Gloucester, and held since Hayting, from Westbury, mono wed. &; sat
1895 by the Rev. Richard Brent M.A. of Queen's College,

Broob Rev. Richard M.A. Vicarage Bradford Thomas William Harold,far- Jones Charles, farmer

Ellis George Viner,'Severn :Bank house mer, Moorcroft house '. Littleton William, farmer

Ellis The Misses, Severn :Bank house Bridges James, fllil"Dler Little-ton William, jun. farmer

Fletcher Miss, Church house Cole .M'bert, assistant oversoor Mathews Henry, farmer, MUll'cott farm

Harvey Frederick, Hygrove house Cole Richard, farmer,'Highcross farm Selwyn Elizabeth (Mlrs.), farmer,

Hawkins Miss Fle-tcher Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper Moorcroft farm

Stephens Mrs. The Naight Harvey Ernest, farmelr &; horse dealer, Vallender Philip, farmer, Moorcroft

COMMERCIAL. The Elms Middle farm

Barrett Henry, farmer Harvey Howard Frederick, farmer. The

Barrett J ames, fa.:rmer Redlands

MISERDEN is a parish and village on the Cotswold by the Rev. Robert oBrisco Earee. Here is a Primitive

Hills, 8 miles north-by-west from Cirencester station on Methodist chapel. The charities are of £8 yearly value

the Great Western railway, 7 north-east from Stroud, and are distributed to the poor in !bread and grocery or

II south-east from Gloucester and 10 from Cheltenham, clothes at their own choice, by the rector and church-
in the Mid division of the county, Bisley hundred, Stroud wardens on St. Thomas's day. Miserden Park is the

union and county court district, petty sessional division seat of Edward .A.ldam Leatham esq. M.A., D.L•• J.P.;

of Stroud, rural deanery of :Bisley and archdeaconry and the park, extending over about 120 acres, is thickly

diocese of Gloucester. The church of St. Andrew, wooded, and has considerable undulations; the little

thoroughly restored in 1866, is 8 building of stone, in river Frome, which rises in the adjoining parish, mean-
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave of ders through it: the house was garrisoned by Cromwell

two bays, aisles, south porch and a low embattled during the Civil War. Here are ruins of an ancient

western tower containing a clock and 2 bells: in the castle, built by Musard, a Norman baron, and destroyed

front and over a closed doorway on the north side, and during the Wars of the Roses. Sudgrove House, is the

also in the south porch, are several exceedingly interest- residence of H. Hamilton Mills esq. Edward .A.ldam

ing arches of supposed Saxon work, embedded in the Leatham esq. who is lord of the manor, Henry Hamilton

wall: in the south chancel aisle, or manorial chapel, is Mills esq. and Robert Lawrence Townsend esq. are the

a fine monument in marble with effigies to Sir William principal landowners. The soil is brashey; subsoil,

Sandys kt. ob. 1640, and 'Margaret (Culpeper) his wife, generally rock. The chief crops are wheat, barley, tur-

ob. 1644; the figure of the knight is in complete nips, oats and land in pasture. The area is 3,218 acres;

armour, and his lady is ricWy dressed; at the sides of rateable value, £2,293; the population in 1891 was

the tomb are kneeling !figures of ten children, and at 393 civil, and 369 ecclesiastical.

the head, on a mural tablet of black marble, is an in- By Local Government Board Order, 16,222, March, 25,

scription: in the Sandys chapel ill an altar tomb with 1885, the tithing of Birdfield was transferred from Bisley,

effigy, in stone, to William Kingston esq. ob. 16I4 and on and Wateredge Farm from Cranham to Miserden, for
the floor of the chancel a. tombstone inscri:bed to Thomas civil purposes.

Warneford, ob. 1717; on the north side of the chancel

is a tablet, with kneeling effigies, to .Anthony Partridge, CAMP is a hamlet, 2 miles west-by-north. Here is a

ob. 1625, .A1ice (Cartwright) his wife, and four children: Baptist chapel. SUDGROVE is three quarters of a mile

there are several stained windows. one of which, erected south; DOWN, 31 miles west; and WISH.A.NGER, I

by the. Nizam of Hyderabad. is a memorial to William mile west-by-north.

Hurst Yarnton Mills esq.: the stained east window is Parish Clerk, William Bradley.

a memorial to the Rev. William Yarnton Mills J.P. for Post Office.-.A.rthur Russell, sub-postmaster. Letters

many years rector of the parish, and there is another arrive from Cirencester at 8.50 a.m.; dispatched at

to Daniel Yarnton Mills J.P. of Sudgrove House: in the 5.30 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.

church are also numerous tablets to various members of The nearest money order office is at Bisley, &; telegraph

the Mills family, dating from 1724: in the manorial chapel office at :Birdlip

are two stained windows, erected by E. A. Leatham Wall Letter Ilox, at 'Camp, cleared at 4.25 p.m. from 1st

esq. in 1882, and in the south aisle another, presented March to 3ISt October & 3.55 p.m. from 1St November

by Mr. Leatham in memory of his son, Harold: the to 28th February; letters arrive at 10.30 a.m
font is of Norman dat~: the lectern was carved by Henry Parochial School (mixed), the property of E. A. Lea-
Bradley, son of the present parish clerk, on the occasion tham esq. built in 1866, accommodates 90 children;

of whose jubilee as clerk it was presented to the church: average attendance, 53; &; supported in part by Edwd.

a carved and painted oak reredos and pulpit were pre- A. Leatham esq. J.P.; Miss Maria Meaby mistress
sented in 1894 by Arthur W. Leatham esq. J.P.: there CARRIERS TO:-
are 180 sittings: in the churchyard is a memorial to

Anthony Ockhold and his wife, 1605. The register dates Clrencester-Matthew Moore, from Sudgrove, every mono

from the year 1574. The living is a rectory, net yearly & fri.; Charles :Booth. every mon

Ivalue £250, including 25 acres of glebe, with residence, Cheltenham-Matthew Moore, every thurs

in the gift of E. A. Leatham esq. and held since 1890 Stroud John Heyde.l, tues. &; fri.; Chas.:Booth,every sat

Earee Rev. Robert Brisco (rootor) Leatham Edward .A.ldam M.A., D.L., Arkeill William, fa.rm&:r &; mason

Foord Mai.-Gen. WiHiam Octavius, J.P. Miserden park Ayers Nathaniel, farmer, Snows farm

Miserden house Mills Henry Hamilton, Sudgrove house :Bradley Henry, carpenter

Herbert William Nicoll Miss, Hazel house Bradley Wm. carpe-nter &; parish clerk

Leatham Arthur Wm. J.P. Miserden Price Jose-ph, Camp house Brewer Frances (Mrs.). Carpent-ers'

park Arkell Job, mason &I farmer Arms P.H

GLOU. 16


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